Page last updated

 

 

 



                                                  

 

Luke 3:1-6                                                        

 

JOHN’S CALL - The first several verses fix the time and political circumstances of John’s call. The story begins with a roll call of important persons: governors and kings, even the high priest. In surprising contrast, however, ‘the word of God’ comes not to any of these but to an unknown prophet out in the wilderness. The redemptive work of which Mary sang in the Magnificat is under way: ‘He has brought down the powerful from their thrones / and lifted up the lowly’ (1:52). In all ages, God’s work proceeds among the poor and the dispossessed. A middle-class church in a nominally Christian society that enjoys religious liberty will have a hard time grasping the fact that Luke does not use these terms in a merely metaphorical or spiritual sense. [1]

ALL PEOPLE . . . SALVATION - Luke’s inclusion of Isaiah 40 moves forward Luke’s universality of the gospel; embedded within the prophetic voice of the past is God’s embrace of the world-not just people of Palestine. God has all along planned to include everyone in the good news of Jesus Christ. [2]

ORIGEN [FL 200-254] - I believe that the mystery of John is still being achieved in the world today. If anyone is going to believe in Christ Jesus, John’s spirit and power first come to his soul and ‘prepare a perfect people for the Lord.’ It makes the ways in the heart’s rough places smooth and straightens out its paths. [3]

 

What do you remember of community leaders / global events / when you got your first car? If you were to parallel Luke’s who’s who description in this lesson with today, who would you put on the list of notables-secular and ecclesiastical?

"The word of God came to John . . . in the desert" (3:2). In contrast to what has just preceded, what do you think Luke wanted us to think about with this phrase?

What valley needs filling in your life? What about crooked paths? Or what mountains need leveling? Any rough edges need to be planed?

 

If you want to create tension as a way to enter the text through the recent ordination and consecration of the US Episcopal Church’s first gay bishop. The event sounded on every radio wave around the world on Sunday, November 2nd. Go on to other major world figures or scenarios that were occurring simultaneously. Then shift the focus to a small seemingly insignificant occurrence that potentially could have large impact.

Move to the text and know what and who makes the list of Luke’s dignitaries. Have them sitting together on the platform in a huge stadium-important people.

Contrast that impressive scene with a lonely figure hunkered down in a deserted, godawful place-John the Baptist-to whom the Word of God came.

What does that teach us about God and messages? What does Luke want us to learn about power and weakness and the Kingdom of God? You might also draw connections of reversal from Mary’s Magnificat as a way to see how God uses small, weak, insignificant things to carry forth God’s programme.

What about us? What word is God saying to us? What message are we to proclaim? Which group have we been most a part of and how has that allowed us or kept us from hearing God’s Word with clarity?

__________________________________________________
[1] The New Interpreter’s Bible IX (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1995), page 81.
[2] Fred Craddock, Interpretation Series: Luke (Atlanta: John Knox, 1990), page 48.
[3] Ancient Commentary on Christian Scriptures III (InterVarsity, 2003), page 60.