AletheiAnveshana: THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO LUKE (Lesson 5 – Mar 4, 2025) Ch. 2: 1-52

Wednesday, 5 March 2025

THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO LUKE (Lesson 5 – Mar 4, 2025) Ch. 2: 1-52

 

 

THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO LUKE

(Lesson 5 – Mar 4, 2025) Ch. 2: 1-52

 

 

2: 1-7 The Birth of Jesus: Caesar Augustus (27 B.C. – A.D. 14) was considered as “savior” and “god” decreed the enrollment of the whole empire, non-citizens.

-        There were local registrations within various provinces from time to time, under the Roman legate Quirinius.

-        Luke attests that both John the Baptist and Jesus were born under Herod the Great (37 B. C., - 4 B. C).

 

For Luke’s theological intention, Pax Romana Augusta is not Augustus Caesar as the prince of the peace but Jesus of Bethlehem

 

V. 7: The Gk term “phatne” = “manger” also “stable”. Another Gk term “kataluma” = “inn” specially means “lodging” or “guestroom” with space for a dining area (this term is employed in Lk 22:11), that he might reprove the glory of the world, and condemn the vanities of this present life.

 

“firstborn son: Roman, Greek, Coptic, Armenian, and other ancient tradition, the phrase represents a title of honor (Gn 27; Ex13:2; Nm 3:12-13; Dt 21:15-27) It does not imply that Mary had other children after Jesus. The term adelfos (ἀδελφοί) excludes. JC

Mk 10:18 “And Jesus said unto him, “Why do you call me good? There is none good but One, that is, God”.

 

Vv. 8-20: The announcement of Jesus’ birth to the shepherds is a blessing to the lowly.

V. 11 Luke only uses the title “savior” for Jesus (Lk 1:69; 19:9; Acts 4:12; Acts 5:31).  Wordsworth gives up the problem, and thinks that the Holy Spirit has concealed the knowledge of the year and day of Christ’s birth and the duration of His ministry from the wise and prudent to teach them humility

 

Gr word “Christos” = Hb word “masiah” = En word Messiah – meaning “anointed one” to bring salvation to all humanity. Hb word “Adonai” = Gk “kurios” = En “Lord”

 

V. 14: “On earth peace to those on whom his favor rests” - the concept of peace in Luke is more than the absence of war of the pax Augustus (Lk 2:14; 7:50; 8:48; 10:5-6) etc..

V. 21 – incorporation into the Jewish people through circumcision.

 

Vv. 22-40: The presentation of Jesus in the temple

V. 22: Purification ((Lev 12:2-8) – the woman who gives birth to a boy is unable for forty days to touch anything sacred or to enter the temple area by reason of her legal impurity. Mary fulfills the law by bringing the offering.

 

Num 3: 47-48: the firstborn son should be redeemed by the parents through their payment of five shekels to a member of a priestly family. In this regard, Luke does not speak.

 

V. 25: Awaiting the consolation of Israel: expectations of faithful for God’s rule.

 

Vv. 29-32 Nunc dimittis: is the fourth and final hymn from the Lukan infancy narratives and has traditionally been part of Compline or night office in the Liturgy of the Hours.

 

V. 34: the schism motif runs throughout Luke’s Gospel.

 

V. 35: “and you yourself a sword will pierce” – her blessedness as mother of the Lord will be challenged by her son who describes true blessedness as “as hearing the word of God and observing it” (Lk 22:27-28; 8:20-21). Mary is elevated to the role of the model disciple. To love Jesus is to suffer with him.

 

Vv. 36-38: Anna, daughter of Phanuel, has made her utterly dependent on God’s goodness – spoke about the redemption of Jerusalem.

 

Vv. 39-40: Nazareth and Bethlehem: The evangelists composed stories that get Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem and then back up to Nazareth.

 

Vv. 41-52: The boy Jesus in the Temple: Jesus returns with his parents to Nazareth, and nothing is heard about him until he is an adult and begins his ministry. The next time we read of Jesus in Jerusalem will be at his triumphal entry (19:28-39), which leads to his death.

 

Vv. 41-42: Child Jesus was raised in the traditions of Israel. The infancy narrative ends.

 

V. 49: “I must be in my Father’s house”: Jesus refers to God as his Father. His divine sonship, obedience to his heavenly Father’s will, takes precedence over his ties to his family.

 

 

The missing years of Jesus from 12 -30 ????

 

 

 

 

 

LENTEN SEASON

HISTORY

 

Ash Wednesday is a holy day to begin the Lenten journey. It marks the beginning of 40 days of prayer, penance, and almsgiving.

 

The Council of Nicaea in 325, “all the Churches agreed that Easter, the Christian Passover, should be celebrated on the Sunday following the first full moon (14 Nisan) after the vernal equinox” (CCC No. 1170).

 

(1)             In the Early Church

 

The word “Lent” means “springtime,” was used (2 c.) to describe the period of individual fasting, almsgiving, and prayer to celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus.

 

In the first three centuries, only catechumens observed two or three days to receive Baptism on Easter Sunday.

 

(2)             40 Days of Lent - the Holy Bible

-        Israel journeyed 40 years in the wilderness

-        Moses spent 40 days receiving the commandments on Mount Sinai (Ex 24:18)

-        Noah was on the Ark waiting for the rains to end for 40 days and 40 nights (Gn 7:4)

-        Elijah “walked forty days and forty nights to the mount Horeb” (1 Kgs 19:8)

-        Jesus fasted 40 days in the desert to be tempted by the devil (Mt 4:1-11)

-        In the forty days of Lent the Church unites herself to the mystery of Jesus (CCC 540)

 

(3)             The Count of the 40 Days

-        The Latin Church uses six weeks to identify the Lenten period, excluding the Sundays, so there are only 36 fasting days.

-        In the early 7th C, St. Pope Gregory the Great (590-604) resolved this situation by adding the Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday before the first Sunday of Lent. Thus, the Lenten 40-day fast, or the Great Fast as it was known, would begin on a Wednesday.

-        Initially, people fasted all 40 days of Lent, observing a little meal for survival.

-        St. John Chrysostom (347-409) writes, “Do you fast? Give me proof of it by your works! If you see a poor man, take pity on him! If you see an enemy, be reconciled to him! If you see a friend gaining honor, envy him not! If you see a handsome woman, pass her by!”

 

(4)             Ashes The Church uses ashes as an outward sign of grief, humility, penance.

 

(a)   The Old Testament

-         Job repented: “Therefore, I disown what I have said, and repent in dust and ashes” (42:6).

-        Daniel “turned to the Lord God, to seek help, in prayer and petition, with fasting, sackcloth, and ashes” (Dn 9:3).

-        Jonah preached conversion and repentance to the people of Nineveh: “That day they fasted and wore sackcloth; they sprinkled ashes on their heads and tore their garments” (1 Mc 3:47).

 

(b)  Abbot Aelfric (1000) England wrote: “We read in the books both in the Old Law and in the new that men who repented of their sins bestowed on themselves with ashes and clothed their bodies with sackcloth. Now let us do this little at the beginning of our Lent, that we strew ashes upon our heads, to signify that we ought to repent of our sins during the Lenten feast” (“Aelfric’s Lives of Saints,” 1881, p. 263).


(c)   This same rite of distributing ashes on the Wednesday that begins Lent was recommended for universal use by Pope Urban II at the Synod of Benevento in 1091.

 

 

(d)  Abbot Gueranger, O.S.B. (1800): “We are entering, today, upon a long campaign of the warfare spoke of by the apostles: forty days of battle, forty days of penance. We shall not turn cowards, if our souls can but be impressed with the conviction that the battle and the penance must be gone through. Let us listen to the eloquence of the solemn rite which opens our Lent. Let us go whither our mother leads us, that is, to the scene of the fall.”

 

 

The five precepts of the Catholic Church are (CCC 2041-2043)

1.     Attend Mass on Sundays and holy days of obligation

2.     Fast and abstain on appointed days

3.     Confess sins at least once a year

4.     Receive Holy Communion at least once a year

5.     Contribute to the Church's support

 

 

 

 

 

for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return.” (Gn 3:19)

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