Christianity Unearthed
Luke's Jesus blesses the poor and curses the rich. Then he dies forgiving the people who put him there. Part 2 of Luke follows what the coherence machine actually delivers. The order Luke built in Part 1 was scaffolding. The structure exists to carry a moral programme, and the programme is reversal. This episode reads the Lukan Jesus as a deliberate construction: • the blessings on the poor, the hungry, and the mourning, paired with woes on the rich • the table fellowship with tax collectors and sinners that the other gospels do not stage so insistently • the women named, listened to, and present at the cross and the empty tomb • the Samaritan as moral exemplar • the Pharisee and the tax collector as a reversal of who is heard • the Prodigal Son as a parable Mark and Matthew do not preserve And then the crucifixion itself. In the Gospel of Mark and the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus dies in agony, crying that God has forsaken him. In the Gospel of Luke, he dies composed. He forgives the people crucifying him. He receives the repentant criminal beside him. The atonement language that the Gospel of Mark used, sacrifice for the many, is removed. Luke is not erasing Mark. Luke is rewriting Mark. The Saviour of Luke's gospel saves through mercy and reversal, not through bloodshed. This is the gospel that gives Christianity its language of compassion and its concern for the marginalised. It is also the gospel that turns the violent death of a Jewish messiah into the calm departure of a universal teacher. Coherence is not free. Smoothing fracture hides real disagreement. Luke does not erase the plurality. Luke orders it. Not from tradition. From evidence.
25 episodios
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