Christianity Unearthed
There was never one story of Jesus. The Gospel of Luke set out to make one. The Gospel of Luke opens by admitting what later Christians would prefer to forget. Many accounts of Jesus already existed when Luke sat down to write. He writes after the Gospel of Mark and the Gospel of Matthew, in Greek, outside Jerusalem, for a reader who needs certainty. His aim is not preservation. It is order. This episode reads Luke as a coherence project. The author admits the plurality, then organises it into a single line. He names his patron, Theophilus. He selects from the sources available to him. He smooths fracture into narrative. He centres a Jesus who is Saviour for the human race, not for Israel alone. Part 1 walks the architecture of that project: • how the author opens by acknowledging the existing accounts • why he writes in polished Greek, outside Jerusalem • how he uses sources, including the Gospel of Mark and material the scholarly tradition has called Q • the universal Jesus he builds, not bound to one people • the Magnificat, sung by Mary, that previews the moral programme • the infancy narrative that brings the Hebrew prophets back into view This is not the gospel that survives because it was written first. It is the gospel that survives because it gave a turbulent movement a single legible story. Part 2 will follow what Luke's Jesus actually does with that scaffolding. The blessings on the poor. The curses on the rich. The criminal forgiven on the cross. The moral architecture that defines this gospel. Luke does not erase the plurality. He orders it. Not from tradition. From evidence.
25 episodios
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