They are now doing 'International Students Ministry' to African leaders and future leaders who are coming from all across Africa to study in South Africa.
12 After Jesus calls Simon Peter, James and
John to follow him in Luke’s gospel we find Jesus in one of the towns of
Galilee. A man covered with leprosy and ‘unclean’, sees Jesus and falls with
his face to the ground before him. The leprous man begs Jesus saying, “Lord,
if you are willing, you can make me clean.” 13Jesus reaches out his hand and
touches this ‘unclean leprous man and says, “I am willing; be clean!”
Immediately the leprosy leaves and the man is made clean.
14Jesus orders the man to go to the priests
as a testimony to them and to offer the sacrifices Moses commanded for the
cleansing lepers (Lev. 14). This would testify to Jesus’ power to restore a
leper to the temple and to the community. Jesus also shows his respect for the Law
of Moses and the Levitical system. Jesus
may have wanted the man to go immediately in the event anyone wanted to undermine
the man’s restoration in opposition to Jesus. 15Also in Mark we’re told that this
healing increased the crowds so that Jesus could no longer enter a town openly
(Mk 1:45). Luke doesn’t say that the man went against Jesus’ wishes but that
the news of Jesus spread and the crowds came to hear Jesus and to be healed of
their sicknesses. 16We
also learn that Jesus often withdrew to lonely places and prayed.
The desperate state of
this man stands out here. Jesus was his only hope of restored fellowship. He
lived in isolation. He was contaminated with leprosy and had to be isolated in
order to not spread his disease to other people. Whoever touched him would
become unclean and yet he begs Jesus to touch him. He is convinced that Jesus
could make him clean and that Jesus would be immune to contamination. He
believed that Jesus had access to resources that could make him ‘clean’ and
restore him to fellowship with God and people. Ironically, Peter was aware of
his own sinfulness and said, ‘Go away Lord’! This man fully aware of his ‘unclean’
status said, “Lord, … touch and make me clean!” Jesus did and the story depicts
the redemptive and restorative power of God at work in and through Jesus!
1After healing Simon Peter’s
Mother-in-law and many other as well as casting out many demons, Jesus goes
down to lakeshore. Jesus visited a variety of places where the people were and
here we find him at the lake with people crowding all around him. Some may have
hoped to be healed; others may have wanted to see a miraculous sign, but were
told that the crowd around Jesus wanted to hear the ‘word of God’. So Jesus was teaching the people and they were
hearing the ‘word of God’!
2The people are crowding in on Jesus and
he sees two boats by the water’s edge; which the fishermen had left there while
they cleaned their nets. 3Jesus had been sent to preach and here we find him concerned that people
could hear his ‘kingdom gospel’. Then Jesus gets into Simon’s fishing boat and
tells Simon to push the boat a little from the shore. He does and Jesus teaches
the people from the boat; the water and the shore making a kind of natural
amphitheater. Then when Jesus finishes teaching the people he makes a peculiar
request.
Simon had used
his resources and his vocation to help enable Jesus to teach the people. Then
when Jesus finished his teaching this prophet, Rabbi, and “would be” Messiah
tells the experienced fisherman, Simon, to the put the boat out into the deep
waters and to let down the nets for a catch. After a long night of fishing all
night with nothing to show for it Simon puts the boat out into the deep waters
and lets down the nets for a catch. For Simon this sounds rather futile since
they caught nothing all night and the fish don’t feed during the day. Yet, Simon
will do it not because it makes sense, but because Jesus said so! Simon is a knowledgeable
fisherman and Jesus is not, but Simon listens and obeys what Jesus tells him to
do!
This prophetic
teacher of ‘good news’ to the poor and liberation for the oppressed tells this experienced
fisherman who has labored all night to no avail to set out in the deep waters and
let down the nets for a catch. 5Simon would likely have thought the request to be a waste of time but he
did it out of respect for Jesus, who he calls Master. Simon says, “Because you
say so, I will let down the nets.” Oddly, when Simon listens and obeys Jesus
they catch an extraordinary once in a lifetime catch. 6When Simon did what seemed like a
waste of time because Jesus said so it resulted in the biggest catch of fish they
had ever seen in their lives. The catch was so large that their nets were
tearing. They couldn’t contain all the fish and so they call for their fishing
partners in their boat and they filled both boats until both boats were sinking
down.
8The catch astonished Simon Peter, his
companions and to his fishing partners, James and John. Seeing the
extraordinary catch Simon falls down before Jesus’ knees. Evidently, Simon fell
before Jesus’ knees since Jesus would have been surrounded by the fish in the
boat. Simon can only say, “Go away from me, Lord; I am a sinful man!”
The astonishing catch gave Simon a sense of his own unworthiness to be around such
a ‘holy man’ like Jesus. 9Simon saw himself as a sinner who
could contaminate a holy man who was so close to God like Jesus was. However,
Jesus assures Simon by saying “Don’t be afraid; from now on you will catch
men.” 11So
then we see that the pull their boats up on shore, and the leave all behind and
they followed Jesus.
31In Luke’s gospel after being rejected
in the Nazareth synagogue, Jesus goes to Capernaum, in Galilee. News about
Jesus is spreading and all spoke well of him with the exception of those in Nazareth.
So Jesus returns to Capernaum where he teaches on the Sabbath and those who
heard were amazed. A big part of Jesus’ ministry was to teach God’s word which
he did on the Sabbath in continuity with God’s purposes for Israel. However, his
hearers were amazed because Jesus’ taught with authority. Jesus spoke as an
expert with an experiential knowledge of God, and God’s plans and purposes. He would
have been teaching in a way consistent with his liberating gospel to the poor,
prisoners, blind, and the oppressed. Moreover, Jesus was proclaiming the
messianic age had come, although God was temporarily suspending his judgment and
was extending his grace to all who saw themselves as poor and in need of God’s
grace (LK 4:1-14)!
33Then in the synagogue, of all places,
there was a demon-possessed man. This man was welcome in the synagogue evidently
an insider and was not a newcomer. He was not normally disruptive and nobody considered
him peculiar or disruptive. So this demon inhabited this man and was undetected
until Jesus entered the synagogue. In the presence of Jesus the demon now evokes
the man to cry out. In a loud voice, the man cries out in a loud voice, 34“What do you want Jesus of
Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know you are—the Holy One of God!”
The demon
knows exactly who Jesus of Nazareth is and has a pretty good idea about what Jesus
came to do. The man under the demons influence or the demon through the man
recognizes Jesus the man and knows or otherwise suspects that Jesus has come to
destroy him and the man under demonic influence knows that Jesus is the “Holy
One of God!” The demon wants to know what Jesus wants and why Jesus was there (1
John 3). Surely the demons are aware that Jesus has overcome Satan’s
temptations and that Jesus has come to destroy, not the gentiles, but the
demonic evil that is oppressing people.
35Jesus tells the ‘unclean spirit’ to
be quiet and come out; and that is exactly what the demon did. The demon throws
the man down without injuring him, evidently the man is being protected by
Jesus. Now free from this ‘unclean demonic spirit’ 36surely the man was happy and we are told
that the people were amazed. They express their amazement by asking, “What is
this teaching? With authority he orders evil spirits and they come out!” 37Now as a result of this, the news
about Jesus spreads throughout the area. What is the result of the event?
Jesus leaves
the synagogue and people throughout the area are talking about Jesus’ teaching
with authority and that demonic spirits have to do what he says. 38Jesus goes to the home of Simon
Peter where Simon’s mother-in-law is suffering from a high fever. They asked
Jesus to help her. Jesus bends over Simon’s mother-in-law, rebukes the fever
and the fever leaves. She gets ups and begins to wait on them. Jesus rebukes
the fever, and the fever leaves and Simon’s mother-in-law is and immediately
she begins to serve the Lord and his future disciple Simon Peter.
40The word on Jesus is out; come sunset
all kinds of sick people are brought to Jesus and he lays hands on them and they’re
healed. 41Demons
are coming out of many people; and they’re shouting, “You are the Son of God!” Jesus
rebukes them since they know that Jesus is the Christ. However, this is not the
kind of advertising Jesus is interested in. Moreover, Jesus has a lot of work
to do to reprogram his disciples’ wrong ideas about who Messiah is and what he
came to do. In time Jesus will make his Messianic identity known but for now he
won’t let the word out, particularly coming from demonic spirits.
42At daybreak Jesus heads off for solitary
place. Yet, the people go looking for Jesus and when they find him they try to
prevent him from leaving. 43Surely they want him to stay and do more healings, but Jesus said, “I
must preach the good news of the kingdom of God to the other towns also, for
this is why I was sent.” 44So Jesus goes on a preaching tour of the synagogues of Judea where he
proclaims the ‘good news’ of his ‘Kingdom of God movement’!
Jesus' Sermon in his hometown synagogue in Nazereth:
The Spirit of the Lord had come upon Jesus at his baptism.
The voice from heaven confirmed that Jesus was the Son of God. Jesus had
returned from overcoming devil’s temptations and from doing miracles in
Capernaum (Lk 4:23). News about Jesus is spreading and people are praising him
for his teachings. In his hometown synagogue, he reads scripture and claims
that they are fulfilled in their hearing (Lk 4:21). Isaiah 61 was familiar to
his hearers, but for them but his interpretation and application was
unacceptable. They run him out of town and try to throw him over a cliff. Why
were they so disturbed?
The devil had tempted Jesus to throw himself down from the
temple to prove his ‘sonship’. The devil wanted Jesus to provoke Jesus to prove
that he was trusting God to rescue him. But, Jesus refused to put the Lord his
God to the test. Now before his home synagogue, Jesus launches his public
ministry. However, what he proclaimed didn’t conform to their expectation of
what Messiah should do! Luke makes it
clear at the beginning of his gospel that the rejection of Jesus is all part of
God’s plan. In this story God validates Jesus’ identity by rescuing Jesus from
the angry mob. They sought to throw Jesus from a cliff to his death, but Jesus
walks unharmed through the angry crowd to continues on his way (Lk 4:10-12, Ps.
91:11-12).
God validates Jesus’ public ministry by rescuing him from
the angry mod. But did they have such an angry violent reaction? Jesus’ hearers
listen while he read Isaiah 61 and were amazed by his words. Some said of
Jesus, ‘isn’t this Joseph’s son?’ Jesus reacts by telling them they’ll say,
‘physician heal yourself’. Then Jesus claims that a prophet is not welcome in
his hometown (Lk 4:24) and illustrates his point with references to Elijah and
Elisha. God sent Elijah to a widow from Sidon and Elisha cleansed Naaman, a
Syrian General (1 Kgs.17, 2 Kgs 5). These two outsiders, a Sidonian widow and a
leader of Israel’s enemies receive God’s favor while Israelites are overlooked!
Many in Jesus’ day understood Isaiah 61 as a text that promised
that God would liberate Israel from their pagan enemies. They expected God to
rescue Israel and condemn their gentile oppressors. Yet, Jesus left out the
part of Isaiah 61 which talks about ‘the day of vengeance of our God’. The
passage also speaks of Israel feeding ‘on the wealth of nations’ (Isaiah 61:2,
6). Moreover, Jesus references God sending Elijah and Elisha to bless those
outside of Israel. Jesus indicated that God would suspend his vengeance and
extend his grace even to Israel’s enemies. Evidently, they were so offended by
the idea of God’s grace for outsiders that they ran Jesus out of the synagogue
and even sought to kill him!
By saying that he was fulfilling Isaiah 61, Jesus meant that
he was the Messiah and that he was bringing liberation for the poor, for
prisoners, for the blind, for the oppressed and that he was ushering in God’s
ultimate ‘Jubilee’! They expected grace for Israel and judgment on their
oppressors, but Jesus’ reading of Isaiah 61 meant mercy even to Israel’s
enemies. Jesus as a prophet was not accepted in his hometown and they even
sought to kill him. Jesus stated that Elijah had passed by many widows in
Israel to provide for widow in Sidon. Jesus also said that Elisha overlooked
many lepers in Israel while cleansing Naaman the Syrian. They were furious
and they drove Jesus out of town. They drove him up the hill to throw him down
to his death. God enabled Jesus to walk right through the crowd on his way (4:27-30).
The Spirit of the Lord ‘anointed’ Jesus at his baptism and
the heavenly voice identified Jesus as Isaiah’s prophesied coming Messiah.
Jesus identified with John’s baptism and was led by the Spirit into the
wilderness to overcome the devil’s temptations. Afterwards, in Nazareth Jesus
goes public but was opposed because he said the opposite of what they were
expected the Messiah to do. They kick Jesus out of the synagogue, run him out
of town, and try to throw him off a cliff! Jesus identified with Elijah being
sent to help a singular gentile widow—and with Elisha cleansing one solitary
gentile leper. In their minds Jesus was portraying Israel’s God as rescuing the
wrong people. They wanted God to pour out His wrath on their enemies, so they
were astonished at Jesus’ words of grace. What they wanted was grace for Israel
and judgment for everyone else. According to Jesus, Messiah had come not to
inflict punishment on gentiles. Jesus was extending God’s love and mercy to all
who were poor and in need of liberation. We must be careful for Jesus may not
validate our expectations because God rescues all outsiders who come to Jesus
in need of God’s amazing grace.
Luke 4:1-131Jesus identified himself with John’s
‘baptism of repentance’. The Spirit ‘anointed him’ and the voice from
heaven confirmed Jesus to be the 'Son of God' . Then Jesus, full of
the Holy Spirit, moved out from Jordan, where Israel had originally entered their "Promised Land". Jesus is going back into Israel’s story and back into the wilderness. 2 For a period
of 40 days Jesus would face the devil’s temptations. Israel had wandered 40
years because of their unbelief, but now Jesus was going to get it right. Jesus,
a real man, is famished after 40 days without food. Jesus is tired, hungry,
dirty, sweaty, and in his physically weakness he faces the devil and his
accusations.
3The devil brings Jesus’ identity and ‘Sonship’ into question. “If you are the Son of
God” challenges what the voice from heaven had affirmed. The devil tells Jesus
to command a stone to become bread as a way of meeting his own need and proving that Jesus really was the ‘Son of God’. 4Here, as in Eden with Adam, the devil
brings into question the good intention of God. Why is God withholding good
from you if you are the ‘Son of God’? Jesus trusts God’s good intention and trusts God’s good intention that ‘man does not
live on bread alone’ (Deut.8:3). Adam, on the other hand, believed the devil’s lie (Gen.3:4). Israel in the wilderness also failed to trust God’s good intention. They grumbled that they
were better off in Egypt and they complained that God was going to kill them in the
wilderness (Exodus 16-17).
Why is God
treating Jesus like this if he is 'God's Son and Israel’s Messiah? The devil tempts Jesus to turn a stone to bread in order to meet his legitimate physical need? Hadn't God provided Israel ‘ manna’ in the wilderness? Yet,
Jesus tells the devil that it is written, "that man does not live by bread
alone" (Deut.8:3). In
his need, his deprivation and his hunger Jesus trusted God and His word and refused to take matters into his own hands. Jesus finds no need to prove his
‘sonship’, but trusts God’s word.
5The devil shows Jesus all the
kingdoms of the world and all their authority and glory. 6 Man had forfeited this authority when he
aligned himself with the devil in opposition to God in Eden. In a sense, the devil took man’s authority over this world away from him. These are the devil’s kingdoms
and he can give them to whoever he wants. 7The kingdoms to be recovered
by the Messiah where still under the devil’s dominion. So the devil presents an easy alternative to God’s plan and offers a way of avoiding the struggle. He presents God as a ‘harsh taskmaster’ for all the devil requires is
worship. Jesus is tempted to gain ‘authority and glory’ over the nations not by
trusting God, but by submitting to Satan in
worship. All Jesus had to do was to worship and submit himself to
the dominion of Satan. Jesus trusts the goodness of God’s way and relies on God and His word as the only
viable option for the ‘Son of God’. Adam believed the lie and aligned himself
with the devil and Israel sought to return to Egypt. They failed to trust God’s good purpose, but Jesus said, “It is written, ‘You shall worship the Lord your God, and
serve him only. (Deut.6:13, Ex.20:3)’ ”
The devil
takes Jesus to Jerusalem and sets him on the highest point of the temple. Again
the devil brings Jesus’ identity into question. According to Satan, if Jesus wants to reclaim the nations and be God’s
king by trusting God’s word then Jesus should put his faith in action. The devil says, “If you are the Son of God, throw
yourself down, 10for
it is written, “ ‘He will command his angels to guard you, 11they will bear you up with
their hands, lest you strike your foot against a stone.’ ” The devil tempts Jesus to throw himself down from the temple and prove that the word of God is
true. 10 For, as the devil said,“He will command his angels concerning you, 11they will lift you up with
their hands, and you won’t strike your foot against a stone. (Ps.91)"
The devil tempts Jesus to put the validity of God’s word to the test by
jumping from the temple so that God would send angels to miraculously hold Jesus
up. 12 |Yet, Jesus answers the devil’s use of
scripture by saying that it is not Jesus’ role to put the Lord God to the
test. Jesus’ answer with scripture and says, ‘You shall not put the
Lord your God to the test.’ ” 13Now the devil postpones his temptations
for a more opportune time. 14So Jesus returns to Galilee, empowered and victorious over Satan at this
point, and so the name and reputation of Jesus begins to spread.
The anointed Jesus, ‘God’s Son’ was sent into the wilderness to directly confront the enemy of God and his people. The first temptation (3–4) urged Jesus to (3:22) to perform an act of power to satisfy his hunger. Jesus responded by quoting the scripture. Then (5–8) Jesus was enabled to see the
glory and the extent of the devil's dominion (Jn. 12:31). The world doesn’t ultimately belong
to the devil; but if Jesus gives in to the devil’s lies than Jesus would have fallen like Adam. To align himself with the devil would be incompatible with serving God
alone (Dt. 6:13). Finally (9–12), the devil tried to
quote scripture (Ps. 91:11–12) to tempt Jesus to leap down from the highest point of the temple as a demonstration of Jesus’
trust in his Father. But to yield to the suggestion would have been to doubt that he was really God’s Son and that his Father was
trustworthy.
If Jesus is to be Israel’s Messiah, then how will he deliver Israel, and the world,
from the grip of the enemy? How can he liberate the world from the devil himself? Jesus responds to the devil by quoting
scripture from the story of Israel’s failures in the
wilderness. Where Israel failed Jesus is going to overcome and become the world’s true
lord. Yet, the path to kingship and dominion is humble service in submission to
God and His word! God’s Son, Jesus, commits himself to the path of humility, service and even
death on a cross. Jesus overcame the devil's temptation on behalf of every Christian. Now it is our plaee to stand by faith in Christ and reist by putting the truth to the devil’s lies. Resistance is found in relying on God’s
love for us as stated in God’s word whenever our ‘identity
in Christ’ is questioned by our circumstances and by the devil’s
lies.