Tag Archives: Luke 6-7

October 24, 2023 Bible Study — It Is a Blessing to Be Cursed for Following Jesus

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Luke 6-7.

In Luke’s account of Jesus’ primary teachings, which Matthew records in the Sermon on the Mount, He tells us that we are blessed when people hate us because of Him, when they exclude us and insult us, even go so far as to call us evil because we hold to His teachings.  In fact a little further into His sermon, Jesus tells us that we should do good for such people, pray for them, and bless them.  He tells us to be like our Heavenly Father, merciful to those who hate us just as He is merciful to us and to those who hate Him.  Let us do good to those who cannot, or will not, repay us (or who will repay us with evil), and God will repay us for what we have done.  Let us remember that we owe Him more than we can ever repay.  Which brings me to the story of the woman who anointed Jesus’ feet at the end of today’s passage.  We should all strive to have the enthusiasm to serve Jesus that she had.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

October 24, 2022 Bible Study — Live The Lifestyle To Which God Calls You

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Luke 6-7.

I was struggling with deciding what to write this morning because there are so many good teachings in today’s passage and I could not figure out how to bring them together into one theme.  However, as I read the passage again in my attempt to put my thoughts in some sort of order, as I was reading Luke’s account of John the Baptist’s disciples asking Jesus if He was the One I decided to focus on What Jesus said there.  Not the answer Jesus gave John’s disciples, but what He said after they left.  Jesus talked about how the “best people” rejected John the Baptist because he lead an ascetic lifestyle, because he neither drank wine nor feasted.  On the other hand, they also rejected Jesus because He drank and went to parties with people who were considered unsavory.  So, we have these contrasting styles regarding their ministry, yet Jesus and John the Baptist both recognized the other as doing God’s work.  Some of us will be called to serve God by living an austere lifestyle, calling others to set aside the pleasures of this world in order to serve God.  Others will be called to spend our time with sinners in their pursuits, showing them that God loves and cares about them.  And some will be called to a lifestyle somewhere in between.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

October 24, 2021 Bible Study — Forgive And You Will Be Forgiven

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Luke 6-7.

The way Luke presents the two stories about the Pharisees confronting Jesus over the Sabbath indicates that he wants us to see a common theme between them.  Both of these stories remind us that we should not allow a rigid adherence to rules, even otherwise good rules, prevent us from caring for ourselves or doing good.  We should take a day each week to relax and worship God, but there is nothing wrong with doing things on that day which bring us joy and there is never anything wrong with doing things which improve the lives of others.

I feel like I need to write about Jesus’ instructions that we love our enemies and the story about the woman who anointed His feet.  My thoughts about them are linked, but I am not sure I am going to be able to actually put that in writing.  When Simon the Pharisee thought that Jesus should not allow the woman to touch Him, Simon was doing exactly what Jesus meant when He told us not to judge others. I want you to consider Jesus’ response to Simon here.  He called him out for what he was thinking about the woman.  It appears to have worked, because how do we know what Simon was thinking?  Clearly we know because Simon became a Believer and told this story on himself.  Simon thought of this woman as the “other”, one of those whom he did not need to love because they had put themselves outside of the acceptable by their actions.  Let us not make the mistake Simon made.  Let us make sure that the “others” know that God loves them and that nothing they have done is so bad that God will not forgive them.  And let us not hold the sins which God forgives against them.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

October 24, 2020 Bible Study Love Your Enemies, Do Good To Those Who Would See You Harmed

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Luke 6-7

When I began reading today’s passage, I was feeling like it would be a passage I would have trouble commenting on.  Then I came to verse 6:27, “But to you who are willing to listen, I say, love your enemies! Do good to those who hate you.”   I think that we as Christians spend too little time talking about what this verse and those which follow mean about how we should live our lives.  It is in the context of the above statement that Luke records Jesus giving us the Golden Rule, “Do to others as you would like them to do to you.”  And it is worth noting that we cannot take Jesus’ statement of the Golden Rule as a transition into the next thing He talks about because a few verse later He repeats “Love your enemies.”  Right here Jesus spells out what it takes to truly be His follower.  I want to note that He talked about loving our enemies just a few verses after He said in 6:22-23, “What blessings await you when people hate you and exclude you and mock you and curse you as evil because you follow the Son of Man.  When that happens, be happy! Yes, leap for joy! ”  If we truly want to follow Christ, we need to do good things to and for those who abuse us.  And we need to expect that they will abuse us.  This passage is the basis for Chapter XII of “Les Miserables” by Victor Hugo.  While it is not quite true as the Bishop says that we can buy someone’s soul from evil by this sort of action, after all, Jesus has already purchased their soul with His death, we can perhaps show people that their souls have been purchased by such action.

October 24, 2019 Bible Study — Blessed Are the Poor So Give To Anyone Who Asks

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Luke 6-7

Having previously caught flack from Pharisees over their rigorous interpretation of the Law regarding the Sabbath, Jesus took the initiative when He saw a man with a deformed hand in a synagogue on the Sabbath.  Instead of allowing them to set the terms of the discussion, He did so Himself.  The Law said, “Remember to observe the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. .. On that day no one in your household may do any work.”  The Pharisees focused on the second part which I quoted there.  Jesus moved the focus from that to the first part about keeping it holy.  He focused everyone’s attention on the fact that you do not keep the Sabbath holy by making those in need wait for another day before you help them.

Today’s passage also contains Luke’s account of the teachings which Matthew presents in the Sermon on the Mount.  I suspect that Jesus touched on these themes many times throughout His ministry.  In fact, these two slightly different accounts of these teachings may actually represent two different occasions (or perhaps more than two).  As a general rule, I prefer the more nuanced account given in Matthew.  However, I also find an appeal in the much more blunt way in which Luke relates the same teachings.  God blesses the poor and the hungry, while sorrow awaits the rich and prosperous.  Which puts a whole new light when Jesus says a few verses later that we should love our enemies and do good for those who hate us.  We need to think about what Jesus means when He says “give to anyone who asks” when we realize this follows Him telling us that the poor are blessed.  Of course, Jesus also tells us elsewhere to be as wise as serpents.

October 24, 2018 Bible Study — Use The Good We Receive To Ease The Suffering Of Others

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Luke 6-7.

    Luke’s version of the Beattitudes scares me and rightly so. I live the good life today and Jesus says that those who live the good life now will suffer later. The Church has always preferred Matthew’s version which spiritualizes poverty and suffering because that is easier for those who have it good today to stomach. I am convinced that despite the similarities between the Beattitudes in Matthew and in Luke that Jesus actually preached both messages. I think that those recorded by Luke transition better into Jesus’ teaching about loving our enemies. Before I go on to Jesus’ teaching about loving our enemies I want to make a final point about the Beattitudes here. If we experience the good life we should seek how we can share that with those who are suffering. If we have been given good things in this life it is so that we can alleviate the suffering of others.

    Luke records what we call the Golden Rule in the midst of Jesus teaching that we should love our enemies, which certainly makes it clear what He meant by it. “Do to others as you would like them to do to you.” Not do to others what they do to you, or even, what you expect them to do to you. No, let me people take your stuff. Let people hit you. Lend to those who cannot repay, even those who can but will not. Jesus transitions into His teachings on generosity from there, which ties it all together. Don’t be afraid that your generosity might lead you into poverty, not because God will prevent that from happening but because God will bless you even if you go from wealth to poverty. It is also worth noting that Jesus teaches about giving generously right after telling us to forgive those who wrong us and not to judge others. Jesus goes on from here to tell us that the only basis for judging someone is the results of their actions. If they make others better off and/or happier, they are good. If they make others worse off and/or feel miserable, they are bad. He uses the very same logic (and I believe Luke includes it here to push home the message) in response to John the Baptist’s disciples asking if He is the Messiah. Jesus answers their question by asking them to look at what He does and reach their own conclusion. When we preach the Gospel, let us ask others to look at what we do and reach their own conclusion. The important thing is not whether we live an ascetic lifestyle, as John the Baptist did, or enjoy some of the finer things in life, as Jesus did. The important thing is whether we do what we are able to ease the suffering of others.

October 24, 2017 Bible Study — Identifying Trees, and People, By Their Fruit

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Luke 6-7.

    Luke’s take on the Beatitudes is slightly different from Matthew’s. The two do not conflict, but they do have a different emphasis. The Beatitudes in Matthew focus more on what you should do, while those in Luke focus more on your attitude toward the circumstances you find yourself in. I like comparing verses 22-23 with verse 25. This runs exactly counter to our human tendency. We want to be loved and exalted by the “beautiful people” and by the crowds, but Jesus warns us that they do not like the people who are righteous and tell them God’s truth. The crowds and the “beautiful people” love those who lie to them and tell them what they want to hear. If you are popular and well-liked you need to look closely at what you are doing and what you are saying because being popular and well-liked may be a sign that you are not doing or saying what God wants you to do or say.

    Of course, there is a qualifier on this. Jesus was popular for a while and sometimes people will dislike you because you are a bad person. Fortunately, a few verses later, Jesus gives us some guidance on how to determine what we are doing. Jesus tells us to focus on fixing what is wrong with ourselves before worrying about what is wrong with someone else. He even tells us how to know if we have gotten it right. The way to judge ourselves is to judge our actions. If we are a good person, we will do good things. If we are an evil person, we will do evil things. This really works better than it seems at first. We can justify to ourselves doing evil things, but we still usually know that they are evil. And even there, Jesus gives us a tool for recognizing evil acts, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” If you would not want someone to do something to you, do not do that something to someone else.

October 24, 2016 Bible Study –Don’t Worry About The Speck In Your Brother’s Eye

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

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Today, I am reading and commenting on Luke 6-7.

    The part of this passage which the Spirit brought most to my attention was the verses from chapter 6 verse 41 through verse 44. We need to focus on what we are doing wrong, not on what others are doing wrong. It is important to note that “doing wrong” includes not doing right. That is, if we are not doing things we should be doing it is just as bad as doing things we should not be doing. If I fail to help those in need, I am as much of a sinner as a person who murders someone. While the verses about the relationship of good and bad fruit to good and bad trees is not directly related to the teaching about worrying about our own faults, there is a connection. Someone who spends their time focusing on the shortcomings of others will never overcome their own shortcomings. It also provides us with a measuring stick by which we can measure ourselves. Are we producing good fruit? Are we doing the sorts of things which show God’s love to the people around us? Because, if we are not, then we are not only not producing good fruit, we are producing bad fruit.