15 - The Homecoming of Jesus

Luke 4:14-30

May 5, 2024 • Pastor Ronald H. Gann • Luke 4:14–30

The Jews of Nazareth, in Jesus' hometown, demanded miracles from him when he returned after a full year ministering down in Judea. They wanted miracles from Jesus but what they got instead was a lecture, and a most unpalatable one at that. Rebuking their unbelief (cf. Mark 6:6), Jesus invoked the Old Testament stories of the widow in Zarephath and Naaman the leper, turning the synagogue crowd against him. They took umbrage with him when he read aloud Isaiah 61:1-2 and 58:6 and applied those texts to himself, but they were fit to be tied when he invoked the stories of the Gentile window and leper as a rebuke. To suggest that God would favor Gentiles (who repent) over natural-born Jews who didn't was both unthinkable and unforgivable to them. But Jesus miraculously escaped their murderous intent to throw him off a cliff. 

More from Luke

20 - The Lord of the Lame

June 16, 2024 • Pastor Ronald H. Gann • Luke 5:17–26

Far more scandalous than the fact that God’s forgiveness comes only through Jesus Christ is the fact that forgiveness comes only from Jesus Christ. And that Jesus has the authority to forgive sins, and repeatedly did so while he walked the earth, may not seem controversial today. But for the Jews in the first century, it was the height of blasphemy. For the paralytic in Luke 5 who was brought to Jesus for healing, the Lord could see the deeper, more significant problem this man faced—his need for forgiveness. Obviously, the man wanted to be physically healed, which the Lord graciously obliged, but Jesus addressed his more serious ailment first. 

01 - Introduction - The Son of Man

December 17, 2023 • Pastor Ronald H. Gann • Luke 1:1–4

Luke wrote his gospel from the perspective of a Gentile writing to another Gentile, named Theophilus, about Jesus being the Son of Man. Despite his anonymity, we see in the first four verses of his prologue a few elements that hint at, or point to, the type of Christian man that Luke was. They are both implicit and explicit. In addition to being a physician (Col. 4:14), Luke is revealed to be a biographer, a historian, and a theologian who took it upon himself to write the most expansive, complete, and thorough gospel on greatest story ever told—the life and ministry of Jesus Christ.

02 - The Parents of John the Baptist

December 31, 2023 • Pastor Ronald H. Gann • Luke 1:5–13, Luke 1:18–25

In writing to Theophilus, it was essential that Luke begin the saga of salvation with the forerunner, John the Baptist. His story is the tie that binds the Old and New testament together. He’s the last of the prophets to come the order of the Old Testament but the first to grace the pages of the New Testament. Most significantly, the story of John the Baptist established that he was in fact the divinely prophesied forerunner to the Messiah. His testimony concerning Jesus, therefore, carried a lot of weight and verified that Jesus was in fact the Christ. And John’s story first begins with his godly parents, an aged priest named Zechariah and his barren wife Elizabeth, and how God broke 400 years of silence in Israel with a personal revelation to them about the miraculous birth of their son that was to soon come.