The Son of Man for all — the Gospel of the outsider and the lost
For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.
Luke 19:10Luke is the longest of the four Gospels and part of a two-volume work (Luke–Acts) that together constitute the largest portion of the New Testament by any single author. Luke was a Gentile physician, a companion of Paul, and the only non-Jewish writer in the New Testament. He writes as a careful historian — his prologue (1:1–4) uses the language of Hellenistic historiography — and his Gospel is addressed to Theophilus, likely a Roman official or patron.
Luke's distinctive emphasis is the universal reach of the gospel. Jesus shows special concern for groups marginalized in first-century Jewish society: women (the most prominent in any Gospel), Samaritans, Gentiles, tax collectors, sinners, and the poor. The three great parables of lostness — the Lost Sheep, the Lost Coin, and the Lost Son (chapter 15) — are unique to Luke and are perhaps the most beloved passages in all of Scripture. Luke's Jesus eats with sinners not despite his holiness but because of it.
The Holy Spirit features more prominently in Luke than in any other Gospel. Luke presents Jesus's entire ministry as Spirit-empowered: conceived by the Spirit, anointed by the Spirit at baptism, led by the Spirit into the wilderness, returning from the wilderness "in the power of the Spirit," announcing in Nazareth that the Spirit of the Lord is upon him. This sets the stage perfectly for Acts, where the Spirit falls on the church at Pentecost and the mission to all nations begins.
2 chapters per day · with Acts as the sequel
Chapter 15 is arguably the greatest chapter in any Gospel. Three linked parables — a shepherd who leaves 99 sheep to find 1 lost one, a woman who sweeps her whole house to find 1 lost coin, and a father who runs toward a returning prodigal — all end with the same image: a party. Heaven rejoices over one sinner who repents. The father in the third parable is the most searching portrait of God in all of literature. He runs — undignified for a Middle Eastern patriarch — he embraces before any confession is complete, he clothes and feasts before any restoration is earned. And then the devastating second act: the older son, who has been there all along, is furious. The parable ends without his answer. The reader must supply it.
Luke's resurrection account includes a story unique to his Gospel: two disciples walking from Jerusalem to Emmaus on Easter afternoon, joined by a stranger who walks with them and expounds all the Scriptures. "Beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning himself." Then at the table, he breaks bread — and their eyes are opened and he vanishes. This is Luke's model of Christian experience: the risen Christ is known in the Word and at the table. It is the pattern of every church gathering since: Scripture explained, then the meal. Emmaus is every Sunday.
Luke records Jesus praying at every major moment: at his baptism (3:21), before choosing the Twelve (6:12), at the Transfiguration (9:29), before teaching the Lord's Prayer (11:1), for Peter at the Last Supper (22:32), in Gethsemane (22:41–44), and on the cross (23:34, 46). No other Gospel so consistently shows us Jesus in prayer. Luke also contains the most prayer parables: the friend at midnight (11:5–8), the persistent widow (18:1–8), the Pharisee and tax collector (18:9–14). Luke's Jesus teaches prayer by practicing it, and practices it at every hinge point of his mission.
Mary's song in Luke 1 is one of the most revolutionary texts in Scripture. Echoing Hannah's prayer (1 Samuel 2) and saturated with the Psalms, it announces the social implications of the Incarnation: God has brought down rulers from their thrones and lifted up the humble; he has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away empty. The Magnificat is not gentle pietism — it is a proclamation of divine reversal. Luke's Gospel enacts what Mary sings: the first to worship are shepherds, not dignitaries; the dinner guests who respond are the poor and lame, not the invited elites. The kingdom of God systematically inverts human hierarchies.