Resurrection Williamsburg Sermons
September 20th Sermon
"Luke is known as the Gospel of the poor and marginalized because he shows more
concern for women, who were the most marginalized group in the first century, and
for those who existed on the bottom rung of Jewish society. Luke alone tells us of
the shepherds who are the first recipients of the good news of the birth of Jesus.
Shepherds were regarded as outcasts in first-century Judaism, barred even from
testifying in a court of law. Only Luke tells of the impoverished baby who sleeps
in a cattle trough. Only Luke tells us the story of the widow of Nain, as well as the
widow who offers both of her remaining coins to the temple treasury. We might
expect that a slave would have longed to see the world turned upside down, and
this is also exactly what we find in Luke’s Gospel. From Mary’s song of the radical
reversal that the coming of Messiah will bring, to the Beatitudes of Jesus, which
announce that those who are laughing now will mourn while the mourners will soon
find reason to laugh, Luke the slave celebrates the coming of Jesus. He longs for
and wonders at the world being turned upside down by this arrival."
MICHAEL CARD, Luke: The Gospel of Amazement
"Glory follows afflictions, not as the day follows the night but as the spring follows
the winter; for the winter prepares the earth for the spring, so do afflictions
sanctified prepare the soul for glory."
-RICHARD SIBBES