Archive | April 2026

Reading the Gospels in 2026: (4/7) Luke 8:16-39

A 5-day per week study.

April 7 – Reading Luke 8:16-39

Read and believe in Jesus.

“”  Luke

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The Gospel according to Luke 8:16-39

Review – In the last study, women follow Jesus and use their resources to support the group. Jesus’ teaching is now in parables as both a judgment and a mercy. The parable of the Sower/Soils puzzles the disciples, but Jesus explains it to them.

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Vss. 19-21.

Jesus is surrounded by crowds, no matter which town or village he goes to.  He is healing and teaching, although now more in veiled parables.

  1. He ended the Parable of the Sower/Soils by describing the “good” soil as “Those who, hearing the word, hold it fast in an honest and good heart, AND bear fruit with patience.”

While He is teaching, Jesus’ mother (Mary) and his brothers come to him. But they cannot get TO Him because of the crowd. We know from other accounts that Mary is concerned about Him because he doesn’t even take time to eat. (Sounds like a mom, right?)  Perhaps she brought his half-siblings along to maybe physically take him aside to eat.

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Yes, Jesus had brothers and sisters.  These are those who were born AFTER Jesus’ virgin birth.  They had Mary as their mom, but Joseph was their birth father, unlike Jesus.

(NOTE: Both Matthew 13:55-56 and Mark 6:3 give the names of the brothers: James (who became the leader of the Jerusalem church and wrote a book by that name), Joseph, Simon, and Judas (or Jude), who also wrote a book in the New Testament – that shortie right before The Revelation.  Matthew mentions “all” of Jesus’ sisters, so He had at least three, although they are not named.)

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Jesus loved and respected His mother, but since his ministry, and eventually the way to the cross, began, His family had to take a secondary position.  He was now “Messiah,” “Savior,” and “Redeemer.”  Faith, not family, was primary.

  1. Jesus said to those who were telling Him His family was summoning Him, “My mother and my brothers are those who HEAR the word of God and DO it.”
  2. This was the point he made with that Parable. It was also something His brother, James, remembered.  In James’ letter (1:22), the church leader wrote, “Be ye doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves.”

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Vss. 22-25.

After this, and to get some rest and alone time with His disciples, Jesus suggested, “Let us go across to the other side of the lake.”

As soon as they set out, Jesus fell asleep on the bench at the back of the boat.

  • The disciples took turns rowing.
  • The wind freshened, then started to blow in earnest. It whipped up the waves, and they began to wash over the sides of the boat.
  • The disciples bucketed out the water, but they couldn’t do it fast enough, and the water level rose. The boat sank deeper into the Sea.
  • They were in serious danger!
  • One sloshed to the back of the boat, shaking Jesus. “MASTER, MASTER, we are perishing!”
  • Jesus sat up and rebuked the wind and the raging waves.
  • Both ceased, and there was a calm.
  • Silence and awe.
  • Jesus, “Where is your faith?”
  • They whispered among themselves, “Who then is this, that He commands even the winds and water and they obey Him?”

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The disciples were about to meet ANOTHER crazy whirlwind and dangerous, angry storm as soon as they reached the other side of the Lake.  A wild, dangerous demoniac. Jesus’ words would once again bring calm and peace.

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Vss. 26-39.

AS SOON AS they stepped out of the boat, the crazy, naked, menacing, demon-possessed man met them. (Talk about stepping out of the frying pan and into the fire!)

This poor man had been uncontrollable, both by himself and by the men of the town.  They had restrained him, but he broke the shackles and ran around naked in the graveyard, screaming and cutting himself.

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(This is a picture of Satan and what he would love to do to us all.  Praise God that Jesus defeated him, not only in the wilderness temptations, but would do once and for all on the cross.)

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  • The demons in the man slammed him down to the ground before Jesus. (They had no choice.)
  • Jesus commanded the demon(s) to come out.
  • “What have you to do with me, Jesus, Son of the Most High God? I beg you, do not torment me!”
  • “What is your name?” Jesus demanded.
  • “Legion, for we are many,” they said and begged Jesus not to send them into the Abyss.”

(NOTE: The Abyss was the pit, the underworld, the prison of bound demons who disobeyed. 2 Peter 2:4 adds about fallen angels, “God committed them to chains of gloomy darkness to be kept until the judgment.”)

  • Jesus instead commanded that this “legion” of demons be sent into a large herd of pigs nearby. The swine promptly ran over the cliff and perished in the lake.
  • This, of course, upset the swineherds and the townspeople, and they asked Jesus to “depart from them.” This, even though the former demon-possessed man was now sitting at the feet of Jesus, fully clothed, “in his right mind.”

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(We haven’t heard a peep out of the disciples. Were they standing around, first in fear, then in awe, then in amazement?  Did they ask themselves again, “Who then is this that a legion of demons obey Him?”)

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The released, whole, and sane former slave to Satan begged Jesus that he might go with Him.  But Jesus told the “new disciple” to return to his home and “declare how much God has done for you.”  

Saved, freed, and now a witness and preacher in his own hometown. “And he went away, proclaiming throughout the whole city how much Jesus had done for him.”

Again, one who heard, believed, and became a “doer of the Word.”

 

Reading the Gospels in 2026: (4/6) Luke 8:1-15

A 5-day per week study.

April 6 – Reading Luke 8:1-15

Read and believe in Jesus.

“They are those who, hearing the word, hold it fast in an honest and good heart, and bear fruit with patience.”  Luke 8:15

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The Gospel according to Luke 8:1-15

Review – While Jesus was at a pompous Simon’s home, a “woman of the city” came and fell at Jesus feet, wetting them with her tears and anointing them with ointment. Simon was disgusted. The woman was forgiven and saved by her faith. Jesus sees hearts.

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Vss, 1-3.

After leaving Simon’s house, Jesus went on through cities and villages proclaiming and bringing the good news of the kingdom of God.  The TWELVE disciples were with Him, AND ALSO some women who had been healed of evil spirits and infirmities,

Luke – perhaps because he was a physician – often highlighted, or at least provided more detail about, the women Jesus interacted with than the other Gospel writers did. Here, he names three, but there were “many others” who followed Jesus.

  1. There was Mary, called Magdalene (because she was from the lakeside town of Magdala). Jesus cast out seven demons from her. (And no, this does not mean she was a prostitute, not the woman of the city in the previous account in Luke 7.)
  2. Joanna is an interesting and independent woman. Her husband, Chuza, was King Herod’s household manager. They were probably a wealthy couple, but I wonder how she met Jesus. Was she healed of some horrible disease?  (She could have been the one who supplied Luke with the details of Herod’s house in Luke 23:8 and 12.)
  3. And there was Susanna. This gal is mentioned nowhere else in scripture. Perhaps she was someone Luke knew personally.

These women “provided for Jesus and the Twelve out of their own means.”

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Vss. 4-8.

Here is when Jesus’ ministry takes a turn.  Up until now, He has been teaching plainly about the Kingdom of God. (The sermon on the mount, etc.).  NOW, Jesus begins to use parables to teach.

WE kind of like parables. We like to think about and even debate their meanings. We often teach them to children.

**** However, unlike the analogies Jesus used (you are salt of the earth, light of the world, etc.), parables required more explanation.  Jesus used them to “obscure the truth from unbelievers.”  Doing this was both a judgment and a mercy. They “loved the dark and had rejected the light,” and more truth would only add more condemnation.

Even the disciples were not sure what Jesus meant by these stories.  They would often ask Him the meaning in private, and, of course, Jesus would explain it to them.

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This first one is very well known. The Parable of the Sower (or sometimes, the Soils) would have resonated with the local farmers. They knew this happened to the seeds that they cast out in sweeping arcs from the bags.  They knew that not all the seed germinated and produced a crop.

BUT what the seed and the soil stood for, and what those hinderances to a plentiful crop signified in Jesus’ teaching, was beyond them.

  1. Some seed fell along the path and was trampled underfoot, and the birds of the air devoured it.
  2. Some fell on the rock, and as it grew up, it withered away, because it had no moisture.
  3. Some seed fell among thorns, and the thorns grew up with it and choked it.
  4. Some seed fell into good soil and grew and yielded a hundredfold.

Jesus ended the parable with, “He who has ears to HEAR, let him hear.”

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Vss. 9-10.

When the disciples asked Him what He meant, Jesus said, “To YOU it has been given to know the secrets of the kingdom of God, but FOR OTHERS they are in parables … so that seeing they may not see and hearing they may not understand.”

Now this seems hard for us to take in. Doesn’t Jesus want the crowds to know and understand the truths He’s teaching?

Well, yes, but hardened hearts do not WANT to understand. They figuratively put up their hands and turn away from the truth. The religious leaders are prime examples.  Jesus quotes Isaiah 6:9, where God blinds unbelievers.

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Vss. 11-15.

Then He explains the parable to His disciples.

  1. The seed is the Word of God.
  2. The “packed-down” soil along the path that gets seed but does not take it in are those who have heard, but the devil comes and takes it away from their hearts so they may not believe and be saved.
  3. The soil on the rocks also receives seed, and perhaps the seed springs up quickly “with joy” (it sounds good, but they don’t really apply it to their heart). When testing coms, they fall away.
  4. The thorny soil seems to take in the truth, but the “thorns” (cares, riches, pleasures of life) soon choke out the precious Gospel truth, and they do not mature.
  5. The good soil represents those who hear the word, hold it fast in an honest and good heart, and bear fruit with patience.

Ah, it seems so clear after Jesus explains it.

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Vss. 16-18.

Jesus says that even though He was now teaching in parables, His message WAS NOT meant to be kept secret for a few elite disciples.

The LIGHT is to be put on a lampstand so it can be seen.   STILL, only those “with eyes to see” will see it.

And then that cryptic message: To the one who HAS, MORE will be given, and from the one who HAS NOT, even what he thinks that he has WILL BE TAKEN AWAY.

(Those who scorn the light of the Gospel NOW, will have all light removed from them in eternity…..)

 

Reading the Gospels in 2026: (4/3) Luke 7:36-50

A 5-day per week study.

April 3 – Reading Luke 7:26-50

Read and believe in Jesus.

“…her sins, which were many, are forgiven, for she loved much.”  Luke 7:47

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The Gospel according to Luke 7:36-50

Review – John the Baptist is in prison, discouraged by what he hears is happening. Where is the fiery Messiah who was coming to judge evil? Jesus didn’t seem to be doing that. He sent his disciples to ask if He was “the One.” Jesus replied with a flurry of miracles and a reminder of Isaiah 29:18-19, which John KNEW by heart. Yes. Jesus WAS the One.

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Vss. 30, 36.
Remember yesterday that Jesus was very harsh in his rebuke of the Pharisees, having “rejected the purpose of God for themselves.” He compared them to bratty little children.Nevertheless, when one of them invited Jesus to eat at his house, Jesus went with him. His name was Simon, and he doesn’t appear to be sympathetic to Jesus.  Could this Pharisee’s “ulterior motive” have been to entrap Jesus in some way?Jesus took His place reclining at the table, and the food and drink were served. Simon watched Jesus.  Jesus watched Simon. Then a very unusual thing happened.

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Vss. 37-38.

A “woman of the city,” (a nice way to say a prostitute), came into Simon’s house.  (Had she been there before under “other “circumstances?)  It’s weird that the servants would just let her into this prominent man’s home.

But in she came and headed right for Jesus – his feet, to be exact. She’d brought an alabaster flask of ointment.

(NOTE: This is not the same woman as in Mark 14:3-9.  In THAT case, the woman was Mary, sister of Martha; it was in Bethany, and during Passion Week. THAT Simon was an ex-leper, not a Pharisee.)

Standing, then kneeling behind Jesus, weeping, she began to wet his feet with her tears and wipe them with her hair. She kissed his feet and anointed them with the ointment.  (We will see that Jesus’ feet were still dusty from the road because Simon had not even had a servant wash them when he came in.)

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Vss. 39-43.

Simon’s thoughts about this woman and Jesus might have been evident by the look of disdain and disgust on his face.

If this man were a prophet,

He would have known who and what sort of woman this is who is touching Him,

for she is a sinner.”

Jesus KNEW his thoughts and said to Simon, “Simon, I have something to say to you.”

Simon: “Say it, Teacher.”

Jesus tells him a little story: “A certain moneylender had two debtors. One owed 500 denarii and the other owed 50. When they could not pay, he canceled both debts.  Now, which of them will love him more?”

Simon: “The one, I suppose, for whom he canceled the larger debt.”

Jesus: “You judged rightly.”

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Vss. 44-50.

Jesus turned to look at the woman while continuing to speak to Simon: “Do you see this woman?

  • I entered your house; YOU gave me no water for my feet, but SHE has wet my feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair.
  • YOU gave me no kiss, but from the time I came in, SHE has not ceased to kiss my feet.
  • YOU did not anoint my head with oil, but SHE has anointed my feet with ointment.
  • Therefore, I tell you, HER sins, which are many, are forgiven for she loved much. But HE who was forgiven little (YOU, Simon) loves little.”

Then Jesus turned to the woman and told her quietly, “YOUR sins are forgiven. Your faith has saved you. Go in peace.”

“Who is this that says He can forgive sins?” grumbled the other guests at Simon’s table.

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WHO indeed?  And HOW?

Because Jesus is God. 

Because, although His death on the cross had not yet happened in “time,” it had been ordained from eternity past. Jesus carried this woman’s many sins on Him at the cross, just as he’s carried yours and mine, if our hearts have repented of sin and we trust in Him for redemption.

**** Think on this today, on “Good Friday” and “Passover,” and look to Jesus, the Lamb of God, with his blood given for us. Remember also His glorious resurrection, which shows for all time that God accepted HIS death in payment in full for OUR sin debt.

Reading the Gospels in 2026: (4/2) Luke 7:18-35

A 5-day per week study.

April 2 – Reading Luke 7:18-35

Read and believe in Jesus.

“”  Luke

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The Gospel according to Luke 7:18-35

Review – A godly Centurion showed great faith, and Jesus healed his servant from afar with just a word. Then Jesus “saw” the widow in the middle of two huge crowds, came to her, and restored her dead son to her alive. The people feared, glorified God, and spread the news far and wide.

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Vss. 18-20.

John the Baptist is in Herod’s prison. His disciples come, bring food, and tell him of the news. They give John some of these wild reports about Jesus that have been circulating through Galilee and Judea. They tell him of His miracles and compassion for hurting people, and of His teachings about love … especially for their enemies.

From the beginning, John had preached a message of coming judgment (“The One is coming who will baptise you with fire!  The axe is laid to the roots of unfruitful trees! He will burn the chaff with unquenchable fire! Repent of your wicked ways!”).

 But, Jesus, whom John baptised, was not judging evil. Forgive and love your enemies?  Huh??

(Have you ever been confused about God, Jesus, and the Bible? Have you had questions that needed to be answered?  Did current struggles ever make you doubt?)

John sent a couple of his disciples to Jesus with this question, “Are You the One who is to come, or shall we look for another?”

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Vss. 21-23.

Jesus, instead of immediately answering John’s question with “Of course I am the One,” began a flurry of healings and casting out demons. Diseases were cured, plagues removed, and the blind were made to see.

Then Jesus tells John’s disciples this: “Go and tell John what you have seen and heard: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, the poor have good news preached to them.”

What was Jesus saying?

He was preaching the scriptures (that John knew so well) back to this questioning servant of God.  This was Isaiah 29:18-19, the Messianic passage that tells of the FIRST part of the Coming One’s ministry (the part before the verses about judgment).

This very passage in Isaiah was the one Jesus read in the synagogue at the beginning of His ministry, then sat down and said, “Today this is fulfilled in your sight.”

Jesus knew that John would recognise the passage and be reassured.  Judgment WAS coming, later, but first the message of Good News, confirmed by miracles.

(And when we are unsure, doubting, questioning, this is what WE should do.  Go to God’s word and ask Him to help us see more clearly.)

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Vss. 24-30.

After John’s disciples left with the visual and verbal message, Jesus turned to the crowd.

  • “What did you go out into the wilderness to see? A reed shaken by the wind?
  • What then did you go out to see? A man dressed in soft clothing? Behold, those who are dressed in splendid clothing and live in luxury are in kings’ courts! 
  • What then did you go out to see? A prophet?  I tell you, and MORE than a prophet.”

Then Jesus quotes Malachi 3:1. “Behold, I send my messenger before your face, who will prepare your way before you.”

Then Jesus continues, “I tell you, among those born of women, none is greater than John. Yet the one who is least in the kingdom of God is greater than he.”

When the people heard this, and the tax collectors too, they declared God JUST, having been baptised with the baptism of John.

But the Pharisees and lawyers REJECTED “the purpose of God” for themselves, not having been baptised by him.

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Vss. 31-35.

Jesus looked at the self-righteous religious leaders and compared them to children sitting in the marketplace, taunting each other.

  • ‘We played the flute, and you didn’t dance.’
  • ‘We sang a dirge, and you did not weep.‘

Jesus uses strong language to rebuke the Pharisees. He’s suggesting they were behaving childishly, determined NOT to be pleased with any outcome.

  • John the Baptist came, eating no bread and drinking no wine, and you say He has a demon.
  • The Son of Man has come eating and drinking, and you say, he is a glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax collectors and sinners!

“Wisdom is justified by all her children.” (True wisdom is vindicated by what it produces.)

The real problem with the Pharisees and scribes was the corruption of their own hearts, but they wouldn’t acknowledge that.

Reading the Gospels in 2026: (4/1) Luke 7:1-17

A 5-day per week study.

April 1 – Reading Luke 7:1-17

Read and believe in Jesus.

“I tell you, not even in Israel have I found such faith.”  Luke 7:9b

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The Gospel according to Luke 7:1-17

Review – Jesus taught about LOVE: our enemies and each other (possible only with the indwelling Holy Spirit). He gave three illustrations: 1) A man with a speck of sawdust in his eye, and ME with a log in mine. 2) Two trees, bearing good or bad fruit, and what our hearts produce. 3) And two homebuilders with different foundations (knowing Christ or not) and different results in a storm (safety or destruction).

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Vss. 1-10.

From teaching on the hillside, Jesus goes into the town of Capernaum.

There was a Roman Centurion living there who “loved Israel” and had, in fact, built the synagogue for the Jews.

(He reminds me of the Centurian, Cornelius, in Acts 10, who loved God, and after Peter preached to him, was saved and filled with the Holy Spirit, and many in his house.)

This Centurion is unnamed, but his faith is strong as well. Knowing how Jews feel about entering a gentile home, he sends some elders to “Rabbi Jesus” to ask for healing for his deathly ill servant.  They plead his cause earnestly, saying that He’s worthy.” And Jesus goes with them.

But near the Centurion’s home, they are met by some of his friends with the message, “Lord, do not trouble yourself, for I am not worthy to have you come under my roof.”

He tells Jesus that he’s a man of authority, and at his word, soldiers and servants obey. He sees Jesus with just such authority.  “Say the word and let my servant be healed.” And Jesus does. And from that moment, the servant is healed.

Then Jesus, marveling at this, turns to the crowd and says, “I tell you, not even in Israel have I found such faith.”

(Matthew’s account says Jesus adds these words, “Many will come from the east and the west and recline at the table with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven, while the sons of the kingdom will be thrown into the outer darkness.”)

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Vss. 11-17.

Soon afterward, Jesus, His disciples, and “a great crowd” go from Capernaum to a town called Nain, about 35 miles south-west of Capernaum.

As they got near the gate to the town, “a considerable crowd” was coming out of the city. It was a funereal procession. The only son of a widow was being carried out in an open bier to the graveyard.

Imagine the chaos when these two huge crowds met and mingled outside the gates to Nain.  But still … JESUS SAW THE WIDOW.  Yes, she was in black, but many mourners were too.  Yes, she was weeping, but mourners wept and wailed all around.  Jesus’s eyes and heart were drawn to that woman. Such empathy and compassion!

With no husband and no children to support her, she would probably become destitute, a beggar. Fear and despair mingled with her sorrow.

Jesus came near to her and said, “Don’t cry.

Then Jesus TOUCHED the open coffin (officially in the eyes of the Jews, making Him “ceremonially unclean”). The procession stopped. Jesus said to the dead body of the widow’s son, “Arise.”  It was a command.

The dead man sat up and began to speak.

Imagine the astonishment! The fear! The people stumbling backward!  The rubbing of eyes in disbelief!

And gentle/powerful, kind/and kingly, Jesus “gave the boy to his mother.”

Fear seized them all, and they glorified God, saying, “A great prophet has arisen among us!” and “God has visited his people!”

That last statement was truer than they realized. Immanuel (God with us) was indeed there.

And yet another “report” about Jesus’ miracles went out through the surrounding country.

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(NOTE: The town of Shunem was just a couple of miles away.  This is where (800 years earlier) the great prophet Elisha stayed with a wealthy family when traveling.  The barren couple had asked him to pray for a son, and God answered his prayer.  Later, the couple’s son died, and when Elisha prayed, he was revived.   Surely, this was what was in the minds of the people of Nain when they said, “A great prophet has arisen among us!”   But so much greater was Jesus, the Son of God.)