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Written by Luke
24 chapters · 235 min read
60s-80s AD
(and by extension, educated readers)
To give an orderly, well-researched account of Jesus' life for non-Jewish readers
Luke is the most detailed gospel — written by a physician who conducted thorough research. He emphasizes Jesus' compassion for outsiders: women, the poor, , and everyone society overlooked. If wrote for Jews and for Romans, Luke wrote for everyone else. It is part one of a two-part work — Acts continues directly where Luke ends.
Mary's song isn't a lullaby — it's a revolution set to music, describing a God who pulls down the powerful and fills the hungry while sending the rich away empty.
Luke 1 — When God Broke the Silence
Peter didn't leave fishing on a bad day — he walked away on his best day, dropping the biggest catch of his life because he recognized something worth more than success.
Luke 5 — Nets, Roofs, and the Authority Nobody Expected
Jesus asked 'Who do you say I am?' — not a theological quiz but a personal commitment that still won't let anyone stay neutral.
Luke 9 — The Question That Changes Everything
Jesus refuses to explain why tragedies happen — instead he turns the question back on the crowd: stop using other people's pain to feel safe about your own standing.
Luke 13 — Tragedy, Trees, and Tiny Seeds
Micah named Bethlehem. Not Jerusalem. Not Nazareth. A tiny, unremarkable town.
A handful of historical facts about Jesus that almost every New Testament scholar accepts — including the atheists. The only question is what explains them.
The actual ancient documents behind the Bible.
More manuscript evidence than any ancient text in history. The data is worth examining.
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The kingdom of God was standing right in front of the Pharisees while they asked when it would arrive — most people miss it because they're looking for something louder.
Luke 17 — The Kingdom Nobody Saw Coming