Luke - Writer & Gospel


Beloved Luke

The Writer & his Gospel

led by Dom Brendan Thomas


Online Tuesday 15th February



Online Timetable for those joining live by Zoom

From 10.15 connect via Zoom to begin at:

10.30am LIVE  Opening prayers and introduction. 

AM & PM VIDEO REFLECTIONS – Watch at your own time (videos will be on this page).

4.00pm LIVE  Connecting with Zoom for final thoughts, conversation and closing prayer.

5.55pm LIVE  To conclude with Vespers.



  • Welcome

    Welcome to this online reflection on St Luke's Gospel. The aim is to take a broad look at the themes of the Gospel to help us appreciate it more, as week by week we go through it as the Sunday Gospel for Year C.


    The French Scholar Ernest Renan called it 'the most beautiful book ever written.' 


    Perhaps we are too familiar with it to say that, but for a work that gives us such a tender portrait of Jesus, and who gives us both the story of the Prodigal Son and the Good Samaritan, it is certainly up there with the best.


    I don't go into those two parables at any length, in order to focus on the broard themes. But I hope thought these talks you come to love Luke's Gospel more, as week by week we go through it as the Sunday Gospel for Year C.


    Many blessings,

    Fr Brendan


  • The Prayer of St Luke

    Lord God, who chose Saint Luke

    to reveal by his preaching and writings

    the mystery of your love for the poor,

    grant that those who already glory in your name

    may persevere as one heart and one soul

    and that all nations may merit to see your salvation.

    Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,

    who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, for ever and ever.


    The collect for the feast of St Luke, 18th October




Video 1: Introduction



Video 2: Who Was Luke?


  • Luke's Lively Parables

    Rather than focus on the much loved parables of the Good Samaritan and Prodigal Son, two quite less familiar parables might give us some insight into St Luke's lively story-telling. 


    You might take a pause to read these before the next videos, to ask what Jesus might be saying to us in his telling of these parables.

  • The Parable of the Unjust Judge: Luke 18:1-8


    Jesus told his disciples a parable about the need to pray continually and never lose heart. ‘There was a judge in a certain town’ he said ‘who had neither fear of God nor respect for man. In the same town there was a widow who kept on coming to him and saying, “I want justice from you against my enemy!” For a long time he refused, but at last he said to himself, “Maybe I have neither fear of God nor respect for man, but since she keeps pestering me I must give this widow her just rights, or she will persist in coming and worry me to death.”’


        And the Lord said ‘You notice what the unjust judge has to say? Now will not God see justice done to his chosen who cry to him day and night even when he delays to help them? I promise you, he will see justice done to them, and done speedily. But when the Son of Man comes, will he find any faith on earth?’


  • The Parable of the Unjust Steward: Luke 16:1-13

    Jesus said to his disciples:


        ‘There was a rich man and he had a steward denounced to him for being wasteful with his property. He called for the man and said, “What is this I hear about you? Draw me up an account of your stewardship because you are not to be my steward any longer.” Then the steward said to himself, “Now that my master is taking the stewardship from me, what am I to do? Dig? I am not strong enough. Go begging? I should be too ashamed. Ah, I know what I will do to make sure that when I am dismissed from office there will be some to welcome me into their homes.”


        Then he called his master’s debtors one by one. To the first he said, “How much do you owe my master?” “One hundred measures of oil” was the reply. The steward said, “Here, take your bond; sit down straight away and write fifty.” To another he said, “And you, sir, how much do you owe?” “One hundred measures of wheat” was the reply. The steward said, “Here, take your bond and write eighty.”


        ‘The master praised the dishonest steward for his astuteness. For the children of this world are more astute in dealing with their own kind than are the children of light.


        ‘And so I tell you this: use money, tainted as it is, to win you friends, and thus make sure that when it fails you, they will welcome you into the tents of eternity. The man who can be trusted in little things can be trusted in great; the man who is dishonest in little things will be dishonest in great. If then you cannot be trusted with money, that tainted thing, who will trust you with genuine riches? And if you cannot be trusted with what is not yours, who will give you what is your very own?

      

      ‘No servant can be the slave of two masters: he will either hate the first and love the second, or treat the first with respect and the second with scorn. You cannot be the slave both of God and of money.’







Video 3: Feasting in Luke


Video 4: Luke's Unlikely Evangelists


Video 5: Luke's Passion Story


There is so much more to look at in Luke. For a consideration of Luke's Resurrection Stories, why not follow the Stations of the Resurrection in Eastertide? And Luke's Infancy stories in Advent?

Video 6:  The Great Themes of Luke's Gospel




There is so much more to look at in Luke. For a consideration of Luke's Resurrection Stories, why not follow the Stations of the Resurrection in Eastertide? And Luke's Infancy stories in Advent?

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