Having
read the Gospel, I am inclined to look at the presentation of Jesus by Luke in
the following perspectives.

The
son of the widow of Nain is restored to life (7:11-17), the woman suffering
from a hemorrhage, whom no one had been able to cure is healed (8: 43-48);
Jairus’ daughter is raised to life (8:49-56); healed a crippled woman
(13:10-13). Hence in almost all the curing miracles Jesus is presented as a
restorer of life, restoring men back to wholeness and freedom.
Jesus visits and Redeems:‘God
has visited his people’ (7:17). Jesus visits John the Baptist and his visit to
him made him leap for joy (1:44). The visit of Jesus always brings joy and
salvation. Besides, one is invited to live in awareness of having met the Lord
who affirms our identity as redeemed people. He visits the tax collectors and
sinners (15:1ff). He visits Zachaeus and tells him, “today salvation has come
to this house” (19:9). He forgives the sinful woman and assures her, ‘your sins
are forgiven’ and affirms her faith and commands her to go in peace (7:49-50).
In a sense He not only visits but stays for a while and takes everyone to the
threshold of redemption. He visits the saddened and disappointed disciples on their
way to Emmaus. He stays with them opens their eyes beyond their misery to a
realized meaningfulness in Jesus, especially in the breaking of the bread
(24:30-32).

A Praying Jesus: Luke
presents to us a Jesus who is always connected to his father. Jesus’ Baptism
took place in the context of prayer (3:21). A prayerful person is always filled
with the spirit of God. Jesus was filled with the Holy Spirit (4:1) and he was
able to assert his identity as the Son of God withstanding temptations. The
disciples are chosen in the context of spending whole night in prayer (6:12). Jesus
is transfigured before his disciples in the context of prayer (9:28). Jesus is an
epitome of Abba experience. He experienced the deep love of his father in
prayer. Jesus relates to God as ‘Father’ (Lk 10: 21-22). He teaches his
disciples to pray (11:1-4). He teaches them about the effectiveness of prayer
and promises the disciples that the heavenly Father will give the Holy Spirit
to those who ask him in prayer (11:13). He teaches through the example of the
Pharisee and the tax collector that prayer is not self assertion of what one
has done in verbatim but an honest admission of what one is (18:9-14). Jesus
teaches that prayer is a relationship with God, giving yourself to the Father
in humble surrender. This is manifested in Jesus at Gethsemane - ‘in his
anguish he prayed even more earnestly and his sweat fell to the ground like
great drops of blood’ (22:44).
Compassionate and Merciful: Jesus
has a preferential option for the marginalized, oppressed, the poor and the
outcast. For Jesus compassion is changing the situation. This is evident in the
event where Jesus restores to life the son the widow of Nain (7:11-17). In
Biblical understanding, the widow is a person who is left without a husband or
a son. In the case of the widow of Nain, she is without any support if her son dies.
Hence Jesus changes the situation by restoring him to life. Jesus himself
teaches his disciples to ‘be compassionate just as your Father is
compassionate’ (6:36). In compassion there is no judgment of the past or
present action of the individual but acceptance of the whole person. Jesus
allowed the sinful woman to anoint his feet and wipe his feet with her hair,
though the Pharisees condemned her (7:36ff). The parable of the prodigal son
(15:11-32) gives us the crux of the aspects of compassion. It is out of his
compassion that he brings wholeness to all the people suffering from all
infirmities. It was his compassion for the sinners that he dines with them and
accepts the scorn of his adversaries.

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