Diane G. Chen

Luke


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fits the occasion of Jesus’ baptism, with the Holy Spirit descending upon the Son of God, who is commissioned to a kingly role to judge not only Israel but the nations as well.

      Genealogy of Jesus (3:23–38)

      Jesus is about thirty years old at this point of the narrative (3:23a). Joseph was thirty when he became Pharaoh’s second-in-command (Gen 41:46), and David was thirty when he began his reign as king in Hebron (2 Sam 5:4). This is the age of a fully grown man, appropriate for public service (Num 4:3, 23). Here Luke provides another validation of Jesus’ identity and status with an unusually formatted genealogy (3:23b–38). Typically, genealogies trace the lineage of families and legitimize the status of individuals or the kinship group as a whole. When social status is at stake, genealogies tend to put the family’s best foot forward by removing questionable members from the listing of generations.

      Historical conundrum aside, several observations point to the theological impulse behind Luke’s presentation of Jesus’ genealogy in this unusual manner. First, drawing from God’s affirmation of Jesus as the divine Son, the genealogy culminates, after a string of seventy-odd names, in a crescendo to hail Jesus as “son of Adam, [who is] son of God” (3:38). Second, the parenthetical note at the beginning of the list, that Jesus was “the son (as was thought) of Joseph” (3:23), makes a distinction between the reader’s knowledge of Jesus’ divine conception and the ignorance of many in the narrative (4:22). It is as though the author was winking at his readers, saying, “That’s what people think, but you know who Jesus’ real Father is!” Third, on the human level, in spite of the many unrecognizable names in Luke’s genealogy, the naming of Abraham and David supports both Jesus’ Jewish identity and his royal pedigree (3:31, 34). Finally, by taking the names beyond Abraham all the way back to Adam (3:38), Luke situates Jesus in the family of Israel within all humanity. This speaks to Luke’s universalism, that Jesus is Messiah of Israel and Savior of the world.