Luke 4:14,15 THE GALILEAN SPRINGTIME
Today’s Text
Greetings Today we have another “guest blogger.” This is from Barcley’s (Thanks for the correction Alex!) wonderful and classic series The Daily Study Bible. If your parents or grandparents had a commentary series, this was it.
No sooner had Jesus left the wilderness but He was faced with another decision. He knew that for Him the hour had struck; He had settled once and for all the method which He was going to take. Now He had to decide, Where would He start?
(i) He began in Galilee. Galilee was an area in the north of Palestine about fifty miles from north to south and twentyfive miles from east to west. The name itself means a circle and comes from the Hebrew word Galil. It was so called because it was encircled by non-Jewish nations. Just because of that new influences had always played upon Galilee and it was the most forward-looking and the least conservative part of Palestine. It was an extraordinarily densely populated part of Palestine. Josephus, who was himself at one time governor of the area, says that it had 204 villages or towns, none with a population less than 15,000.
It seems incredible that there could be about 3,000,000 people congregated in Galilee. It was a land of extraordinary fertility. There was a proverb which said that, ” It is easier to raise a legion of olive trees in Galilee than to bring up one child in Judea.” The wonderful climate and the superb water supply made it the garden of Palestine. The very list of trees which grew there shows how amazingly fertile it was-the vine, the olive, the fig, the oak, the walnut, the terebinth, the palm, the cedar, the cypress, the balsam, the fir tree, the pine, the sycamore, the bay tree, the myrtle, the almond, the pomegranate, the citron and the oleander.
The Galileans themselves were the Highlanders of Palestine. Josephus says of them, ” They were ever fond of innovations and by nature disposed to changes, and delighted in seditions. They were ever ready to follow a leader who would begin an insurrection. They were quick in temper and given to quarreling.” ” The Galileans,” it was said, ” have never been destitute of courage.” ” They were ever more anxious for honor than for gain.” So that is the land in which Jesus began. It was His own land; and it would give Him, at least at the beginning, an audience who would listen and kindle at His message.
(ii) He began in the Synagogue. The Synagogue was the real center of religious life in Palestine. There was only one Temple; but the law said that wherever there were ten Jewish families there must be a Synagogue; and so in every town and village it was in the Synagogue that the people met to worship. There were no sacrifices in the Synagogue. The Temple was designed for sacrifice; the Synagogue for teaching. But how could Jesus gain an entry into the Synagogue and how could he, a layman, the carpenter from Nazareth, deliver His message there?
In the Synagogue service there were three parts. (a) The worship part in prayer was offered. (b) The reading of the scriptures. Seven people from the congregation read. As they read the ancient Hebrew, which was no longer widely understood, was translated by the Targumist into Aramaic or Greek, in the case of the Law, one verse at a time, in the case of the prophets three verses at a time. (c) The teaching part of the service. In the Synagogue there was no professional ministry; there was no one person to give the address; the president would invite any distinguished person present to speak and then discussion and talk would follow. That is how Jesus got His chance. The Synagogue and its platform at this stage were open to Him.
(iii) The passage ends by saying that He was held in high
reputation by all. This period of Jesus’ ministry has been called the Galilean springtime. He had come like a breath of the very wind of God. The opposition had not yet crystallised. Men’s hearts were hungry for the word of life, and they had not yet realized what a blow He was to strike at the orthodoxy of His time. A man with a message will always command an audience.
5 Responses to 'Luke 4:14,15 THE GALILEAN SPRINGTIME'
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on June 23rd, 2007 at 6:30 pm
What did the other Judeans think of the Galileans?
on June 23rd, 2007 at 8:23 pm
If I had time to find out the answer to that do you think that I would have brought in a guest blogger?
Just kidding…
I’ll get back to you.
-Ethan
on June 24th, 2007 at 9:35 pm
Daily Study Bible – is that the one by Wm Barclay? My dad had me read akoud from it for family devos one yr
on June 25th, 2007 at 8:36 am
It’s been years since I tackled much Josephus (I remember reading the Whiston transl before the newer ones became widely available), but the wikipedia article touches on his reputation to be less-than-reliable on topics that reflect back on him – perhaps he exagerates a little on Galilee?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavius_Josephus
on June 25th, 2007 at 8:31 pm
I would say that in general wikipedia and Josephus are probably equally reliable.
Basically I would say that you are right that we need to take Josephus with a grain of salt (or as my grandma used to say, “some people you take with a grain of salt, and for others you get out the whole shaker.”)
Unlike Barcley who is willing to trust his specifics, I am more interested in his general impressions and the degree to which he may verify other sources.
As to your first question regarding Judean opinion of the northern regions during this period, I can find no primary source that gives uss more information than we get form scripture itself, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth.”)