Luke 4 · WEB
Temptation, Rejection at Nazareth, and Ministry in Galilee
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Summary
After his baptism, Jesus is led by the Spirit into the wilderness, where he fasts forty days and rebuffs three temptations from the devil with quotations from Deuteronomy. Returning to Galilee in the Spirit's power, he announces his messianic mission in his hometown synagogue at Nazareth by reading from Isaiah 61, but the townspeople reject him and try to throw him off a cliff. He moves on to Capernaum, where he teaches with authority, casts out a demon, heals Simon's mother-in-law, and ministers to many sick at sundown before traveling to preach throughout Galilee.
Themes
- Resisting temptation through Scripture
- Jesus as the anointed fulfillment of prophecy
- Rejection by the familiar, reception by the outsider
- Authority over demons and disease
- The Kingdom proclaimed beyond one town
Key verses
- Luke 4:18 — “The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to heal the broken hearted, to proclaim release to the captives, recovering of sight to the blind, to deliver those who are crushed,”
- Luke 4:24 — “Most certainly I tell you, no prophet is acceptable in his hometown.”
- Luke 4:4 — “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word of God.”
- Luke 4:43 — “I must preach the good news of God's Kingdom to the other cities also. For this reason I have been sent.”
Context & background
Luke, a physician and companion of Paul, wrote his Gospel c. AD 60-80, emphasizing Jesus' compassion for the poor, women, Gentiles, and outcasts. The wilderness of the temptation is the arid Judean desert west of the Jordan River and Dead Sea in modern Israel/Palestine. Nazareth, a small village in lower Galilee in northern Israel, was built on a ridge with cliff-like drops at its southern edge — fitting the attempted lynching. Capernaum, on the north shore of the Sea of Galilee in modern Israel, became Jesus' base of operations for his Galilean ministry; archaeologists have uncovered both its ancient synagogue and a house traditionally identified as Peter's.
Cross-references
- 1 Kings 17:8-16 — Elijah and the widow of Zarephath, cited as a Gentile receiving God's mercy.
- 2 Kings 5:1-14 — Naaman the Syrian cleansed of leprosy, another Gentile recipient of grace.
- Deuteronomy 8:3 — Source of Jesus' first reply: man does not live by bread alone.
- Isaiah 61:1-2 — The passage Jesus reads and claims to fulfill at Nazareth.
- Matthew 4:1-11; Mark 1:12-13 — Parallel accounts of the wilderness temptation.