Luke, the writer of the
Gospel and the Acts of the Apostles, has been identified with St. Paul's
"Luke, the beloved physician". He was born in Antioch in Syria, a
Greek and a Gentile. Luke's gospel shows special sensitivity to Gentiles. It is
only in his gospel that we hear the parable of the Good Samaritan, that we hear
Jesus praising the faith of Gentiles and the story of the one grateful leper
who is a Samaritan. Luke was also known to be a doctor. In our day, it would be
easy to assume that someone who was a doctor was rich, but scholars have argued
that Luke might have been born a slave. Not only do we have Paul's word, but St
Jerome, Eusebius and St Irenaeus all refer to Luke as a physician.
We have to go to Acts to follow the trail of
Luke's Christian ministry. We are grateful for St Luke who followed St Paul on
his missionary journeys and recorded with great detail what St Paul did between
51 until 65 AD. Luke is the loyal comrade who stays with Paul when he is
shipwrecked on Malta in 60 AD, and later imprisoned in Rome a year later. And
after everyone else deserts Paul in his final imprisonment and sufferings, it
is Luke who remains with Paul to the end: "Only Luke is with me,"
Paul writes to Timothy.
Luke's unique perspective on Jesus can be seen in
the 6 miracles and 18 parables not found in the other gospels. Luke's is the
gospel of the poor and of social justice. He is the one who tells the story of
Lazarus and the rich man who ignored him. Luke is the one who uses
"Blessed are the poor" instead of "Blessed are the poor in
spirit" in the beatitudes. Luke also has a special connection with the
women in Jesus' life, especially Mary. It is only in Luke's gospel that we hear
the story of the Annunciation, Mary's visit to Elizabeth, the Presentation, and
the story of Jesus' disappearance in Jerusalem. It is Luke that we have to
thank for the Scriptural parts of the Hail Mary: "Hail Mary full of
grace" spoken at the Annunciation and "Blessed are you and blessed is
the fruit of your womb Jesus" spoken by her cousin Elizabeth. Forgiveness and God's mercy
to sinners is also of first importance to Luke. Only in Luke do we hear the
story of the forgiven woman disrupting the feast by washing Jesus' feet with
her tears. Throughout Luke's gospel, Jesus takes the side of the sinner who
wants to return to God's mercy. The reports of Luke's life after Paul's
death are conflicting. Some early writers claim he was martyred, others say he
lived a long life. Some say he preached in Greece, others in Gaul. The earliest
tradition we have says that he died in 84 AD in Boeotia after settling in
Greece to write his Gospel. A tradition has it that Luke was also a painter,
painting various images of the Blessed Mother, including one he did in Malta
when he stayed for 3 months with St Paul. Several images of Mary appeared in
later centuries claiming him as the artist and because of this tradition, he is
considered a patron of painters of pictures and is often portrayed as painting
pictures of Mary. Being the patron of doctors and surgeons, many hospitals
around the world were dedicated to him.
Monday, 18 October 2021
St Luke
Guercino - 'Luke painting the Blessed Mother'
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