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320 pages, Paperback
First published January 19, 2001
It is both a wonderful, unique, spellbinding tale, and also a model (and Luke surely knew this) for a great deal of what being a Christian, from that day to this, is all about. The slow, sad dismay at the failure of human hopes; the turning to someone who might or might not help; the discovery that in scripture, all unexpected, there lay keys which might unlock the central mysteries and enable us to find the truth; the sudden realization of Jesus himself, present with us, warming our hearts with his truth, showing us himself as bread is broken. This describes the experience of innumerable Christians, and indeed goes quite a long way to explaining what it is about Christianity that grasps us and holds us in the face of so much that is wrong with the world, with the church, and with ourselves. (293)Another comment on this same passage is a good summary of one of Wright’s primary themes throughout this entire commentary series:
In this and the following passage Luke emphasizes what the church all too easily forgets: that the careful study of the Bible is meant to bring together head and heart, understanding and excited application. This will happen as we learn to think through the glory of God and the world, of Israel and Jesus, not in the way that our various cultures try to make us think, but in the way that God himself has sketched out. (297)Luke is a long book, and Wright has helped me stay focused on the main points where I might otherwise get distracted by minutiae along the way.