Have you noticed how those who hate Christ can become strange bedfellows? | Episode 434 | The Gospel of Luke
Mar 10, 2026Stephanie beckons us to continue our way through the gospel of Luke by experiencing alongside Jesus what it feels like to be attacked by enemies. With His usual meekness and boldness, He addresses their needs and ignores the facades they seem to put up to trap Him. What does this tell us about how we are called to behave?
Listen here: https://www.podcastics.com/episode/55225/link/
Have you noticed how people of different opinions can suddenly unite against a common foe? It's uncannily relevant to our current news; this feels ripped out of today's headlines!
But it's nothing new; the enemies of Christ have always united against Him, and His people. Our generation is no exception. We see it happen today when 4 distinct people groups, who mutually hate and despise each other, come together in unity against their foe - Jesus Christ, who claims to be Messiah. Pharisees, Sadducees, Herodians and Scribes unite to attack Him. We can still see such strategies in our world today. So, when you behold people who seem to be divided on every issue, suddenly unite together against Christ--you know something is up. Jesus role-models for us what a good response is. And it has to do with love--yes, love.
We are in Luke 20-22 today, and we hope to tie in these seemingly unrelated passages to show the seamlessness of Jesus' message and love--yes, even for His enemies.
Stephanie takes us on a journey through Luke chapters 19-21. We’re entering the Easter Season with Palm Sunday. Today, we’ll explore the significance of time and the events leading up to Jesus’s crucifixion, the unity of His opponents, and the deeper invitation to know God personally.
Stephanie invites us to celebrate the unique ability of Scripture study: the opportunity to both dig deep into the details of a passage and also to step back for a broader perspective. This week’s focus is on the approaching final days of Christ in Jerusalem, viewed through the lens of Luke—the Gospel writer most committed to chronology.
Luke offers a chronological account, helpful for readers wanting to piece together the order of events in Jesus’s life. Contrasting Matthew, who organizes by theme, Luke’s western approach caters to our familiar way of thinking about time. The ancient Jewish (and Greek) concepts of time are richer: where “chronos” means sequential time, “kairos” refers to those moments when God breaks in—a divine appointment. Both are crucial to understanding the Gospel’s narrative.
When Jesus enters Jerusalem (Luke 19:41), he weeps over the city’s inability to understand what would bring peace. Often, we’re so bound by everyday “chronos” time, we miss the “kairos”—special moments when God reveals Himself and His plans. Jesus’s lament invites us to seek understanding of God’s heart, even if we cannot know everything about His future plans.
Luke describes four major groups who opposed Jesus: Pharisees (spiritual leaders), Herodians (political/wealthy elites), Sadducees (rationalists denying resurrection), and Scribes (religious legalists). These groups despised each other, yet their opposition to Jesus brought them into unity, if only for a moment: the rejection of Christ can unite even the most unlikely groups, and she asks: “If only you knew whom you are rejecting.”
· Pharisees: Jesus challenges their authority using parables about the vineyard and fig tree, symbols deeply meaningful to all Israelites.
· Herodians: Their materialism is confronted with the “give to Caesar what is Caesar’s” lesson, turning the focus to what truly bears God’s image—us.
· Sadducees: Their attempt to trap Jesus with a question about resurrection is overturned as Jesus points to God as the God of the living.
· Scribes: Jesus warns against hollow religious showmanship.
Jesus’s prediction of Jerusalem’s destruction in Luke 21 receives both a historical fulfillment in AD 70 and a future prophetic event. Early Jewish Christians escaped Jerusalem before its fall by heeding Christ’s warnings—a model for attentive faith.
Ultimately, the gospel of Luke invites us to step beyond superficial knowledge and into deep relationship with God. We’re challenged not to be like Christ’s opponents, who knew what they rejected, but like the disciples—flawed but transformed into “the spice of the Gospel.” Don’t miss your kairos moment. Seek not just to know about God, but to truly know Him.
Reflection: Ask yourself—do you merely know facts about Jesus, or do you know Him personally? Where is God inviting you into a kairos encounter this week?
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