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Luke the Evangelist (
Ancient Greek: Λουκᾶς
Loukas) was an early
Christian leader who is said by tradition to be the author of both the
Gospel of Luke and the
Acts of the Apostles.
The
Roman Catholic Church venerates him as
patron saint of
physicians and
surgeons; his feast day is 18 October.
Saint Luke was born of
Greek origin in the city of
Antioch.
His earliest notice is in
Paul's Epistle to Philemon, verse 24. He is also mentioned in
Colossians 4:14 and
2 Timothy 4:11, two works commonly ascribed to Paul. The next earliest account of Luke is in the
Anti-Marcionite Prologue to the Gospel of Luke, a document once thought to date to the 2nd century AD, but which has more recently been dated to the later 4th century.
Helmut Koester, however, claims that the following part – the only part preserved in the original
Greek – may have been composed in the late 2nd century:
| “ | Luke, a native of Antioch, by profession a physician. He had become a disciple of the apostle Paul and later followed Paul until his [Paul's] martyrdom. Having served the Lord continuously, unmarried and without children, filled with the Holy Spirit he died at the age of 84 years. (p. 335) | ” |
Later tradition elaborates on these few facts.
Epiphanius states that Luke was one of
the Seventy (
Panarion 51.11), and
John Chrysostom indicates at one point that the "brother" Paul mentions in
2 Corinthians 8:18 is either Luke or
Barnabas. J. Wenham asserts that Luke was "one of the Seventy, the
Emmaus disciple, Lucius of Cyrene and Paul's kinsman." Not all scholars are as confident of all of these attributes as Wenham is, not least because Luke's own statement at the beginning of Acts freely admits that he was not an eyewitness to the events of the Gospel.
If we accept that Luke was in fact the author of the Gospel bearing his name and also the
Acts of the Apostles, certain details of his personal life can be reasonably assumed. While he does exclude himself from those who were eyewitnesses to Jesus' ministry, he repeatedly uses the word "we" in describing the Pauline missions in
Acts of the Apostles, indicating that he was personally there at those times. There is similar evidence that Luke resided in
Troas, the province which included the ruins of ancient Troy, in that he writes in
Acts in the third person about Paul and his travels until they get to Troas, where he switches to the first person plural. The "we" section of
Acts continues until the group leaves
Philippi, when his writing goes back to the third person. This change happens again when the group returns to Philippi. There are three "we sections" in
Acts, all following this rule. Luke never stated, however, that he lived in Troas, and this is the only evidence that he did.
The composition of the writings, as well as the range of vocabulary used, indicate that the author was an educated man. The quote in the Letter of Paul to the Colossians differentiating between Luke and other colleagues "of the circumcision" has caused many to speculate that this indicates Luke was a
Gentile. If this were true, it would make Luke the only writer of the New Testament who can clearly be identified as not being Jewish. However, that is not the only possibility. The phrase could just as easily be used to differentiate between those Christians who strictly observed the rituals of Judaism and those who did not.
The two documents most widely attributed to Luke, The Gospel According to Luke and The Acts of the Apostles, are held in high regard by Biblical historians and archaeologists for their historical accuracy and trustworthiness.
Archaeologist
Sir William Ramsay wrote that "Luke is a historian of the first rank; not merely are his statements of fact trustworthy...[he] should be placed along with the very greatest of historians." Professor of classics at
Auckland University,
E.M. Blaiklock, wrote: "For accuracy of detail, and for evocation of atmosphere, Luke stands, in fact, with
Thucydides. The Acts of the Apostles is not shoddy product of pious imagining, but a trustworthy record...it was the spadework of archaeology which first revealed the truth."
Dr. Norman L. Geisler observed, "In all, Luke names thirty-two countries, fifty-four cities and nine islands without a [factual or historical] error."
Christian apologist Josh MacDowell notes that in specific instances where Luke's texts have been found to disagree with common scholarly knowledge, where archaeology has been able to resolve the difference, the disagreement has consistently been resolved in favor of Luke. Additionally, Luke has brought to light previously unknown details which have later been verified by historians or archaeologists. Examples of such details include the names and titles of local officials as well as dates that those individuals served, locations and descriptions of ancient cities, and religious, civic, and governmental idiosyncracies of various locales.
Roman historian
Colin Hemer made note of the following attributes of Luke's writing:
- Specialized details, which would not have been widely known except to a contemporary researcher such as Luke who traveled widely. These details include exact titles of officials, identification of army units, and information about major routes.
- Details archaeologists know are accurate but cannot verify as to the precise time period. Some of these are unlikely to have been known except to a writer who had visited the districts.
- Correlation of dates of known kings and governors with the chronology of the narrative.
- Facts appropriate to the date of Paul or his immediate contemporary in the church but not to a date earlier or later.
- "Undesigned coincidents" between Acts and the Pauline Epistles.
- Internal correlations within Acts.
- Off-hand geographical references that bespeak familiarity with common knowledge.
- Differences in formulation within Acts that indicate the different categories of sources he used.
- Peculiarities in the selection of detail, as in theology, that are explainable in the context of what is now known of first-century church life.
- Materials the "immediacy" of which suggests that the author was recounting a recent experience, rather than shaping or editing a text long after it had been written.
- Cultural or idiomatic items now known to be peculiar to the first-century atmosphere.
Another Christian tradition states that he was the first
iconographer, and painted pictures of the
Virgin Mary (
The Black Madonna of Częstochowa) and of
Peter and Paul. Thus late medieval
guilds of St Luke in the cities of Flanders, or the
Accademia di San Luca ("Academy of St Luke") in Rome, imitated in many other European cities during the 16th century, gathered together and protected painters. There is no scientific evidence to support the tradition that Luke painted icons of Mary and Jesus, though it was widely believed in earlier centuries, particularly in Eastern Orthodoxy. The tradition also has support from the
Saint Thomas Christians of India who claim to still have one of the
Theotokos icons that St Luke painted and Thomas brought to India.
Luke the Evangelist painting the first
icon of the Virgin Mary.
Conservative Christian scholars attribute Luke as being author of the third Gospel and the
Acts of the Apostles, which is clearly meant to be read as a sequel to the Gospel account. However, other scholars are more skeptical about Luke's authorship of these books. Despite this controversy, many secular scholars give credit to Luke's abilities as an historian. Both books are dedicated to one
Theophilus and no scholar seriously doubts that the same person wrote both works, though neither work contains the name of its author. Many argue that the author of the book must have been a companion of the Apostle
Paul, due to several passages in Acts written in the first person plural (known as the
We Sections). These verses (see Acts 16:10-17, 20:5-15, 21:1-18, etc) seem to indicate the author was travelling with Paul during parts of his journeys. Some scholars report that, of the colleagues that Paul mentions in his epistles, the process of elimination leaves Luke as the only person who fits everything known about the author of Luke/Acts. Additionally, the earliest manuscript of the Gospel (
Papyrus Bodmer XIV/XV = P75), dated circa AD 200, ascribes the work to Luke; as did
Irenaeus, writing circa AD 180; and the
Muratorian fragment from AD 170.
[17] Scholars defending Luke's authorship point out that there is no reason for early Christians to attribute these works to such a minor figure if he did not in fact write them, nor is there any tradition attributing this work to any other author.
Luke and the
Madonna, Altar of the Guild of St. Luke, Hermen Rode,
Lübeck 1484