Certainty Through Eyewitness: The Gospel's Historical Foundation
Luke writes so believers may have certainty about the fulfilled story of Jesus.
A teaching guide through Luke, shaped by biblical, Christ-centered, and cross-centered reading.
A teaching guide through Luke, shaped by biblical, Christ-centered, and cross-centered reading.
Teaching paths help you move through the book with a clear purpose. Use the right rail to focus the chapter plan, or stay in the full book view to read every passage in canonical order.
Best for: church-wide formation, annual series, big-picture discipleship.
Each week can point to Study, and some weeks also link to an outline when one is available.
Luke 1 argues that the gospel is not a novelty detached from Israel's Scriptures but the faithful arrival of God's promised salvation. The chapter moves through temple, womb, home, song, birth, and prophecy to show that God is remembering His covenant, raising David's promised King, preparing the way through John, and bringing salvation through Jesus.
Luke writes so believers may have certainty about the fulfilled story of Jesus.
God answers barren waiting by raising up a Spirit-filled forerunner to prepare His people for the Lord.
God brings His eternal King into the world by sovereign grace and Spirit power.
The promised child brings joy, blessing, reversal, and covenant mercy to the humble who believe God’s word.
God fulfills His word, restores praise, and raises John to prepare the way for the Lord’s saving visitation.
Luke 2 argues that the arrival of Jesus is simultaneously humble and glorious, local and universal, Jewish and world-embracing, fully human and uniquely divine. The chapter shows God governing empire, fulfilling Davidic expectation, placing the Son under the Law, revealing Him to the lowly and faithful, and preparing readers to see that this child belongs uniquely to the Father and will bring salvation that exposes every heart.
The Savior is born in humble Bethlehem, and heaven announces good news of great joy for all the people.
Jesus is presented under the law and revealed as God’s salvation for Israel and the nations.
Jesus grows in obedient humanity while revealing that His deepest identity and mission are bound to His Father.
Luke 3 argues that the public ministry of Jesus is introduced through prophetic preparation, ethical repentance, messianic expectation, divine revelation, and representative identity. John prepares the way by exposing false security and calling for fruit-bearing repentance. He points away from Himself to the stronger One who will bring the Spirit and judgment. Jesus then enters the waters with the people, prays, receives the Spirit's descent, and is affirmed by the Father's voice. The genealogy then places Him within Israel's covenant line and humanity's universal line, preparing the reader for His representative obedience and redemptive mission.
The word of God comes in the wilderness to prepare the way for the Lord’s salvation.
Repentance that prepares for the Lord must bear fruit in ordinary life.
John points beyond Himself to the Mightier One who brings Spirit, judgment, and true gospel fulfillment.
At His baptism, Jesus is revealed as the beloved Son anointed by the Spirit and approved by the Father.
Jesus stands in the line of humanity and promise as the Son whose mission reaches all people.
Luke 4 argues that Jesus begins His public ministry as the obedient Son who succeeds under testing, the Spirit-anointed Messiah who fulfills Isaiah's promise, the rejected prophet who exposes unbelief, the Holy One whose word has authority over demons and disease, and the sent preacher whose mission is the good news of the kingdom of God. The chapter establishes the nature of Jesus' ministry: Scripture-governed, Spirit-empowered, mercy-bearing, judgment-exposing, and kingdom-proclaiming.
The Spirit-led Son defeats temptation by trusting the Father and standing under the written Word.
The Spirit-anointed Christ announces fulfillment and exposes the unbelief of those who want grace on their own terms.
Jesus’ authoritative word teaches truth and drives out unclean spirits.
Jesus heals and delivers with authority, yet He presses forward to preach the kingdom of God.
Luke 5 argues that Jesus' authority is comprehensive and saving. His word commands creation and calls disciples. His touch cleanses what others avoid. His authority reaches beneath visible affliction to forgive sin. His mercy crosses social boundaries to call tax collectors and sinners. His presence as bridegroom introduces newness that cannot be reduced to inherited religious patterns. The chapter presses readers to see that the kingdom proclaimed in Luke 4 is now embodied in Jesus' powerful, merciful, and disruptive mission.
The Lord who fills empty nets calls humbled sinners to leave everything and gather people for Him.
The holy Christ touches and cleanses the unclean, then withdraws to pray as the crowds increase.
The Son of Man proves His authority to forgive sins by raising the paralyzed man before all.
Jesus calls sinners, eats with sinners, and came to bring sinners to repentance.
The presence of the bridegroom brings new joy that old forms cannot contain.
Luke 6 argues that Jesus' authority governs Sabbath, leadership, healing, ethics, judgment, speech, and discipleship. His lordship exposes religious hardness that objects to mercy. His prayerful appointment of the Twelve forms the apostolic foundation of His people. His healing power reveals the kingdom's restoring mercy. His teaching overturns worldly measures of blessing and demands enemy-love rooted in the Father's mercy. His final warning shows that true discipleship is not verbal honor but obedient hearing.
The Lord of the Sabbath defines its purpose and fulfillment.
The Lord of the Sabbath fulfills its purpose through mercy, restoration, and authoritative interpretation.
Sabbath mercy reveals true righteousness and exposes hardened hearts.
After a night of prayer, Jesus appoints the Twelve as apostles for His kingdom mission.
Jesus blesses the needy who belong to Him and warns the satisfied who live for the present age.
The children of the Most High love enemies because their Father is merciful.
Merciful disciples examine themselves before correcting others.
The mouth reveals what the heart stores, just as fruit reveals the tree.
The true disciple builds on Jesus’ words by obeying them.
Luke 7 argues that Jesus is recognized rightly not by social location, religious status, or public reputation, but by humble faith, need-aware dependence, and receptive love. A Gentile centurion trusts His authority. A grieving widow receives His compassion. John's disciples are directed to His messianic works. Tax collectors accept God's way while religious leaders reject God's purpose. A sinful woman loves much because she has been forgiven much, while a Pharisee's cold judgment exposes blindness to both Jesus and grace.
The centurion’s great faith trusts Jesus’ authoritative word without requiring His physical presence.
The compassionate Lord confronts death and restores the widow’s son to life.
Jesus’ messianic works confirm His identity, while unbelief rejects both the forerunner and the Christ.
The one forgiven much loves much, and Jesus has authority to forgive sins.
Luke 8 argues that the decisive issue in the kingdom is how people hear and respond to Jesus' word. The same word is preached, but hearts differ: some are hardened, some shallow, some crowded by life's pressures, and some fruitful through perseverance. That word is not weak, because the speaker of the word has authority over creation, demons, disease, uncleanness, and death. True discipleship hears, holds fast, obeys, trusts, and testifies.
Those restored by Jesus join and support the proclamation of God’s kingdom.
Fruitful disciples hear, retain, and persevere in the word of God.
Kingdom light must be received carefully and allowed to shine openly.
Those who hear God’s word and do it belong to Jesus’ true family.
The Lord who commands the storm calls fearful disciples to faith.
Jesus’ authority liberates the enslaved and turns them into witnesses of God’s mercy.
Jesus’ power saves the unclean, raises the dead, and calls fearful hearts to faith.
Luke 9 argues that Jesus' identity cannot be separated from His mission and that discipleship cannot be separated from the cross. The Twelve receive authority, the crowds receive provision, Peter confesses Jesus as the Christ, and the Father confirms Him as the chosen Son. Yet Jesus immediately defines messiahship through suffering, rejection, death, resurrection, betrayal, and the journey to Jerusalem. Therefore, true discipleship is not triumphal ambition but daily self-denial, humble reception of the least, non-retaliatory mercy, and total allegiance to the kingdom of God.
Kingdom authority flows from Christ to His commissioned servants.
Jesus sends His witnesses with kingdom authority, and His fame forces the question of His identity.
The growing kingdom compels every hearer to confront who Jesus truly is.
The kingdom Shepherd supplies abundantly through inadequate servants and insufficient resources.
Jesus is not merely a prophet returned; He is the Messiah of God.
The Messiah’s mission is defined by the cross and resurrection.
The suffering Messiah calls disciples to lose their lives for Him in order to truly save them.
True life is found by losing oneself for Christ.
The glorious Son must be listened to as He goes to accomplish His saving departure at Jerusalem.
The Messiah who shines in glory conquers darkness in the valley.
The glorious Son descends to deliver the helpless and announces that He Himself will be delivered up.
Public amazement cannot obscure the necessity of the coming cross.
The greatest in Christ’s kingdom is the one who receives the least for His sake.
In Jesus’ kingdom, the least are great, and rivalry must give way to humble reception and generous recognition of work done in His name.
Kingdom unity is grounded in loyalty to Christ, not narrow affiliation.
The resolute Savior goes to Jerusalem to suffer and save, not to indulge disciples’ retaliatory zeal.
Following Jesus requires costly, urgent, and undivided allegiance to the kingdom of God.
Luke 10 argues that Jesus’ Jerusalem-bound mission expands through sent witnesses whose proclamation carries eternal significance. Yet ministry success must not become the ground of joy; heavenly belonging is greater than spiritual authority. True revelation is not mastered by the proud but given by the Father through the Son to the humble. The Law’s demand of love exposes self-justification, and Jesus defines neighbor-love through costly mercy embodied by an unexpected Samaritan. The chapter closes by showing that even necessary service must remain subordinate to hearing the word of Jesus.
Christ multiplies mission by sending laborers into a ready harvest under His authority.
Kingdom mission goes out under Jesus’ authority, but the deepest joy is that names are written in heaven.
Greater light rejected results in greater judgment.
Rejoice not merely in spiritual power but in salvation secured.
Salvation knowledge is a sovereign gift revealed through Christ to the humble.
Jesus exposes self-justifying religion and calls for mercy that becomes neighbor to the one in need.
The disciple must receive Jesus’ word before and above anxious service.
Luke 11 argues that true discipleship is Father-dependent, kingdom-oriented, Spirit-receiving, and word-obeying. Jesus’ authority over demons reveals that God’s kingdom has arrived and Satan’s stronghold is being plundered. Yet the chapter also warns that religious privilege can become sign-seeking unbelief, that moral order without kingdom occupation leaves a person worse off, and that outward religious precision without justice, love, and true knowledge is condemned by God. The issue is not religious activity but whether one receives Jesus, obeys God’s word, and is filled with true light.
Jesus teaches disciples to pray with Fatherward dependence, kingdom priority, persistent asking, and confidence in the Father’s good gift of the Spirit.
The casting out of demons reveals the kingdom’s arrival and eliminates spiritual neutrality.
The stronger Christ overthrows Satan’s house, and the truly blessed hear and obey God’s word.
An empty heart, though cleansed, becomes vulnerable unless filled with God’s rule.
The truly blessed are those who hear and keep God’s word.
The greater-than-Jonah Son stands before a sign-seeking generation that will be judged by those who responded to lesser light.
The light of Jesus must be received with a clear eye, or the inner life remains dark despite outward exposure to revelation.
God rejects outward religiosity that masks inward corruption.
Jesus exposes religious hypocrisy that looks clean, sounds learned, and appears honorable while remaining inwardly corrupt and spiritually obstructive.
Obstructing God’s truth invites severe accountability before Him.
Luke 12 argues that the coming of Jesus creates a decisive crisis of allegiance. Disciples must reject hidden hypocrisy because God will expose all things. They must fear God rather than human opponents, confess Christ openly, and rely on the Holy Spirit under pressure. They must reject greed because death reveals the folly of earthly treasure. They must reject anxiety because the Father knows their needs and gives the kingdom. They must live watchfully because the Son of Man will come unexpectedly. They must steward responsibility faithfully because greater knowledge brings greater accountability. Jesus’ mission brings division and judgment, making the present time urgent.
Secret hypocrisy will be uncovered by God’s final revelation.
Fear God, not man; confess Christ, not hypocrisy; trust the Spirit, not self-protection.
Right fear of God anchors courage in persecution and confidence in divine care.
Eternal destiny hinges on one’s confession of Christ and response to the Spirit’s witness.
Life is not secured by abundance; the soul is accountable to God, and true wealth is being rich toward Him.
Because the Father gives the kingdom, disciples can stop worrying, seek His reign, and treasure heaven above earthly security.
The returning Master blesses watchful servants and judges unfaithful stewards.
Christ’s mission brings purifying fire and dividing allegiance.
Jesus’ coming forces a crisis of decision before the fire of judgment and the urgency of the present time.
Spiritual discernment demands urgent reconciliation before the coming judgment.
Luke 13 argues that God’s kingdom cannot be approached with detached curiosity, religious presumption, or self-protective legalism. Jesus interprets tragedy as a call to repentance, fruitlessness as a warning under mercy, Sabbath healing as divine liberation, kingdom growth as certain despite smallness, and salvation as an urgent entrance through the narrow door. The chapter climaxes in Jesus’ sorrow over Jerusalem, showing that judgment does not cancel divine compassion, and compassion does not cancel judgment.
All stand under judgment; therefore, all must repent without delay.
Jesus turns tragedy into a warning: repent before patient mercy gives way to judgment.
Grace delays judgment, yet fruit is required.
The Sabbath is not violated when Jesus sets Satan’s captive free; it is fulfilled in mercy, worship, and kingdom liberation.
God’s kingdom starts small and hidden, but it grows into shelter and permeates the whole.
Do not speculate about how many will be saved; strive to enter now before the narrow door is shut.
Jesus presses on toward Jerusalem with sovereign resolve and grieving compassion over the city that refuses His saving shelter.
Luke 14 argues that the kingdom of God overturns ordinary human instincts about religion, honor, hospitality, privilege, and discipleship. Jesus exposes Sabbath legalism by healing the suffering, confronts pride by teaching the low seat, redirects generosity toward those who cannot repay, warns that privileged invitees can exclude themselves through excuses, and demands that would-be disciples place allegiance to Him above every competing attachment. The chapter moves from a meal table to the messianic banquet, then from banquet invitation to cross-bearing discipleship.
The Lord of mercy heals on the Sabbath and exposes the silence of legalistic hearts.
Kingdom honor is granted by God, not seized by pride.
At Jesus’ table, humility takes the low place and mercy invites those who cannot repay.
Kingdom generosity is selfless and resurrection-centered.
The kingdom banquet is ready, but those who excuse themselves from grace will be replaced by those brought in from the margins.
Following Jesus requires counting the cost and surrendering every rival claim to His lordship.
Luke 15 argues that Jesus’ welcome of sinners is not a violation of God’s holiness but the visible expression of God’s saving mercy. The Pharisees and teachers of the law grumble because they do not share heaven’s joy over repentance. Jesus’ threefold parabolic response reveals the divine logic of salvation: the lost are sought, the found are celebrated, the repentant are restored, and the resentful are invited to enter the father’s joy. The chapter shows two forms of lostness: the open rebellion of the younger son and the hidden alienation of the older son. Both need the father’s mercy.
The Shepherd’s joy outweighs the scandal of His pursuit.
God seeks the lost and heaven rejoices when one sinner repents.
Divine pursuit penetrates darkness and ends in joy.
The Father runs to restore the repentant lost, and He pleads with the resentful near to join His joy.
Luke 16 argues that wealth functions as a test of allegiance, faithfulness, mercy, and submission to God’s Word. Jesus does not commend dishonesty, but He uses the shrewd manager’s urgency to rebuke spiritual carelessness. Disciples must use temporal resources in light of eternal accountability. The Pharisees’ love of money shows that outward religious authority can coexist with inward idolatry. The kingdom’s arrival does not weaken Scripture’s authority but presses its fulfillment and moral seriousness. The rich man and Lazarus then embody the chapter’s warning: wealth without mercy, Scripture ignored, and repentance delayed lead to irreversible judgment.
Use temporary wealth with eternal wisdom, because money is a servant to steward, not a master to serve.
God knows the heart beneath religious respectability, and His kingdom does not cancel His holy authority.
The rich man ignored mercy at His gate and Scripture in His hands, and after death the reversal could not be undone.
Luke 17 argues that the coming kingdom forms a people who must live faithfully now while awaiting the unmistakable future revelation of the Son of Man. Disciples must not harm the vulnerable, must forgive repentant offenders, must trust God even with small faith, and must obey as servants without entitlement. The cleansing of the ten lepers shows that receiving mercy is not the same as rightly responding to the Merciful One; the Samaritan outsider becomes the model of grateful faith. Jesus then corrects kingdom speculation by declaring that the kingdom is already present in their midst, even while the future day of the Son of Man remains ahead. That day will follow His suffering and rejection, will come suddenly like judgment in the days of Noah and Lot, and will expose whether people cling to this life or are ready for God’s reign.
Jesus forms disciples who protect the vulnerable, forgive the repentant, trust God, and serve without entitlement.
Mercy received should return as worshipful gratitude to Jesus.
The kingdom is present in Jesus and will be revealed suddenly in judgment, so disciples must not cling to this life or be deceived by false expectations.
Luke 18 argues that true readiness for the kingdom and the coming Son of Man is not found in self-confidence, status, wealth, or surface nearness to Jesus, but in persevering prayer, mercy-seeking humility, childlike dependence, surrendered discipleship, and sight-giving faith. Jesus teaches disciples to pray until God’s vindication, exposes the self-righteousness that trusts in religious achievement, welcomes children as models of kingdom reception, confronts the ruler whose wealth controls Him, and declares that salvation is impossible with man but possible with God. He then announces that the prophetic path to Jerusalem leads through rejection, suffering, death, and resurrection. The blind beggar at Jericho becomes an embodied contrast: though physically blind and socially marginalized, He sees Jesus’ messianic identity, cries for mercy, receives sight, follows, and glorifies God.
Persistent prayer reveals faith in the coming righteous Judge.
Justification belongs to the humble, not the proud.
Childlike dependence qualifies one for the kingdom.
The kingdom demands exclusive allegiance that only God enables.
The cross is the ordained fulfillment of God’s redemptive plan.
Spiritual sight comes through persistent faith in the merciful Messiah.
Luke 19 argues that Jesus’ journey to Jerusalem must be interpreted through His saving mission, royal authority, and prophetic judgment. Zacchaeus shows that the Son of Man seeks and saves the lost, and salvation produces concrete repentance. The parable of the minas corrects triumphal immediacy by teaching that the king’s return follows a period of entrusted stewardship and contested rule. Jesus’ entrance into Jerusalem reveals His Davidic kingship, but His lament shows that the city does not recognize the peace and visitation present in Him. His temple action asserts divine authority over worship and exposes corruption, while the leaders’ desire to kill Him confirms the rejection that has been building throughout Luke.
Salvation comes through Christ’s initiative and results in radical transformation.
Between departure and return, faithful service determines reward and judgment.
The King enters Jerusalem in prophetic fulfillment on His way to redemption.
Failure to recognize Christ’s visitation results in devastating consequence.
The Messiah cleanses God’s house, revealing true worship and impending judgment.
Luke 20 argues that Jesus’ authority cannot be challenged without exposing the unbelief of His opponents. The leaders’ refusal to answer honestly about John reveals that they do not submit to God’s messengers. The wicked tenants parable interprets their rejection of Jesus as the climactic rebellion against the vineyard owner’s beloved Son. Jesus is the rejected stone whom Scripture says God will make the cornerstone, and rejecting Him brings judgment. Attempts to trap Him on Caesar fail because Jesus recognizes legitimate earthly obligation while preserving God’s ultimate claim. Attempts to mock resurrection fail because Jesus reveals the age to come and proves resurrection from Moses. Finally, Jesus reveals that the Messiah is not merely David’s son but David’s Lord, then warns against religious teachers whose public honor hides exploitation. The chapter demonstrates that Jesus is the true authority in the temple and that every rival authority is being judged by Him.
Those who reject revealed truth cannot rightly discern Christ’s authority.
The rejected Son becomes the exalted cornerstone, and those who reject Him face judgment.
Render earthly obligations rightly, but give ultimate allegiance to God alone.
The resurrection is real, and life in the age to come transcends earthly categories.
The Messiah possesses divine authority as enthroned Lord.
God judges self-exalting religion that exploits the vulnerable.
Luke 21 argues that what appears impressive to human eyes is not necessarily secure before God. The poor widow’s small gift outweighs the rich gifts of abundance because God sees costly devotion. The temple’s magnificent stones will fall because visible religious grandeur cannot escape judgment. Disciples must not be deceived by false claims or shaken by upheaval, for suffering and testimony belong to the period before the end. Jerusalem’s coming desolation will fulfill Scripture and demonstrate covenant accountability, yet that crisis is not the final word. Beyond Jerusalem’s fall stands cosmic shaking and the glorious coming of the Son of Man. Jesus’ words are more permanent than heaven and earth, so disciples must live watchfully, pray continually, and stand ready before Him.
God values wholehearted sacrificial trust above impressive external contribution.
Earthly religious grandeur cannot prevent divine judgment.
Remain vigilant and undeceived amid historical turmoil.
Christ sustains His people through suffering and uses persecution for testimony.
Judgment follows rejection of Christ, yet God’s redemptive purposes move forward.
Believers lift their heads in hope because redemption draws near.
Discern the season of God’s kingdom and trust the permanence of Christ’s word.
Guard Your heart and remain alert so You may stand in Christ’s appearing.
The Lamb of God moves toward sacrifice while human conspiracy advances.
Luke 22 argues that Jesus’ passion is neither accident nor defeat. Human plotting, Judas’s betrayal, Satan’s activity, disciple weakness, and religious hostility all move within the divine necessity of Scripture fulfillment. Jesus directs the Passover preparation, interprets His death as body given and blood poured out for the new covenant, teaches servant greatness, intercedes for Peter, and submits to the Father in agonized prayer. His arrest is the hour of darkness, yet even there He refuses violent defense and heals an enemy. Peter’s denial exposes disciple weakness, but Jesus’ prior prayer secures restoration beyond failure. The mocked Jesus is not powerless; He is the Son of Man who will sit at the right hand of God and the Son of God whose confession becomes the basis of His condemnation. The chapter therefore presents the cross as covenant fulfillment, sacrificial self-giving, servant kingship, Scripture’s accomplishment, and the path to enthronement.
The Passover meal becomes the covenant meal through Christ’s substitutionary sacrifice.
The greatest in Christ’s kingdom serves because the King Himself serves.
Though Satan sifts, Christ’s prayer preserves.
The Messiah must be numbered with transgressors and prepares His disciples accordingly.
In Gethsemane, the obedient Son embraces the cup so sinners may be saved.
The obedient Son heals and submits even as darkness advances.
Christ’s intercession sustains even when disciples fail.
Christ’s humiliation cannot conceal His coming exaltation.
Luke 23 argues that Jesus’ death is the death of the innocent and righteous King, not the execution of a criminal rebel. Pilate repeatedly finds no guilt in Him. Herod finds no capital offense. Barabbas, the actual insurrectionist and murderer, is released while Jesus is condemned. On the cross, Jesus is mocked with titles that are ironically true: Messiah, Chosen One, King of the Jews. He does not save Himself because He is saving others through His self-giving death. He is numbered with transgressors, prays forgiveness, receives the repentance of a guilty criminal, and promises immediate fellowship in paradise. His death is marked by darkness and the tearing of the temple curtain, showing divine judgment and opened access. The centurion’s praise and declaration of Jesus’ righteousness, the crowd’s remorse, the women’s witness, and Joseph’s honorable burial all testify that the crucified Jesus is righteous, rejected, and truly dead, yet not abandoned beyond hope.
Earthly rulers misjudge the true King.
The true King refuses spectacle and submits in prophetic silence.
The righteous King dies in place of the guilty.
The suffering King advances to the cross and calls for repentance.
From the cross, Jesus extends grace and eternal life.
The righteous Son dies and tears open access to the Father.
Christ rests in the tomb, preparing for resurrection victory.
Luke 24 argues that the resurrection of Jesus is not an isolated miracle detached from Scripture, nor a private spiritual experience without bodily reality. The empty tomb, angelic announcement, remembered words of Jesus, Peter’s inspection, Emmaus exposition, table recognition, bodily appearance, wounds, touch, eating, opened minds, apostolic witness, and ascension all converge to show that the crucified Jesus is truly risen. His suffering was not a failure of messianic hope but the necessary path spoken in the Law, Prophets, and Psalms. The resurrection does not end the story in private joy; it launches mission. Repentance for the forgiveness of sins must be preached in Jesus’ name to all nations, beginning from Jerusalem. The disciples are witnesses, but they must wait for the promised power from on high. Jesus’ ascension confirms His exalted lordship and produces worship, joy, and praise.
The empty tomb proclaims resurrection victory.
The risen Lord reveals Himself through Scripture and ignites believing hearts.
The resurrected Christ reveals Himself physically and inaugurates the global gospel mission.
The ascended Messiah reigns and blesses His people.