Saturday, November 5, 2022

Gerald F. Hawthorne on Luke 2:40

  

The child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom; and the favor of God was upon him. (Luke 2:40 | NRSV)

 

Commenting on the Christological implications of Luke 2:40, Gerald F. Hawthorne noted the following:

 

Crammed into this final phrase, “by being filled with wisdom,” are several large ideas that are worth unpacking and spreading out to that they may easily be seen:

 

1. At its center is a participle in the present tense, pleroumenon, a progressive tense in Greek, which describes a steady, continuous, uninterrupted action. Jesus was becoming strong (intellectually) by being ever more and more filled.

 

2. Further, the participle pleroumenon, is in the passive voice—Jesus was being filled by someone. That is to say, someone other than Jesus himself was doing the filling. But who? Luke does not say in just so many words who this agent was. One may infer, however, both from what Luke had to say earlier about the agent at Jesus’ birth (1:35), and from what he will say later on about the driving force in Jesus’ ministry (4:1), that this unnamed agent was none other than the Holy Spirit. Jesus, therefore, was growing strong (in mind) because the Holy Spirit was ever more and more filling him.

 

3. Finally, that with which Jesus was being filled was sophia, “wisdom.” In choosing this important word, Luke may have intended to say: (a) that the growth of Jesus’ mind was to be such that not only would he become a highly intelligent person, but a person filled with a knowledge of, a love for, and a commitment to the ways of God—the essence of wisdom (cf. 1 Kings 4:29; 2 Chron. 1:10; Prov. 1:2, 7); (b) that perhaps Jesus was to be the Messiah, for the Messianic hope was bound up in just such a person as this, a person endowed with wisdom by the Spirit of God (cf. Isa. 11:2; Pss. Sol. 17:37; 1 En. 49:3); and (c) that readers must not be surprised when they come across the story of Jesus sitting, while still a young boy, among the learned teachers of Israel asking them questions and intelligently answering theirs (cf. Luke 2:47)—after all, he was constantly being filled with wisdom throughout these very early years of his life. (Gerald F. Hawthorne, The Presence and the Power: The Significance of the Holy Spirit in the Life and Ministry of Jesus [Dallas: Word Publishing, 1991], 99-100, italics in original)

 

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