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The Pulpit Commentary: St. Luke (Vol. II)

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Overview

One of the largest homiletical commentary sets of its kind, this work gives a verse-by-verse exposition, a translation, and historical and geographical information, followed by the homiletics section, homilies by numerous authors, and a homiletical index to the Bible.

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“Apparently nine of these lepers were Jews, and only one a Samaritan. This man would not have been allowed to associate with Jews but for the miserable disease with which he was afflicted, and which obliterated all distinction of race and caste. It is the same now at Jerusalem; in the leper-houses, termed ‘Abodes of the Unfortunate,’ Jews and Mohammedans will live together. Under no other circumstances will these hostile peoples do this.” (Page 88)

“After the Resurrection he was known as he pleased, and not necessarily at once.… Till they who gazed on him were placed in something of spiritual harmony with the Lord, they could not recognize him.’ The two on their walk to Emmaus, and Mary Magdalene in the garden, were preoccupied with their sorrow. The fisher-disciples on the lake were preoccupied with their work, so that the vision of the Divine was obscured. The risen Christ will surely fulfil his own words, ‘The pure in heart, they shall see God’—but only the pure in heart.” (Page 270)

“‘like them that dream’ when they heard the good tidings. This method of Divine action—long delay followed by a sudden crisis—so frankly recognized by Christ, is one to which we find it hard to reconcile ourselves. These parables help us so far, but they do not settle everything. They contain no philosophy of Divine delay, but simply a proclamation of the fact, and an assurance that, in spite of delay, all will go well at the last with those who trust in God’ (Professor Bruce).” (Page 108)

“Paradise. This is the only instance we have of our Lord’s using this well-known word. In the ordinary language used by the Jews, of the unseen world, it signifies the ‘Garden of Eden,’ or ‘Abraham’s bosom;’ it represented the locality where the souls of the righteous would find a home, after death separated soul and body. The New Testament writers, Luke and Paul and John, use it (Acts 2:31; 1 Cor. 15:5; 2 Cor. 12:4; Rev. 2:7).” (Page 242)

  • Title: St. Luke (Vol. II)
  • Author: H. D. M. Spence
  • Series: Pulpit Commentary
  • Publisher: Funk & Wagnalls
  • Print Publication Date: 1909
  • Logos Release Date: 2004
  • Era: era:modern
  • Language: English
  • Resources: 1
  • Format: Digital › Logos Research Edition
  • Subject: Bible. N.T. Luke › Commentaries
  • Resource ID: LLS:29.47.19
  • Resource Type: Bible Commentary
  • Metadata Last Updated: 2022-02-11T16:27:08Z

H.D.M. Spence (1836–1917), or the Very Reverend Henry Donald Maurice Spence, was an Anglican dean and author at the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth.

Spence was educated at Westminster School and Corpus Christi College in Cambridge, and ordained in 1865. He lectured in Hebrew at St. David’s College in Lampeter until 1870. He later became rector of St. Mary de Crypt in Gloucester. From 1886 until his death in 1917, Spence served as the Dean of Gloucester. In 1904, he took on his wife’s surname and went by Donald Spence Jones. 

Spence served as the general editor of the best-selling The Pulpit Commentary series, and is the author of several other commentaries and church histories.

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    $9.99

    Digital list price: $12.49
    Save $2.50 (20%)