Luke's Jesus in the Roman Empire and the Emperor in the Gospel of Luke
English


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About The Book

Luke provides valuable clues to an understanding of the religious and political power of the Roman Empire through Jesuss birth and trial accounts. Also the book analyzes what role Lukes tax-related accounts play in relation to the emperors authority. This volume presents a new argument: Luke emphasizes Jesuss interaction with tax collectors as a way of displaying his moral authority seen in his intervening effectively with one of the most hated aspects of the empire an aspect that the emperor was responsible for and should have dealt with. This analysis helps us examine Lukes portrayal of Jesuss authority with a focus on the titles benefactor and savior. Comparisons and contrasts are to be made between Jesus and the emperor. Thus this study discusses how Luke elevates Jesuss authority on the basis of his stance toward the emperor. Scholars typically get sidetracked in dealing with tax collectors in the Gospels thinking the main issue is collaboration with Rome. Pyung Soo Seo gets down to the more basic issue of unpopularity due to corrupt practices. From there he maps a more convincing route to seeing Luke interacting with the Empire. Seo shows Luke depicting Jesus as the one able to change tax collectorss corrupt practices showing Jesus as possessing more moral auctoritas than the emperor responsible for tax collectors but failing to rein them in. --Peter Oakes University of Manchester Manchester UK The reassessment of the relationship of early Christianity to Roman Imperial power has produced extreme and contradictory claims. . . . Pyung Soo Seo offers a well-argued balanced and moderate case for Lukes Jesus needing to be seen in relation to the power structures of the Roman Empire and for implicit critique of the emperor as an important Lukan technique for exalting Jesus. --John Nolland Trinity College Bristol UK Pyung Soo Seo has opened a fresh approach to the interface between Luke and the Roman Empire. He argues that Luke does not reject the emperor or the Empire as such. Rather Luke implicitly and indirectly critiques the failures of the emperor in his moral and Imperial authority by depicting Jesus as a superior and more effective authority figure. In contrast to the emperor Jesus brings morality to tax collectors by repentance and forgiveness demonstrates pure benefaction by service to the people rather than as a quest for honor and acts as savior by bringing peace through love of enemies rather than through violent conquest. This careful study will be of interest to students of Luke as well as to all those who are exploring the role of the Roman Empire among early Christians. --David Rhoads Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago Chicago IL Pyung Soo Seo is a Korean scholar who completed his PhD at the University of Manchester.
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