By Jason Valeriano Hallig
[Jason Valeriano Hallig is professor of New Testament and Greek at Alliance Graduate School and Asia Graduate School of Theology—Philippines. He is also senior pastor of the International Christian Fellowship, Taytay Rizal, Philippines.]
Abstract
This article offers an understanding of forgiveness in the plot of Luke-Acts narrative. It uses a thematic approach to Luke’s Gospel narrative to further enrich existing biblical and theological studies on forgiveness through its attention to artistic literary considerations such as events, characters, and parallels. In doing so it sets the biblical doctrine of forgiveness within its narrative milieu in Luke-Acts and its function in the plot and its development. This study shows forgiveness as integral to the narrative as an artistic whole and embedded in the five causal stages of the witness plot in Luke-Acts. Moreover, it livens the twofold thrust of the gospel—salvation and the kingdom. Forgiveness marks the church as the renewed people of God inclusive of both the people of Israel and the nations.
* * *
Scripture is first and foremost a narrative, and forgiveness is part of that narrative. Jeremiah wrote, “ ‘This is the covenant I will make with the house of Israel after that time,’ declares the Lord. ‘I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people. No longer will a man teach his neighbor, or a man his brother, saying, “Know the Lord,” because they will know me from the least of them to the greatest,’ declares the Lord. ‘For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more’ ” (Jer 31:33–34).
The biblical idea of forgiveness is rooted in the concept of “covering” from the Hebrew word כָּפַר, which means “to cover,” “to cover over,” or “to overspread.”[1] The same word applies to the Old Testament theology of atonement, which is closely tied to the forgiveness of sins. That is carried over to the New Testament in general and the Gospels in particular, where the Greek word ἄφεσις connotes forgiveness or liberation in the spirit of cover or release.[2] As such, forgiveness is an essential part of the Christian message. There is no gospel where there is no forgiveness. Studies on forgiveness, however, focus on its theological or doctrinal meaning and significance. Little is done on its literary function vis-à-vis the narrative plot of the gospel. Literary considerations of forgiveness are sporadic, if not totally isolated from the biblical narrative in general and the gospel narrative in particular. Most are results of form critical studies on the gospels, with literary studies of forgiveness literally pericopic in nature. This takes it out of its narrative plot context, resulting in an impoverished hermeneutic of forgiveness or a highly embellished theology of forgiveness.
Of the four Gospels, the Gospel of Luke or rather Luke-Acts captures the truth of forgiveness beautifully, powerfully, and most comprehensively.[3] Luke-Acts spells out for its intended or implied readers, whether they are disciples or would-be disciples of Jesus, the reality and necessity of Christian forgiveness, without which there is neither salvation nor the kingdom. The life and task of the Christian, and so of the church, revolves around the truth of forgiveness both in terms of divine grace to all believers and extended grace toward others. Scholars are convinced that forgiveness is at the heart of Lukan discipleship embedded in the gospel Luke narrates. Hence, studies of Luke’s narrative must give attention to the literary function of the theme of forgiveness in its plot. Narrative criticism studies the gospel as a unified whole and also takes into consideration various themes in the gospel narrative and their relationships or literary functions in the development of the plot and characters. Themes cannot be taken in isolation. Doing so does an injustice to the narrative as a whole and to the themes themselves, whose meanings are tied to the narrative.
Forgiveness And The Lukan Plot
The story of Luke-Acts centers on the gospel and its witness. At the time Jesus was born, the angel announced to the shepherds: “I bring you good news of great joy” (Luke 2:10). This announcement is programmatic to the Lukan narrative. It captures the very spirit of the narrative. Luke informs his reader/s that he is writing this gospel to affirm the certainty of the witness story of Jesus and the witness testimony of the church, in and through whom their faith is anchored. The certainty of the good news is not only in its historicity but also in its “order” (1:1–4), demonstrated in the plotting of the narrative as a whole.[4] Tannehill writes, “In a longer narrative the question of proper order becomes more difficult. Unity must be maintained through a series of events by the display of major developments and patterns.”[5] It is in such unity of the whole and likewise unity with his predecessors that the certainty is found.
Ju Hur rightly defines the plot of Luke-Acts as “the way of witness, in seeking and saving God’s people, engendered by Jesus (in the gospel) and his witnesses (in Acts), through the power and guidance of the Holy Spirit in accordance with the plan of God.”[6] This is developed by Luke in his narrative that demonstrates the geographical expansion based on the movement of Jesus’s witness and that of his disciples called to carry on the way of witness. Hur presents five causal stages of Luke’s narrative plot.
I. Beginning (Luke 3:1–4:13): at the Jordan River and/or wilderness in Judea.
II. Development toward the Central Point (Luke 4:14–19:44): from Galilee to Jerusalem.
III. Central Point (Luke 19:45–Acts 2:13): in Jerusalem.
IV. Development toward the End (Acts 2:14–28:13): from Jerusalem, through Judea and Samaria, and towards Rome.
V. Open-Ended Finale (Acts 28:16–31): Rome.[7]
Embedded in the plot is Luke’s narrative emphasis on forgiveness, which furthers his twofold narrative thrust—salvation and the kingdom of God. I will attempt to demonstrate how forgiveness plays an important role or function in the narrative plot and its development in and through the witness story of Jesus and the witness testimony of the church.
The witness plot is introduced with the witness of John the Baptist, who serves as the precursor of Jesus—the Witness himself. The ministry of John is an important narrative sign of the coming of the Messiah and his witness. It serves as a literary signpost so that readers can bridge the gap between the Old Testament and Luke’s story.[8] It points to the promised salvation of God when he shall forgive or cover the sins of his people after the time of national discipline during the exile. While the return to Jerusalem was the beginning, forgiveness shall come at a much later time in and through Jesus the Christ. John’s role in God’s promised salvation is one of preparation. John must announce it to the people and call the people to repentance and baptism for the forgiveness of their sins. But the baptism of water is efficacious only because of its relation to Jesus the Christ. Hence, the importance of John is in his relation to (the unborn) Jesus and his ministry.
The baptism of water John executed foreshadows the work of Jesus as the Christ, who shall baptize the people with the Holy Spirit. With this, the ministry of John is indeed a significant part of the promise. Without him, people would have difficulty recognizing Jesus as the Messiah. But without Jesus, the baptism of John would not have meant anything to the people. The baptism of forgiveness is given reality in and through Jesus Christ.
Forgiveness And The Story Of Jesus
The story of Jesus is the first part of Luke’s narrative. Its narrative function is central and primary to the whole narrative of Luke-Acts. Hur writes, “Jesus is portrayed as the witness par excellence both to God and to himself (Lk. 2.30–35), thus offering himself as the ‘model of prophetic witness’ for his witnesses in Acts, and, at the same time, he becomes the core of the message that his witnesses are (sic) represented proclaiming to the ends of the earth (Acts 1.8; cf. Lk. 24.46–48).”[9] The message is Jesus in and through whom forgiveness shall come to all.
Luke’s narrative presents a well-developed outline of the life and ministry of Jesus: (1) the birth of Jesus, (2) the public ministry of Jesus, and (3) the death and resurrection of Jesus. It has an artistic beginning, a tension-building middle, and a dramatic ending of the story. The theme of forgiveness is rightly embedded in the whole narrative plot, artistically creating the literary dynamism that shapes and develops the story.
The Birth Of Jesus
In addition to John the Baptist’s witness, Luke introduces the witness of Jesus with several other important witnesses who affirmed Jesus’s own witness as the Messiah of God.[10] First is Mary. Luke here shows who Jesus really is and what he would soon do for his people: “You will be with child and give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus” (1:31). Mary’s song (the Magnificat) indicates that the child in her womb fulfills the long-awaited salvation of God for his people.[11] She speaks of God as her savior, and that has come to reality with what the angel Gabriel has revealed to her. God’s election of Mary is itself an act of forgiveness—her being the chosen one already guaranteed divine forgiveness.
This is supported by Zechariah’s song (the Benedictus). Zechariah declares with clarity that God’s salvation would come first and foremost in and through the forgiveness of the sins of the people (1:77). Hence, what Mary declared in the Magnificat as God’s salvation has been given its particular expression in the Benedictus—the forgiveness of sins. Tannehill writes, “The description of God as ‘my savior’ in 1:47 anticipates the emphasis on salvation in Zechariah’s and Simeon’s words (1:69, 71, 77; 2:3), as well as in the angel’s announcement of the birth of a savior (2:11).”[12] John’s baptism of forgiveness is God’s message of salvation in Jesus revealed to righteous characters—Mary and Zechariah. What would soon be announced by John in his public preaching in the wilderness, the forgiveness of sins, will be accomplished by Jesus, the salvation of God’s people. Salvation and forgiveness are interrelated. One is the overarching theme; the other the more specific one. Indeed, forgiveness brings people to salvation. And so the narrative begins with such an artistic announcement through literary songs of salvation with the Magnificat and the Benedictus.
Moreover, both Simeon and Anna speak of the baby Jesus in terms of salvation not only for the people of Israel but also for the Gentile nations: “a light for revelation to the Gentiles and for glory to your people Israel” (2:32). The nature of God’s offer of forgiveness is universal. Indeed, the stories of Simeon and Anna add beauty to the universality of the narrative of forgiveness. This is what John proclaimed as prophesied by Isaiah: “A voice of one calling in the desert, ‘Prepare the way for the Lord, make straight paths for him. Every valley shall be filled in, every mountain and hill made low. The crooked roads shall become straight, the rough ways smooth. And all mankind will see God’s salvation” (3:4–6).
The Public Ministry Of Jesus
The theme of forgiveness is integral to the public life and ministry of Jesus, announced at the opening of his ministry (4:18–19). This is clear in Jesus’s work to “proclaim . . . release to the oppressed.” The word “release” is used in the phrase “release of sins” (usually translated “forgiveness of sins”).[13] There is no freedom where there is no forgiveness. Indeed, Jesus’s ministry revolves around the theme of forgiveness. Tannehill writes,
The task of “proclaiming . . . repentance for release of sins (3:3) remains central throughout Luke-Acts. In Nazareth Jesus indicates that he has been called to “proclaim release” (4:18), and the scenes in 5:17–32 in which Jesus asserts his authority to “release sins” and defends his mission “to call . . . sinners to repentance” (dif. Matthew, Mark) are linked by the narrator to a series of later scenes which keep this important aspect of Jesus’ mission before the reader. In 24:47 the mission of proclaiming “repentance for release of sins” (the same words used of John in 3:3, again dependent on the verb κηρύσσω) is given by the risen Jesus to his followers, and this mission is carried out in Acts.[14]
Luke uses it as a literary device in his presentation of the plot and its development. He did this in and through his artistic characterization of Jesus as healer or miracle doer, disciple-maker, and teacher or preacher. The theme of forgiveness is prevalent in each aspect of Jesus’s ministry, revealing how forgiveness is important to his activities both in words and in deeds. Early on, the story of Jesus and the paralytic (5:17–26) is programmatic of Jesus’s teaching ministry as centered on the proclamation of forgiveness. Jesus sees people as more than sick in need of healing; he sees them as sinners in need of forgiveness. The friends of the paralytic brought the man before Jesus for healing, but, “when Jesus saw their faith, he said, ‘Friend, your sins are forgiven’ ” (5:20). Forgiveness, a literary sign to the character of Jesus, is central to this story, carrying the message of Jesus, and so of Luke’s gospel. Jesus reveals his intention above the expectation of the people. He is the savior more than a healer. As such, forgiveness is not a later development of the ministry of the church—contra Bultmann’s proposal—but is an integral part of the gospel and original to Jesus.[15] Luke’s narrative shows Jesus as one having divine authority in words and in deeds that prove Jesus’s authority to forgive sins.
Such authority of Jesus is further demonstrated in the many miracles Jesus performed before the eyes of the public, including his enemies, who obviously had a problem with it. The religious leaders rejected Jesus on his claim of divine authority, which causes the conflict.[16] But such rejection is negated by Jesus’s further healings and miracles. Later Jesus again uttered words of forgiveness and this time to a sinful woman: “Jesus said to her, ‘Your sins are forgiven’ ” (7:48). This time Jesus is offering forgiveness not on behalf of God, but on his own authority, prompting the religious leaders to question him and further intensifying the conflict. This emphasis on forgiveness indicates who Jesus really is—the Son of Man.[17] This divine identity is where the religious leaders began to personally oppose Jesus. It is the causal factor of the opposition or the conflict. Kingsbury writes, “Accordingly, the resolution of Luke’s gospel story of conflict between Jesus and the religious authorities is found in the events associated with Jesus’s crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension.”[18]
Forgiveness is likewise integral to Jesus’s evangelistic or disciple-making ministry. The task of building the kingdom begins with the calling of the disciples. This is demonstrated in calling Levi. The call to discipleship involves the message of forgiveness. Jesus’s association with sinners is already indicative of his ministry of forgiveness.[19] His presence among the “sinners” extended God’s mercy and forgiveness to them. When questioned by the religious leaders, “Why do you eat and drink with tax collectors and ‘sinners’?”, Jesus’s response reveals his willingness to forgive those who respond to his call: “I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance’ ” (5:32). To show that forgiveness is part and parcel of Jesus’s message to people, Luke repeated this theme with Jesus’s words to Zaccheus, “The Son of Man came to seek and save what was lost” (19:9). The connection between salvation and forgiveness is here conspicuous. Salvation means first and foremost the forgiveness of the sins of the people. It is fundamental to salvation. With Zaccheus showing the fruit of repentance, Jesus pronounced salvation to the house of Zaccheus, bringing them into the community of the kingdom.
Jesus’s teaching ministry is likewise replete with teachings on forgiveness. Luke narrates three major incidents where forgiveness is given emphasis: Jesus’s teaching on a plain, 6:17–49; Jesus’s teaching on prayer, 11:1–4; and Jesus’s teaching through parables, chapters 12–19. His ministry extends to everyone who is willing to receive him and listen to his teaching, whether they are apostles, disciples or part of the crowd, or even religious leaders. His ministry is obviously inclusive. He welcomes everyone to his community. Although in context Luke is particularly referring to a Jewish crowd, they narratively represent the nations.[20] The teaching of Jesus on a plain shows that Jesus is not just addressing his disciples but also the crowd. His pronouncement of blessings and woes reflect his balanced teaching ministry. Jesus does not show favoritism, neither favoring his disciples nor condemning the others. Bock writes, “He gives promises for those who enter into grace humbly, while warning of judgment for those who remain callous.”[21] In the ending of the narrative, Jesus will pay the price for his offer of forgiveness to people; the ultimate price of forgiveness is Jesus’s sacrifice of himself at the cross—his death.
The assurance of the efficacy of forgiveness, however, is anchored in willingness to extend forgiveness to others. This is the spirit of Jesus’s teaching on prayer in 11:1–4. Forgiveness must be a way of life for Jesus’s disciples: “Forgive our sins, as we forgive those who sin against us.” He expects them to forgive and keep on forgiving. His teaching on prayer shows the kind of disciples they must be. Forgiveness indeed begets forgiveness. By this Jesus lays an important foundation of discipleship. The Father’s grace of forgiveness flows freely to his children, who also must extend forgiveness to others. This is echoed by Jesus himself in Matthew’s account of the parable of the unmerciful servant: “I tell you not seven times, but seventy-seven times” (Matt 18:22, see also Luke 17:1–4). As such forgiveness reflects the character of God in and among his children. Bock points to three other reasons for it:
First, it shows that disciples are aware that they live in an imperfect, fallen world and that they contribute to its imperfection. . . . Second, there is recognition that sin is not only against individuals; it is an act of opposition to God. . . . Third, the recognition of the need for forgiveness reflects a humility that is central to healthy discipleship.[22]
Most of the parables of Jesus demonstrate his emphasis on forgiveness. Parables are his favorite narrative tools to teach people about the kingdom and the values of the kingdom, which he wants his disciples to embody as kingdom people. Luke’s lengthy account of Jesus’s parables shows Luke’s interest in the teachings of Jesus. Again there is a balance in Luke’s presentation. The parables portray both the positive and the negative aspects of the kingdom—receiving and rejecting, finding and losing, saving and condemning, forgiving and judging. There is a strong emphasis on forgiveness. But here forgiveness is more than words of affirmation or even of promise. The parables in chapter 15—the parable of the lost sheep, the parable of the lost coin, and the parable of the lost son all portray God’s acts of forgiveness. Forgiveness is God’s initiative. With Jesus, the Father’s forgiveness is real.
The Death And Resurrection Of Jesus
What is foreshadowed in the beginning and offered and preached in the middle is given substance in the ending of the story of Jesus.
With 19:28 the story moves towards the dramatic ending. This is now Jesus’s ministry in Jerusalem. The conflict announced in the beginning and developed in the middle now comes to its fundamental resolution. How would Jesus be able to substantiate his offer of forgiveness? Corollary questions follow: What certainty would the people have in the words of Jesus that they have been indeed forgiven? How would the disciples of Jesus live forgiveness toward others so as to forgive them seventy times seven?
As Jesus entered Jerusalem, symbolic of the city of the great king, he wept over its ignorance (19:28–44) and its rejection of Christ the king (20:1–26). Johnson writes,
This lament provides an authoritative commentary (by Jesus himself) on the significance of his arrival in the city, and a reminder of important literary themes: Jesus’ arrival is the visitation of God that offers peace; the rejection of the Prophet will lead to destruction; this first rejection is one that is carried out of ignorance (Acts 3:17).[23]
The triumphal entry (19:37–40), the tears of Jesus (19:41–44), and the temple of Israel (19:45–48) all add to the dramatic ending portraying forgiveness despite rejection. The people had no idea of how Jesus was enacting forgiveness for them. He would soon atone for their sins with his own self-sacrifice. Jesus is God’s forgiveness in flesh and blood. He is the peace that Jerusalem needed and waited for so long. He is the peace that would be announced to the ends of the earth. Had Jerusalem known who Jesus is, they would have welcomed him as their king.
How is forgiveness possible? At the Lord’s Supper, sharing table with his disciples, Jesus gave them bread and wine as emblems of his body (“given for you”) and blood (“poured out for you”) in and through which forgiveness shall flow to the people. As the author of Hebrews declares, “For without the shedding of blood, there is no forgiveness of sins” (9:22). Jesus’s death is God’s highest act of forgiveness—the atoning sacrifice for the sins of men and women. God did not just promise forgiveness, he enacted forgiveness in Jesus. Peter had to learn this truth through his own rejection of Christ but was promised forgiveness upon his return: “But I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith may not fail. And when you have come back, strengthen your brothers” (Luke 22:32).
At the cross, the climax of this dramatic ending, Jesus prayed for the forgiveness of his people: “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing” (23:34). Although out of ignorance, the people were still violating the Son of Man.[24] Rather than condemn them, Jesus took this as an opportunity to forgive them. Through his words and actions, forgiveness is given to the very people who were crucifying him. Not only did he pray for forgiveness, he specifically forgave. When one of the thieves crucified with Jesus asked for forgiveness, Jesus said, “I tell you the truth, today you will be with me in paradise” (v. 43). Forgiveness is anchored in the act of God in Christ and the humble response of men and women to the person of Christ.
Through Christ’s death—God’s act of atonement, sin is dethroned. The death of his Son is God’s resolution to the problem of sin that has burdened men and women since Adam and Eve. When Jesus dies, forgiveness has come to life.[25] At the cross, forgiveness echoed back to Genesis and gave life to all who believed. Hence, the centurion, seeing what had happened, praised God and said, “Surely this was a righteous man” (23:47). Forgiveness is an act of righteousness. The righteousness of Christ is the foundation of God’s forgiveness and even ours toward others today. His righteousness covers the unrighteousness of all who believe.
The disciples could not believe what happened, Jesus was dead. They needed the resurrection. They needed to see the Christ. Luke ended his story of Jesus with the resurrection account to show the literary reversal—God’s pivotal act of forgiveness in Jesus. The resurrected Christ took away the disciples’ fears and doubts. He helped them see what Scripture is all about, and then he told them: “This is what is written: The Christ will suffer and rise from the dead on the third day, and repentance and forgiveness of sins will be preached in his name to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem” (24:46–47). The story of Jesus ended where it all began—with John the Baptist’s message of repentance and forgiveness. Luke’s narrative indeed presents to us the Christian message of forgiveness—the gospel is a gospel of forgiveness.
Forgiveness And The Story Of The Church
The story of the church continues the story of Jesus.[26] Luke takes the narrative further to include the efficacy of the gospel of Christ in and through the church under the ministry of the Holy Spirit. God’s promised deliverance does not end in Jesus and his messianic ministry. The final goal of the narrative is the actual, historical, universal, and progressive realization of the kingdom of God on earth toward its eschatological reality—the restoration of God’s good creation and the resumption of divine kingship.[27]
Essential to the efficacy of the gospel is the Holy Spirit, who will bring to completion the plan of God in and through the church.[28] The person and ministry of the Holy Spirit are closely tied to the ministry of Christ; hence, in Luke’s narrative plot, the coming of the Spirit is an integral part of the central point, which is not only Christological but also Pneumatological. As such the transcendent character of the central point is embodied by the “Christo-Pneuma” relation—a sub-relation within the economic Trinity, and so the climax of Luke-Acts narrative includes Pentecost, which transitions the witness-plot from Jesus to the church.
The Birth Of The Church
The Pentecost signals a new era in God’s work of redemption.[29] The implied author brings the central story to its climactic plot-axis highlighting the witness of Jesus with his disciples (filled with the Spirit) commissioned to take the witness to the world. Because of the inherent relationship between the events before and after Pentecost, Twelftree observes,
We can see that Luke would not call Pentecost the birth of the Church. For him the origins of the Church is in the call and community of followers of Jesus during his ministry. Perhaps Luke would say that what was born in hope in the ministry of the earthly Jesus was given the ‘breath’ (pneuma) of life and power in the promised coming of the ‘Spirit’ (pneuma). This means that, for Luke, the Church does not occupy a period in history separate from that of Jesus. Rather, the Church was called into existence by him and is a continuation or ongoing expression of his ministry.[30]
At the heart of Pentecost is the coming of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit himself is the causal factor of the life and witness of the church. There is no church without the Holy Spirit. As Jesus was filled by the Holy Spirit in his own witness so would the church be as Christ to the world. The filling of the Holy Spirit marks the church as the people of Christ commissioned to continue God’s work. The Spirit who resurrected Jesus is the same Spirit who now resurrects the people of God. This means that Israel is resurrected but now with a new identity and a mission to carry out.[3
The church is the new Israel, but not ethnically. This is made clearer in the gift of tongues symbolic of the new people representing the new and resurrected humanity.[32] Such is a universal forgiveness extended to all people in and through the church. God through his Son Jesus grants forgiveness to men and women of all nations with the giving of the Holy Spirit. Tannehill writes, “It is possible that the Pentecost scene is meant not only to fulfill John the Baptist’s words about baptism in the Holy Spirit (Luke 3:16; cf. Acts 1:5) but also to suggest that Peter or the church is a successor of John and Jesus in preaching a message of repentance.”[33]
The birth of the church put flesh and blood to the message of forgiveness announced during the birth of Jesus by John and in his public ministry by Jesus himself. This we have seen in the preaching of Peter on that day, where Peter called people to repentance for the forgiveness of their sins. Witherington writes, “It is thus quite correct to stress that in Acts 2 we see repentance (and faith) leading to baptism, the forgiveness of sins, and the reception of the Holy Spirit.”[34] The words of forgiveness in Jesus have now become acts of forgiveness by the Spirit. The Spirit himself is the believers’ covering. Forgiveness is a spiritual act only the people of the Spirit can truly extend to others, and so the church is commissioned to take the message of forgiveness in Jesus to the world as the people of the Spirit. Those who have received the witness of the Spirit receive the witness himself—the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of forgiveness. The new life begins with the Spirit, who incorporates or rather initiates men and women into the community of forgiveness.[35] We know we have been forgiven not only because we have believed in Christ and received the Holy Spirit but also because we have been incorporated into the body of Christ—the Church, which also serves as a narrative sign of forgiveness.
The Witness In Jerusalem
Filled by the Spirit, the disciples embarked on their witness as commissioned by Jesus himself: “you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8). Following Jesus, a programmatic geographic expansion, the witness of the church began, or rather resumed, in Jerusalem.
Although Luke-Acts is primarily addressed to a Gentile congregation, the extension of the gospel to the other nations is rooted in God’s work with Israel and his purpose for them to be light to the nations, and it is fitting that the witness of the church began in Jerusalem, where Jesus himself ended his witness as God’s messiah. Two major events marked the witness in Jerusalem: the witness of Peter and the other disciples (Acts 3:1–5:42) and the witness of Stephen (6:1–8:1). Peter and the other disciples held in their hands the authority to perform miracles in Jesus’s name and also the authority to grant forgiveness in Jesus’s name. Forgiveness is anchored in the authority the disciples had in Jesus’s name. His was the power behind the miracles and the message of forgiveness. Such authority of the disciples was not an arbitrary act of forgiveness; it was anchored in the work of Jesus—his death and resurrection.[36] Their offer or pronouncement of forgiveness was effective only in the name of Jesus and by the Holy Spirit. Jerusalem experienced God and his grace in Jesus anew (4:12). However, despite the authority of the disciples, religious leaders kept themselves aloof from God’s grace of forgiveness in Jesus. The same character group in Luke creates the conflict in Acts.[37] The refusal of the religious authorities to recognize Jesus as the one sent by God for the forgiveness of sins points to the resistibility of grace. There is no forgiveness where there is no faith in Jesus preceded by repentance (5:31–32).
The witness of Stephen likewise highlights forgiveness. Stephen’s defense narrates the biblical story from Abraham to Moses and from Moses to David and Solomon. The narrative describes persistent refusal by Israel to submit to the authority of God.[38] They had rejected servants and prophets whom God had sent for them, and the climax of Israel’s rejection came with the murder of the Righteous One. Stephen’s audience and the readers of Acts are called to break the chain of resistance and rejection. Such a call echoes Stephen’s understanding of the gospel, which offers men and women forgiveness. The intended narrative effect is one of repentance leading to forgiveness. Stephen’s prayer of forgiveness not only demonstrates his own willingness to forgive but also “a clear recognition of the ‘Lord’ as the one with the power to realize forgiveness.”[39] Hence, his speech/message was more of an act of forgiveness than simply words of forgiveness through preaching. Stephen’s life serves as the message to those who still refuse to acknowledge Jesus as the Righteous One. Stephen prayed for the forgiveness of his accusers and murderers, demonstrating the very goal of the plan of God.[40] The Christlike prayer of Stephen shows that no sin or persecution is out of reach of God’s forgiveness.
Witness In Judea And Samaria
The witness in Judea and Samaria involves a number of stories of forgiveness: the story of the Ethiopian eunuch (8:26–40), the story of the conversion of Saul (9:1–31), the stories of Aeneas and Dorcas (9:32–42), and the story of Cornelius (10:1–11:18). Forgiveness is expanded outside Jerusalem to both Jews and Gentiles.
Luke’s narrative ending, the witness to the ends of the earth, now moves to its new geographic expansions. The characters of the stories overlap among Jews, proselytes, and Gentiles. The Ethiopian eunuch ushers Luke’s narrative to its non-Jewish audience under the ministry of a Hellenistic leader or disciple, Philip.[41] The Holy Spirit is the causal character who brings the witness to its new phase.[42] Here we have a minor character—the Ethiopian, an African eunuch, a God-fearing Gentile. The attention to God-fearing men and women in Acts points to the attention given to those who have receptive spirits toward the gospel of forgiveness. At the heart of the story is the prophecy of Isaiah regarding the “servant” and the forgiveness of the people of Israel, which Philip connected to the good news. Philip builds the connection between the promised forgiveness for the people of Israel to God’s offer of forgiveness to the nations in Jesus. The baptism of the eunuch brings us back within the narrative of forgiveness inaugurated by John the Baptist and provided by Jesus through his blood.
A fuller expression of forgiveness in Acts finds its home in the narrative of Saul, the persecutor, who would later become the preacher of forgiveness to the Gentiles. His story is a climax within the Lukan narrative and plays as the causal factor for the witness to the ends of the earth. Tannehill writes, “After Philip carries the word to Samaria and makes the first contact with a representative of peoples at ‘the end of the earth’ (Acts 8), the narrative focuses on a key character in the spread of the mission (Saul) and on key events in the development of a sustained mission to the Gentiles.”[43] Saul/Paul is a central character in the latter part of Acts, with three narrative thrusts in his story: Saul’s encounter with the resurrected Jesus, Saul’s restoration of sight through Ananias, and Saul’s commission to be Jesus’s chosen instrument for the Gentiles. Each narrative thrust demonstrates a divine act of forgiveness not only for a man of sin but also for an enemy of Christ. As such, Christian forgiveness is inclusive and also incisive or transformative.
The stories of Aeneas and Dorcas as literary signposts point to the supernatural character of forgiveness in Acts through the ministry of the apostles in general and Peter in particular. Here Luke parallels the witness of the disciples with the witness of Jesus. Both miracles bring back memories of the narrative of Jesus. The story of Aeneas recalls the time Jesus offered forgiveness to a paralytic because of the faith of his four friends.[44] The story of Dorcas narratively recalls the story of Jesus raising a widow’s son, where it happened that the news about Jesus spread throughout Judea and the surrounding country (Luke 7:17).[45] Miracles here also express divine forgiveness.
The conversion of Cornelius and his house makes forgiveness and grace both ecclesiastical and theological. The church in Jerusalem needs a new perspective on God’s work in Christ by the Holy Spirit among the Gentiles. While they are willing to preach the gospel to the nations, the Jerusalem church is not ready to give equal status to their Gentile counterparts. There remains in the heart of Jewish Christians the exclusivity of their fellowship. Jews and Gentiles do not fellowship together. They do not share tables. Hence, Peter’s action is put to question as “the circumcised believers criticized him” (Acts 11:2). Although the Jerusalem church now possess the Holy Spirit, they still hold their traditions. Yet the conversion of Cornelius leads to the church’s confession that “God has granted even Gentiles repentance unto life” (v. 18).[46] Forgiveness involves acceptance leading to unity and holiness. With this the transformation of the people of God is complete; a new life has dawned.[47] The plot of witness now comes to its fullness with the mission of bringing the good news to the ends of the earth and thereby fulfilling the words of the Law and the Prophets.
Witness To The Ends Of The Earth
The witness to the ends of the earth that began in Jerusalem is the climax of the ending of the Luke-Acts narrative plot. This witness, however, is to be a Jewish-Gentile Christian witness to the ends of the earth. The Holy Spirit set Paul (and Barnabas) apart in Antioch for the work of preaching the gospel to the nations. The narrator characterizes the Spirit as the director of the mission to the Gentiles.[48] That Antiochian believers were the sending church is undoubtedly a narrative sign of the unity of the church. In this way the narrator tells readers that Gentile believers have been given the responsibility of being part of the witness of Christ to the nations. Unity is not only a matter of identity but also a sharing in responsibility. Indeed the witness to the ends of the earth is one responsibility of all believers or churches both Jews and Gentiles.
The witness among the Gentiles centered on the proclamation of Jesus as the fulfillment of the promise given to King David (13:23). Paul emphasizes that it is through Jesus that forgiveness of sins shall be proclaimed to the nations (v. 38). Salvation offers first and foremost the forgiveness of sins of Israel and also the Gentiles who were appointed for eternal life (v. 48). The Gentiles too received miracles as signs of forgiveness in their midst.
The Jerusalem Council (Acts 15) marks not only the church’s official acceptance of the Gentiles into the body of Christ—the church, but also the turning point of the witness plot.[49] Christian forgiveness does not require circumcision or any Jewish regulations. That they have received the Holy Spirit is enough for Gentiles to become part of the community of forgiveness. The Holy Spirit is the only assurance of forgiveness (v. 8). Paul’s ministry among Gentiles centers on the preaching of forgiveness to all the nations. Paul’s missionary journeys demonstrate how God’s work of forgiveness has come to its universal proclamation, allowing Gentiles to take part in the covenant God had given to Abraham. While the mission was also faced with challenges, the work was unhindered, gaining more and more men and women from all nations into the kingdom through the powerful preaching of the gospel. Witherington writes, “Luke’s main concern is to leave the reader a reminder about the unstoppable word of God, which no obstacle—not shipwreck, not poisonous snakes, not Roman authorities—could hinder from reaching the heart of the Empire, and the hearts of those who dwelled there.”[50]
Conclusion
The Luke-Acts narrative presents the program and progress of the witness of Jesus and the church. The literary power behind the events of the plot brings the words of the prophets to life: “For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more” (Jer 31:34). Forgiveness is at the heart of the narrative as one of God’s activities, if not the activity, in and through the witness of Jesus and the church that brings God’s offer of salvation and the kingdom to the people of Israel and the nations.
This study of the literary function of forgiveness in the plot of Luke-Acts narrative enriches Luke’s theology of forgiveness. It develops further three theological concerns. First, God and forgiveness. Forgiveness is portrayed as God’s activity in Jesus by the Holy Spirit. This means that forgiveness is the work of the triune God demonstrating his faithfulness to the people of Israel and the nations. Second, the gospel and forgiveness. There is no gospel where there is no forgiveness. Salvation and the kingdom come to life only through God’s work of forgiveness. To preach Christ is to preach forgiveness. The gospel is indeed a gospel of forgiveness. And third, the church and forgiveness. The new people of God is a people of forgiveness. To be forgiven is to be a part of the church. And to be a part of the church is to forgive. Lack of forgiveness belies the witness of the church.
Furthermore, the story of forgiveness is the very ground of the command to forgive. Forgiveness is more than a personal exercise of cancelling people’s debts or not counting their offenses. It is indeed anchored in God’s redemptive act of forgiveness in Jesus. Hence, as people of forgiveness, we forgive our offenders only in Jesus and as members of his body.
Notes
- Two other words are also used in relation to forgiveness: נָשָׂא (Gen 4:13; Exod 32:32; Ps 24:18) and סָלַח (Lev 4:20; 5:10, 13). See H. Leroy, ἄφεσις in Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament, vol. 1 (1990): 181–83.
- Leroy, ἄφεσις, 181–83. Both the Old Testament and New Testament references point to divine forgiveness in relation to sin/s. Liberation is also conceived as forgiveness.
- Leroy’s essay sums up forgiveness in the other Gospels.
- See William S. Kurz, Reading Luke-Acts: Dynamics of Biblical Narrative (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1993): 17–19. He notes that Luke arranged the earliest independent stories and the collected sayings of Jesus.
- Robert C. Tannehill, Luke, Abingdon New Testament Commentaries (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1996), 10.
- Ju Hur, A Dynamic Reading of the Holy Spirit in Luke-Acts (London: T&T Clark, 2001), 185–86.
- Hur, A Dynamic Reading of the Holy Spirit in Luke-Acts, 192.
- See Kurz, Reading Luke-Acts: Dynamics of Biblical Narrative, 31–32.
- Ju, A Dynamic Reading of the Holy Spirit in Luke-Acts,189.
- Luke has used character speech in developing his narrative themes. See Karl Allen Kuhn, The Kingdom according to Luke and Acts: A Social, Literary and Theological Introduction (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2015), 127–78.
- Kuhn puts forward the thesis that Luke introduces a distinct ideological context or kerygmatic worldview that guides his audience in understanding the kingdom story. He outlines five primary contours of Luke’s kingdom story: (1) “God Reigns and Brings These Things to Pass,” (2) “Fulfillment of God’s Promises to Save,” (3) “Faithful Response: Believing and Rejoicing in the Good News,” (4) “God’s Visitation of God’s People in Jesus, the Messiah, Divine Son, and Lord,” (5) Reversal. The Kingdom according to Luke and Acts, 130.
- Robert C. Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, Vol. 1 (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1986), 32.
- Tannehill, Luke, 92.
- Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, 48–49.
- Leon Morris, The Gospel according to St. Luke, Tyndale New Testament Commentary (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1982), 117.
- Jack Dean Kingsbury believes that “at the heart of this gospel (Luke) plot is the element of conflict.” “The Plot of Luke’s Story of Jesus,” Interpretation 48, no. 4 (1994): 369–78. See also Jack Dean Kingsbury, Conflict in Luke: Jesus, Authorities, Disciples (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1991); Luke Timothy Johnson, The Gospel of Luke (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 1991): 307–8.
- See Jason Valeriano Hallig, “The Eating Motif and Luke’s Characterization of Jesus as the Son of Man,” Bibliotheca Sacra 173 (2016): 203–18.
- Kingsbury, “The Plot of Luke’s Story of Jesus,” 377. On how Luke characterizes the religious leaders, see also, Mark Allan Powell, “The Religious Leaders in Luke: A Literary-Critical Study,” Journal of Biblical Literature 109 (1990): 93–110.
- See Hallig, “The Eating Motif and Luke’s Characterization of Jesus as the Son of Man.”
- For the difference between “people” and “nations” in Luke, see Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, 143.
- Darrell L. Bock, Luke, vol. 1, Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 1994), 120.
- Bock, Luke, 205.
- Johnson, The Gospel of Luke, 301.
- For a discussion on the theme of ignorance and misunderstanding in Luke-Acts, see Kurz, Reading Luke-Acts, 149.
- N. T. Wright comments, “From Luke’s point of view, the resurrection is the moment when Israel’s Messiah ‘comes into his glory,’ so that ‘repentance for the forgiveness of sins’ can now be announced to all the world as the way of life, indeed, as they say in Acts, as The Way.” Wright juxtaposes the cross and the kingdom. How God Became King: The Forgotten Story of the Gospels (New York: HarperCollins, 2012), 246.
- Ben Witherington III, The Acts of the Apostles: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998), 109; see also Gerhard A. Krodel, Acts (Minnea-polis: Augsburg, 1986), 51.
- The Holy Spirit in the church is also an eschatological sign. Hur writes, “The future expectation of the outpouring of the Spirit prophesied by Joel is said to be fulfilled on the day of Pentecost and is construed as the eschatological Spirit by replacing the Joel phrase ‘in the last days’ (2.17).” A Dynamic Reading of the Holy Spirit in Luke-Acts, 228.
- Hur offers three major functions of the Holy Spirit in the narrative: empowering and guiding cause, verifying cause, and supervising or sustaining cause. A Dynamic Reading of the Holy Spirit in Luke-Acts, 226–27.
- This note was missing in the print version.
- Graham H. Twelftree, People of the Spirit: Exploring Luke’s View of the Church (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2009), 28.
- On the significance of Pentecost, see the works of J. Dunn, Baptism in the Holy Spirit: A Re-examination of the New Testament Teaching on the Gift of the Spirit in Relation to Pentecostalism Today (London: SCM Press, 1970); G. Haya-Prats, L’Espiritu force de L’eglise. Sa nature et son activise d’ apres les Actes des Apotres, trans. J. Romero (Paris: Cerf, 1975); M. Turner, “Luke and the Spirit: Studies in the Significance of Receiving the Spirit in Luke-Acts” (PhD dissertation, University of Cambridge, 1980); G. W. H. Lampe, The Seal of the Spirit (London: Longmans, Green, 1951); and R. Menzies, The Development of Early Christian Pneumatology with Special Reference to Luke-Acts (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1991).
- Along with the other phenomena, “they thus ascribe to God’s Spirit an initiatory role, a function that launched not only the ministry of Jesus but that of testimony to be given about him by commissioned apostles.” Joseph A. Fitzmyer, The Acts of the Apostles (New York: Doubleday, 1998), 236.
- Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Acts, 40; italics added.
- Witherington, The Acts of the Apostles, 154–55.
- See Graham H. Twelftree, People of the Spirit: Exploring Luke’s View of the Church (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2009).
- Emphasis on Jesus or the name of Jesus in various speeches reveals the message of the early church, that is, Christological kerygma and the call to repentance leading to forgiveness. Both are included in the persistent elements in the structure of speeches in Acts. Conzelmann lists six elements, 1. An appeal for hearing. 2. Connection between the situation and speech. 3. The body of the speech 4. Christological kerygma 5. Scriptural support 6. Offer of salvation. Hans Conzelmann, Acts of the Apostles (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1987), xliv.
- For the conflict with the temple authorities, see Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, 59–79; John A. Darr, On Character Building: The Reader and the Rhetoric of Characterization in Luke-Acts (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox, 1992), 116–26.
- For the climax of the conflict in Jerusalem, see Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, 80–101.
- Marion L. Soards, The Speeches in Acts: Their Content, Context, and Concerns (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1994), 70.
- Soards, The Speeches in Acts, 70.
- For a discussion of why scholars hesitate to recognize the identity of the eunuch as a Gentile, see Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, 110. Tannehill argues that this encounter with the Ethiopian is not a causal factor in a sequence of events that moves toward the end of the earth. However, for the implied reader, this scene has its causal function foreshadowing the witness to the ends of the earth, which Tannehill clearly recognizes: “The Ethiopian represents those who are at the end of the earth” (109).
- For a summary of the causal function of the Spirit in the witness in Judea and Samaria, see Hur, A Dynamic Reading of the Holy Spirit in Luke-Acts, 249.
- Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, 113.
- F. F. Bruce, The Book of Acts, New International Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1988), 198.
- Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, 126.
- Martin Dibelius believes that the conversion of Cornelius has a special importance in Acts as decisive evidence of the acceptance of the Gentiles by God. The Book of Acts: Form, Style, and Theology, edited by K. C. Hanson (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2004), 140.
- Tannehill highlights that the baptism with the Holy Spirit is inclusive. With this experience of Cornelius and his house, the meaning of the experience includes Gentiles too. The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, 144.
- Hur, A Dynamic Reading of the Holy Spirit in Luke-Acts, 254.
- Ernst Haenchen, The Acts of the Apostles: A Commentary (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1971), 462.
- Witherington, The Acts of the Apostles, 815–16.