EVENING SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 5/19/2026
10:57 PM
My
Worship Time Focus:
Intro to “Jesus:
The Divine Deliverer”
Bible
Reading & Meditation Reference: Luke 4:38-44
Message of the verses: “38 Then
He got up and left the synagogue, and entered Simon’s home.
Now Simon’s mother-in-law was suffering from a high fever, and they asked
Him [a]to help her. 39 And
standing over her, He rebuked the fever, and it left her; and she
immediately got up and served them.
40 Now while the sun was setting,
all those who had any who were sick with various diseases
brought them to Him; and He was laying His hands on each one of them
and healing them. 41 Demons also were coming out of
many, shouting, “You are the Son of God!” And yet He
was rebuking them and would not allow them to speak, because they
knew that He was the Christ.
42 Now when day came, Jesus left and
went to a secluded place; and the crowds were searching for Him, and they came
to Him and tried to keep Him from leaving them. 43 But He
said to them, “I must also preach the kingdom of God to the other
cities, because I was sent for this purpose.”
44 So He kept on preaching in the
synagogues of Judea.
I will do as I have been doing and that
is quote the introduction to these verses from John MacArthur’s commentary.
“The historical records of the life
and ministry of Jesus Christ in the Gospels contain all that God has revealed
about Him. Each of the four gospel
writers wrote from his own unique perspective and for a distinct audience. Matthew wrote primarily to a Jewish audience,
presenting Jesus as Israel’s Messiah and rightful king. Thus, while Luke recorded Mary’s genealogy to
show Jesus’ physical descent, Matthew gave Joseph’s genealogy, since the royal
line came through him. Matthew
frequently cited the fulfillment of the Old Testament prophecy in Jesus’ life
and ministry. He also referred to Jesus
by the Jewish messianic title ‘Son of David.’
Sensitive to his readers’ reverence for and reluctance to use the name
of God, Matthew aloe of the gospel writers substitutes the phrase ‘kingdom of
heaven’ instead of ‘kingdom of God.’
“Mark addressed his gospel to
Gentiles, particularly the Romans. Thus
he was careful to translate Aramaic words (e.g., 3:17; 5:41; 7:11, 34; 14:36;
15:22, 34) for his readers, and to explain Jewish customs with which they would
not have been familiar (7:3-4). His
fast-paced account, marked by the frequent use of the term ‘immediately’ (more
than forty times), would appeal to the practical, action-oriented Romans. Mark presented Jesus as the Servant, who came
‘to give His life a ransom for many’ (10:45).
“Luke presented a carefully
researched, historically accurate account of the life of Jesus Christ. He addressed a broader Gentile audience than
Mark, and presented Jesus as the Son of Man (a phrase he used more than two
dozen times), the answer to mankind’s needs and hopes.
“John was written much later than
the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke) to supplement and complement
them. Its supreme, overarching purpose,
as stated by John himself, is to present Jesus Christ as God, and to encourage
its readers to come to faith in Him: “These have been written so that you may
believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing you may
have life in His name’ (20:31). The same
purpose could be given for the other three Gospels.
“Yet despite their different
emphases, all the Gospels present the revelation of Jesus Christ as God in
human flesh. They reveal Him to have
been born of a virgin, lived a sinless life, died as a substitute for believing
sinners, and to have risen from the dead three days later, forever conquering
death for all the redeemed. Repentance
from sin and faith in Christ and His work bring complete forgiveness of sin and
eternal life. The divine truths,
spiritual realities, singular accomplishments, and glorious promises they
record as part of the life and ministry of the Lord Jesus demand that the
Gospels be studied carefully.
“Along with the claims Jesus Christ
made, the gospel writers also presented convincing evidence for the validity of
His assertions. To that end, Luke
marshals the historical evidence to make an extensive, irrefutable case that
Jesus is the God-man, Messiah, and only Savior.
Luke’s concern (like the other gospel writers), then, is not primarily
with the historical details of Jesus’ life and ministry, but rather with what
those accurately recorded details incontrovertibly prove about Him.
“The closing section of chapter 4
might appear at first glance to be a series of brief, disconnected comments
that sum up a certain period of Jesus’ life.
But they are in reality very carefully connected. The Jewish people wanted to see signs to
prove that Jesus was the Messiah (cf. 11:16;
Matt. 12:38; 16:1; 1 Cor. 1:22), and in this brief passage Luke provided some
for them. He revealed Jesus’ divine
power over three realms: the natural realm, the supernatural realm, and the
eternal realm.”
5/19/2026
11:28 PM