Pneumatology in Lukes Gospel
Pneumatology in Lukes Gospel
Pneumatology in Lukes Gospel
The following essay, of which I have kept a copy, is entirely my own work. All sources of
ideas and quotations are duly acknowledged in references.
(enter name for electronic
SIGNATURE OF STUDENT: John Mayne submissions)
LECTURER:
ABSTRACT
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For many, Christianity is a matter of churchgoing, soldiering on, doing ones best and
believing in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus (Green 1975, 11). Our lack of Spirit-
shallow pneumatology, in that we have fallen short of adequately engaging with this
central person and doctrine of the Bible. As we explore the Spirit’s role in the synoptics,
chiefly Luke’s gospel, we can begin to discover a Spirit of prophecy, anointing and
holiness. Our method is that of uncovering the exegetical foundations of Lucan passages
commissioning and his sending out of the apostles. This work helps to scale back the
current academic preoccupation with the Spirit in the Pauline epistles, as we go back to
the heart of the matter, and arguably the foundation of the doctrine, in one of the most
1. INTRODUCTION
In exploring pneumatology throughout the synoptics, one cannot go past Luke for
providing the bulk of our material. Luke is more than worthy of the “theologian of the
Holy Spirit” (DeSilva 2004, 330) attestation ascribed to him. There are sixteen direct
mentions of the Holy Spirit in Luke’s Gospel, plus a few other passages where he is
through Jesus’ infancy, baptism, inauguration, ministry and final commissioning, we can
glean useful truths about the “πνεύματι τοῦ θεοῦ ἡμῶν” (1 Cor 6:11).
2. INFANCY NARRATIVES
Matthew mentions the Spirit in his opening narrative (Matt 1:18; 20), yet it is Luke who
does so more exhaustively, highlighting the prophetic activity of the Spirit in relation to
John and Jesus’ conception, birth and infancy (Luke 1:15-2:27). These account for almost
half the references to the Spirit within Luke. Once the prologue is finished, the reader
plunges into the “conceptual world of… intertestamental Judaism” (Turner 2005, 269),
which viewed the Spirit predominantly as an organ of communication between God and
man. Though prophecy had ceased, the Spirit is here renewing its activity, “announcing a
This commences with “a prenatal sanctification of John” (Marshall 1978, 58), the anointed
choice for the task ahead who bears the same “πνεύμα” and “δύναμις” as “Ἡλίας” (Luke
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1:17), a pivotal OT allusion. “Πνεύμα” and “δύναμις” is a common Lukan pairing (1:35;
4:14; cf. 24:49; Acts 1:8; 10:38), hinting at dynamic experience for the imbued, “the
energy of the Spirit,” whereupon the Marcan “δύναμις” “is eschatological” (Conzelmann
1953, 181). On this occasion, the term “πνεύμα” refers simply to the moral and spiritual
development of the subject. In the case of Jesus’ conception without human agency, the
“πνεύμα ἅγιος” worked miraculously, “equated in poetic parallelism” (Marshall 1978, 70)
alongside the “δύναμις ὑψίστου” (Luke 1:30; cf. Matt 1:18; 20). The Spirit is creative, the
agent behind Creation itself (Gen 1:2; Job 33:4), rekindling the OT understanding of the
“Spirit instigating the next chapter in the plan of God for his world” (Warrington 2009,
60). He not only authenticates the Messiah and his divine forerunner to a Jewish
audience seeped in prophetic tradition, but also to Gentiles besotted with power in its
various guises. The Spirit’s bestowal was proportional to their mission scope, with John
affirmed as “μέγας” and Jesus the ‘υἱὸς θεοῦ’ (Luke 1:35). Proclamation of the gospel is
endorsed by the Spirit, with Zechariah’s Song, Mary’s Magnificat and Simeon’s tribute
touching on multiple gospel themes, including restoration of Gentiles (Luke 1:67-70; 77;
2:31-32). These praises serve “to stop the progression of events momentarily so that
Zechariah and Elizabeth were both “δίκαιοι… ἐναντίον τοῦ θεοῦ” (Luke 1:6), similar to the
perfect verb denoting imbuement with honour. They possessed holiness consistent with
the very Spirit that spoke through them. Luke introduces the term “πνεύμα ἅγιος” (Luke
1:15) early on, which though common throughout the NT, features merely times in the OT
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(Ps 51:11; Isa 63:10-11). Though there were numerous spirits being worshipped, Luke
emphasizes that God’s Spirit is holy, perfect and divine. Other uses of “πνεῦμα” in Luke
which lack the descriptor of “ἅγιος”, are predominantly to describe evil spirits (Luke 6:18;
7:21; 9:39). The Spirit temporally abides on “ἅγιος” messengers, set apart for Yahweh’s
purposes. This is not alien to the OT. Simeon was not only morally righteous, but was
awaiting the “παράκλησις” of Israel (Luke 2:25). This longing to see the Messiah was
fulfilled by Holy Spirit, leading him to public praise in the “ἱερόν” (Luke 2:27), symbol of
OT faith. Luke develops upon this latent understanding, serving to legitimize the Christian
movement as the continuity and fulfilment of Judaism, a clear theme in the Luke-Acts
corpus. This may be through the efforts of a manipulative redactor, though more likely
Elizabeth (Luke 1:40-44) and Zechariah (Luke 1:67) are described as “ἐπλήσθη” with
Spirit, a Lukan idiom. The term describes filling of the Spirit, yet not always (cf. Luke 4:28;
5:7; 26; 6:11). For Simeon, the Spirit was “ἐπ’ αὐτόν” (Luke 2:25). Their resulting
outbursts were joyous, ecstatic, otherwise unprovoked, and would have been noticeable
to bystanders.
The Spirit acted through an often unlikely collective of persons in the OT (Ex 15:20; Judg
4:4; 2 Kgs 22:14), but no doubt most Jews did not anticipate “such re-occurrences in the
NT era” (Warrington 2009, 55). Yet here the fulfilment of Spirit-prophecies is experienced
through “στεῖρα” Elizabeth and the “παρθένου” Mary (Luke 1:7; 1:41). Likewise the
ageing, rural priest Zechariah became the first person in four hundred years to give
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prophetic utterance (Luke 1:67-80). God has a preferential bias towards the marginalized,
3. JESUS’ BAPTISM
John fuels Messianic expectation, announcing that Jesus will supersede his own ministry
by baptising “ἐν πνεύματι ἁγίῳ καὶ πυρί” (Matt 3:11; Luke 3:16). Markan and Johannine
accounts share likewise, but neglect to mention “πῦρ” explicitly, the meaning of which
has “occasioned much discussion” (Marshall 1978, 146). Later Jesus is anointed with the
Spirit post-baptism, an event paralleled in each Gospel (Matt 3:16; Mark 1:10-11; Luke
On the surface there is nothing particularly unique to Luke’s testimony, but further
digging yields subtle insight. Luke is the only Evangelist to record the Spirit’s descent
occurring while Jesus was “προσεύχομαι” (Luke 3:21), conflating two of the author’s
beloved themes. After the Spirit was given at Pentecost, he could still be stirred up afresh
in response to prayer (Acts 4:31). Unexpectedly, Luke also refers to Jesus’ baptism only in
highlight “the opening of heaven and the descent of the Holy Spirit” (Morris 1974, 99).
His usage of “σωματικῷ εἴδει” attests to the objective, physical reality of Jesus’ Spirit-
baptism (Luke 3:22), rather than a subjective rendering. This synchronises with Luke’s
The precise symbolism of the “περιστερά” (Luke 3:22), whether an early Christian
invention or one more rooted in Judaism, is difficult to pin down with certainty. The most
reputable argument evokes the idea of a herald of good tidings (cf. Gen 8:11), bolstering
further Luke’s thrust of the “Spirit on Jesus as the power to proclaim the messianic good
news” (Turner 2004, 483). The voice provides “heavenly confirmation of Jesus’
appointment as Messiah” (Evans 1990, 56), and may allude to a royal enthronement
Psalm (Ps 2:7). Jesus is not adopted by the Spirit, but rather “identified by the Spirit” and
confirmed by the Father as the one worthy of the Spirit’s presence (Warrington 2009, 63)
on his journey to redeem mankind. Green (1975, 50) concludes that “no longer is the
Holy Spirit encountered as naked power; he is clothed with the personality… of Jesus.”
Each synoptic witness records the Spirit prompting Jesus into the wilderness to encounter
Satan (Matt 4:1-11; Mk 1:12-13; Luke 4:1-14). Whilst Mark’s account is minimalistic,
Luke’s dual reference to the “πνεύμα” is more exhaustive than Matthew’s, a consistent
theme so far. Luke alone states that Jesus was “πλήρης πνεύματος ἁγίου,” and adds that
he was led “ἐν” the Spirit, rather than Matthew’s up by (“ὑπό”) the Spirit. This nuancing
of language in Luke, demonstrates more clearly than the others that the Spirit “is not an
external, compulsive force upon Jesus but an inward inspiration” (Marshall 1978, 169).
The Messiah constantly lives “in the sphere or presence of… the Spirit” (Warrington 2009,
67), both coexisting in harmony. In combating Satan, Jesus did not function in human
energy alone, yet conscious resistance and firm reliance on God’s word was nonetheless a
key component. The Spirit’s proactivity in allowing Jesus to be tempted confirms the
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Warrington 2009, 67) that required engagement in the unfolding timeline of salvation-
history. Where Israel formerly “rebelled and grieved his Holy Spirit” in the wilderness (Is
Luke’s interest in the Spirit comes to the fore when Jesus returns to Galilee “ἐν τῇ
δυνάμει τοῦ πνεύματος” and “φήμη” spreads throughout (Luke 4:14; cf. Matt 4:12-13;
Mark 1:14). This latter word is rare in the NT, yet is the source of the English term ‘fame,’
which could “even pass as a translation” (Hendriksen 1978, 249). Bock (1994, 391) is
preaching efforts (cf. Luke 4:15). Jesus’ fullness of Holy Spirit, visibly manifested (cf. Luke
4:18), and his newsworthy baptism, were undoubtedly factors also. Jesus’ power is here
5. MINISTRY COMMISSIONING
Isaiah 61:1f and 58:6 (Luke 4:18-21), which serves as a “beacon shedding light over the
whole of his ministry” (Green 1975, 46). Luke compromises his usually stringent
chronological standards (cf. Luke 4:23; 31-37) in order to instil this scene as first in his
account of Jesus’ ministry (Turner 1996, 215). He may have had access to other
synoptics, but elected to use his own account (cf. Mark 6:1-6; Matt 13:53-58). This
highlights the consensus that Luke “evinces the strongest redactional interest in the
Spirit” among synoptic authors (Turner 2005, 268). The aorist verb “ἔχρισέν” (Luke 4:18)
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harks back to the Spirit in anointing Jesus as divine kingdom proclaimer, from his infancy
and baptism, through to his ministry commissioning “σήμερον πεπλήρωται” (Luke 4:21).
entered. Holy Spirit reveals Jesus as the Mosaic prophet taking a “central role in a New
Exodus programme of liberation” (Turner 1996, 240) as well as David’s successor (Evans
1990, 73). Building on Jewish presuppositions, the Spirit of God and of OT prophecy may
now also be interpreted as the Spirit of Christ. This represents a key Lukan
pneumatological motif, a paradigmatic shift that has been gathering steam from the
towards the “πτωχός,” “αἰχμάλωτος” and “τυφλός.” It is for these hitherto outsiders
whom Jesus was sent (the perfect tense verb “ἀπέσταλκέν”) to εὐαγγελίσασθα, the first
4:18-19). The “light and darkness imagery” (Bock 1994, 409) hints at both physical and
spiritual Jubilee, the two not being antithetical. This Isaianic good news was fulfilled
through Jesus’ Spirit-empowered ministry, with the restoration of many outcasts into
God’s kingdom (Luke 7:36-50; 14:15-24; 15:1-32; 16:16; 19:9-10) Gentile readership,
“traditionally excluded from a relationship with God” can now view God as touchable and
In contrast to the “πνεῦμα” references throughout Luke 1-4, usage begins to thin out
considerably from here onwards, and only four explicit mentions of “πνεύμα ἅγιος”
remain (Luke 10:21; 11:13; 12:10, 12). This provides weight to Turner’s (2005, 277)
assertion that Luke’s Gospel “has little to say about the relationship of disciples to the
Spirit” until Pentecost. They are dispensed a measure of authority by Jesus in their
second mission (Luke 9:1; 10:19), with Luke including the term “δύναμις” in addition to
Mark’s “ἐξουσία” (Mark 3:15), but Spirit had not yet been poured out (cf. Acts 2) and was
only appropriated through the one “πλήρης πνεύματος ἁγίου” (Luke 4:1).
Marcion’s famed textual variant in the Lukan Lord’s Prayer (Tertullian, Adv. Mcion 4:26 in
Marshall 1978, 458), “ἐλθέτω τὸ πνεῦμα σου τὸ ἄγιον εφ ημας και καθαρισατω ημας”
(Luke 11:2), lies alongside the Lucan reference of our “πατὴρ ὁ ἐξ οὐρανοῦ” desiring to
give the “ἀγαθός δόμα” of the “πνεῦμα ἅγιον” to those who ask (Luke 11:11-13; cf. Matt
7:9-10). The Matthean reference does not touch on the “πνεῦμα” at all, though Bock
(1996, 1063) refutes the notion that either account may assert outright historical veracity
over the other. Rather, it pays tribute to Luke’s pneumatological focus that he mentions
this form of “δόμα.” The correlation between prayer and Spirit is evident, previewing the
Spirit’s outpouring at Pentecost, an event coinciding with the disciples prayer meeting
(Acts 1:14).
weakened by multiple variants that lack the descriptor “τῷ ἁγίῳ” (Marshall 1978, 433).
Further confusion is present over inclusion of the preposition “ἐν” (Metzger 1971, 128),
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due to variants and also a dearth of similar phraseology elsewhere. The likely thrust is
that Jesus is full of joy and Spirit as he pronounces “one of his strongest Christological
statements” (Bock 1996, 1011) in Luke 10:22. The ontological relationship between
Father, Son and Spirit is championed more in John, but Luke reminds us that the Spirit has
not left the Son. He remains in Jesus permanently, contrasting with the temporal
The disciples are promised that they will receive help from the Spirit, the only passage
that explicitly instructs as much, when they are called to defend themselves before courts
(Luke 12:12; Mark 13:11 and Matt 10:19-20). The Spirit “διδάξει” the disciples,
2004, 486), the latter a repeated Lukan theme. A parallel statement in Luke 21:15 notions
Synoptic passages describing the “βλασφημήσαντι” of the Spirit are not exclusive to Luke
(Luke 12:8-10; Mark 3:28-30; Matthew 12:30-32), though Luke does couch it in a slightly
different context. It is certainly one of Jesus’ more “enigmatic… sayings” (Bock 1996,
1142), probably speaking not of a once-off rejection, but rather a persistent denial of the
7. PROMISE OF PENTECOST
We view in Luke “how tied to the new era, mission, and witness the Spirit is” (Bock 2012,
219). This is confirmed in the final Lukan reference to the Spirit (cf. Matt 28:18-20; Mark
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16:15): Jesus instructing his disciples to wait for the “ἐπαγγελίαν τοῦ πατρός μου” (Luke
(Isa 32:15; 44:3; Ezek 39:29; Joel 2:28-29). This designation of the Spirit emphasises “the
place of the divine promise in His coming” (Morris 1974, 343). Note the preceding
reference to Christ’s death and resurrection (Luke 24:46), as well as “μετάνοιαν εἰς
ἄφεσιν ἁμαρτιῶν” (Luke 24:47). The Spirit is aligned with the gospel, loves the gospel
and empowers gospel proclamation. The verb “ἐξαποστέλλω” (Luke 26:49) is a futuristic
present, denoting the Spirit’s arrival more as an appointment than a present bestowment
(Garland 2011, 968). As the Gospel began with several faithful Jews waiting for a
Messiah, it ends with several faithful Christ-followers waiting for the Spirit of the Messiah,
8. MINISTRY APPLICATION
Luke’s fusing of holiness, prayer and Spirit is a powerful reminder. It is easy to become
complacent of the Spirit post-Pentecost, now poured out “ἐπὶ πᾶσαν σάρκα” (Acts 2:17;
cf. Joel 2:28-29), at the expense of forgetting pre-Pentecost testimony. Though Christ
followers are sealed with the Spirit, Ephesians 5:18 employs a present imperative
(“πληροῦσθε”) motivating the church to continue walking in the Spirit, appropriating his
power daily. Jesus, John, Simeon, and others from Luke’s Gospel provide life examples of
what a holy, righteous, Spirit-expectant life should look like in this regard. We can be
9. CONCLUSION
Building from OT foundations, Luke confirms the Spirit as holy, prophetic and divine. Just
as the Spirit would formerly anoint OT saints, so too has he anointed Jesus, making
manifest the active presence of God through Christ. Jesus’ birth, commissioning and
loves the forgotten, the forsaken, and so too does his Spirit, who provides for their
advocacy through the gospel. The Spirit loves the gospel, and empowers its
proclamation. He is no longer formless, but has form through Christ, who was “πλήρης
πνεύματος ἁγίου” (Luke 4:1). We can continue to walk in the Spirit today through
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New Testament: Its Literature and Theology. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans.
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Testament. Grand Rapids: Baker.
Conzelmann, Hans. 1960. The Theology of Saint Luke. New York: Harper & Brothers.
DeSilva, David A. 2004. An Introduction to the New Testament. Contexts, Methods and
Ministry Formation. Downers Grove: IVP.
Evans, Craig A. 1990. Luke, New International Biblical Commentary Series. Peabody:
Hendrickson.
Garland, David E. 2011. Luke, in Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament Series.
Grand Rapids: Zondervan.
Green, Michael. 1975. I believe in the Holy Spirit. Revised Edition. Eastbourne: Kingsway.
Hendriksen, William. 1978. The Gospel of Luke, in New Testament Commentary Series.
Grand Rapids: Baker.
Marshall, Howard, I. 1978. The Gospel of Luke: A Commentary on the Greek Text, The
New International Greek Testament Commentary Series. Exeter: Paternoster
Metzger, Bruce. 1971. A Textual Commentary on the Greek New Testament, 2nd ed.
Stuttgart: UBS.
Morris, Leon. 1974. Luke, Tyndale New Testament Commentary Series. Downers Grove:
IVP.
Turner, Max. 1996. Power from on High: The Spirit in Israel’s Restoration and Witness in
Luke-Acts. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic.
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edited by Daniel G. Reid, 481-491. Downers Grove: IVP.
Turner, Max. 2005. “Luke and the Spirit: Renewing Theological Interpretation of Biblical
Pneumatology,” in Reading Luke: Interpretation, Reflection, Formation, vol. 6,
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Warrington, Keith. 2009. The Message of the Holy Spirit, The Bible Speaks Today series.
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