Sunday, July 8, 2012

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation: Davidic Christology and Ecclesiology in Luke-Acts







Taken from: http://www.salvationhistory.com/documents/scripture/LSJ3%20Hahn.pdf







Scott W. Hahn

St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology





Luke reflects a deep biblical worldview. Both his gospel and its sequel, the Acts

of the Apostles, are based upon a hermeneutic of continuity. Luke’s widely recognized

reliance on Old Testament allusion and citation is really only the surface

manifestation of this deeper, underlying hermeneutic, which is a way of reading

and interpreting sacred history.

Luke sees an analogy between the first man, Adam, and the “new Adam,”

Jesus Christ; between creation and the kingdom of God, and again between the

kingdom and the Church; and between the old covenant and the new covenant

made in the blood of Christ. Likewise, he sees these relationships diachronically,

that is—growing, and developing over the course of time, with the new marking a

profound restoration and renewal of the old.

In this article, I will show how this hermeneutical key helps us to understand

and explain Luke’s christology and his ecclesiology. Luke’s vision of Christ and the

Church hinges on the figure of Israel’s King David and the kingdom established by

God’s covenant with David.

Luke, following a subtle but clearly discernible line of interpretation that

begins in the Old Testament, understands David and the Davidic kingdom as a

fulfillment of the divine promises and covenant in creation. Thus Luke’s hermeneutic

of continuity enables him to see Christ as not only the Davidic Messiah, but

the definitive “new man.” This hermeneutic also enables him to see the Church as

the restoration of the Davidic kingdom but also as the new creation.

I will unfold my argument as follows: First, I will consider recent scholarship

on the gospel of Luke, especially research into Luke’s use of the Old Testament. I

will then consider the evidence for a royal Davidic christology in Luke. This will

reveal a certain Old Testament “substructure” to Luke. This in turn will help explain

certain distinctive features of the Third Gospel—the centrality of Jerusalem

and the Temple, the christological title “Son of God,” and the emphasis on “the

nations.” Second, I will explore the depths of this Old Testament substructure. I

will examine how the Davidic kingdom was seen to be a renewal of the primordial

covenant with creation. After tracing the Old Testament background, I will show

how “new creation” themes—creation as a cosmic temple; Adam as the primordial

king and son of God; Zion; and Eden—shape Luke’s vision and narrative. I will

do this through a close reading of Luke’s genealogy of Jesus, and of his accounts of

Jesus’ baptism and temptation in the wilderness. Finally, I will briefly indicate how

Letter & Spirit 3 (2007): 113–138

114 Scott Hahn

Acts portrays the Church’s universal mission in terms of both a restored Davidic

kingdom and a renewed creation.

Hermeneutical Reference Points in Luke

The past two decades have seen a flowering of scholarship on the use and significance

of the Old Testament in the Gospel of Luke. Augustín del Agua succinctly

expresses the premise of much of this scholarship: “the Old Testament tradition . . .

is the hermeneutic reference of meaning sought by Luke in his narration” and “the

source par excellence for the narrative elaboration of his theological project.”

There have been excellent studies of Luke’s treatment of Israel’s covenant

traditions. But not all these traditions have received equal attention. Work in

this area has tended to emphasize the covenants wih Abraham and Moses at the

expense of the Davidic covenant. In addition, despite the fact that, as Joel Green

observes, “Luke’s use of the Scriptures is primarily ecclesiological rather than

christological,” the few studies written on Davidic covenant motifs in Luke-Acts

Important works on the Old Testament background of Luke’s theological project include:

Kenneth Duncan Litwak, Echoes of Scripture in Luke-Acts: Telling the History of God’s Pepole

Intertextually, Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series 282 (New

York: T & T Clark, 2005); Craig A. Evans and James A. Sanders, eds., Luke and Scripture: The

Function of Sacred Tradition in Luke-Acts (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1993); Charles A. Kimball, Jesus’

Exposition of the Old Testament in Luke’s Gospel, Journal for the Study of the New Testament

Supplement Series 94 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1994); Robert L. Brawley, Text to Text

Pours Forth Speech: Voices of Scripture in Luke-Acts (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University, 1995);

Rebecca I. Denova, Things Accomplished Among Us: Prophetic Tradition in the Structural Pattern

of Luke-Acts, Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series 141 (Sheffield:

Sheffield Academic, 1997); Darrell L. Bock, Proclamation from Prophecy and Pattern: Lucan

Old Testament Christology, Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series 12

(Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1997); and Craig A. Evans and W. Richard Stegner, eds., The

Gospels and the Scriptures of Israel, Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement

Series 104 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1999).

Agustín Pérez del Agua, “The Lucan Narrative of the ‘Evangelization of the Kingdom of God’:

A Contribution to the Unity of Luke-Acts,” in The Unity of Luke-Acts, ed. Jozef Verheyden,

Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium 142 (Leuven: Peeters, 1999), 639–62,

at 643.

Del Agua, “Narrative,” 641.

On the Abrahamic covenant in Luke, see Brawley, Text to Text, and also his “Abrahamic

Covenant Traditions and the Characterization of God in Luke-Acts,” in The Unity of Luke-Acts,

109–32.

For example, Brawley (in Text to Text and “Abrahamic Covenant Traditions and the

Characterization of God in Luke-Acts,” in The Unity of Luke-Acts, 109–32) makes astute

observations concerning the Davidic covenant in Luke, but foregrounds and emphasizes the

Abrahamic, as does Sabine Van Den Eynde, “Children of the Promise: On the Diaqh,kh Promise

to Abraham in Luke 1,72 and Acts 3,25,” in The Unity of Luke-Acts, 470–82.

Joel B. Green, “Theological Interpretation and Luke,” in Reading Luke: Interpretation, Reflection,

Formation, eds. Craig G. Bartholomew, Joel B. Green, Anthony C. Thiselton (Grand Rapids,

MI.: Zondervan, 2005), 55–78.

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation 115

focus mainly on christology. The influence of the Davidic covenant traditions on

Luke’s ecclesiology remains largely unexplored. This paper will attempt to address

that gap in the scholarship.

The work of Mark Strauss and others has won some support for the view that

royal Davidic messianism is a major christological category in Luke. Nonetheless,

the seemingly logical ecclessiological conclusion has yet to be drawn—namely, that

if Jesus is the Davidic king proclaiming a coming kingdom, that coming kingdom

must be in some sense the Davidic kingdom. Perhaps the connection is not made

because Luke calls the coming kingdom “the kingdom of God” and not “the kingdom

of David.” It is true that the precise phrase, “kingdom of God,” is not found

in the Old Testament. However, it is notable that the Chronicler twice employs a

virtually synonymous phrase—“the kingdom of yhwh”—to describe the Davidic

monarchy (1 Chron. 28:5; 2 Chron. 13:8; compare 1 Chron. 17:14; 29:11–22). The

Chronicler understood that the reign of the House of David was based on a divine

covenant in which the son of David was also declared to be the son of God (2 Sam.

7:14; Pss. 2:7; 89:27). Therefore, the kingdom of David was the manifestation of

God’s rule over the earth—that is, God’s kingdom for Israel and the nations.10

Raymond Brown saw quite clearly the close relationship (indeed, identification)

of the kingdom of God and the kingdom of David:

The kingdom established by David was a political institution

to be sure, but one with enormous religious attachments

(priesthood, temple, sacrifice, prophecy) . . . It is the closest Old

Testament parallel to the Church . . . To help Christians make up

their mind on how the Bible speaks to [whether the Church is

related to the kingdom of God], it would help if they knew about

David and his kingdom, which was also God’s kingdom.11

See also Bock, Proclamation from Prophecy and Pattern, esp. 55–90. An earlier piece is F. F. Bruce,

“The Davidic Messiah in Luke-Acts,” in Biblical and Near Eastern Studies: Festschrift in Honor of

William Sanford LaSor, ed. Gary A. Tuttle. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1978), 7–17.

“Strong emphasis on christological uses . . . tends to overshadow concerns for the ecclesiological

function . . . of scriptural traditions in the Lukan writings.” David W. Pao, Acts and the Isaianic

New Exodus Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament. 2/130 (Tübingen:

Mohr Siebeck, 2000), 17.

Mark L. Strauss, The Davidic Messiah in Luke-Acts: The Promise and Its Fulfillment in Lukan

Christology, Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series 110 (Sheffield:

Sheffield Academic, 1995). Bock, Proclamation from Prophecy and Pattern, 293–94: “The

fundamental category of Lukan Old Testament christology is a regal one.”

10 The Chronicler describes the worshipping assembly of this kingdom, most often led by the

Davidic king himself, with the Hebrew term lhq, or, in the Greek Septuagint text (lxx) ,

evkklhsi,a (e.g. 1 Chron. 13:2–4; 28:2–8; 29:1, 10, 20; 2 Chron. 1:3–5; 6:3–13; 7:8; 10:3; 20:5–14; 23:3;

29:23–30:25). Chronicles uses this term more frequently than any other part of the lxx and may

provide the background for understanding Luke’s deployment of evkklhsi,a in Acts.

11 Raymond Brown, “Communicating the Divine and Human in Scripture,” Origins 22:1 (May 14,

116 Scott Hahn

In this article, I want to build on Brown’s insight that we find in the Scriptures

an integral relationship of the kingdom of God, the kingdom of David, and the

Church. Specifically, I will advance the thesis that the kingdom of David informs

Luke’s presentation of Jesus’ kingship and kingdom, providing much of the content

and meaning of these terms. Luke’s Davidic royal christology sets the stage for his

development of a Davidic kingdom ecclesiology in Acts.12 Inasmuch as Christians

believe themselves still to be participating in the ecclesial reality whose birth is

portrayed in Acts, my thesis implies that a Davidic kingdom-ecclesiology is still

relevant for contemporary Christian theology.

Royal Davidic Christology in Luke

As a growing number of scholars has concluded, there is a strong strain of royal

Davidic messianism in Luke’s portrait of Jesus and his mission.13 This is evident in

several key texts:

• Luke introduces Jesus’ legal father, “Joseph of the house of

David” (Luke 1:27).14

• Gabriel’s annunciation is saturated with Davidic imagery, as

Mary hears that her son is promised “the throne of his father

David . . . and of his kingdom there will be no end” (Luke

1:32–33), an adaptation the key Davidic covenant text (2 Sam.

7:1–17).15

• In the Benedictus, Zechariah praises God who has raised up

“a horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David”

(Luke 1:69), a reference to a royal Davidic psalm (Ps. 132:17).16

1992): 5–6, emphasis mine. See also, Jon D. Levenson, Sinai and Zion: An Entry into the Jewish

Bible (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1985), 155–56.

12 “The God of Jesus was the God of Israel, and the kingdom of Jesus was a kingdom for Israel.”

Scot McKnight, A New Vision for Israel: The Teachings of Jesus in National Context (Grand

Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1999), 83. One may go further and say, the kingdom of Jesus is the

kingdom of Israel, and the kingdom of Israel is the kingdom of David.

13 See Bock, Luke 1:1–9:50 (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1994), 115; Brawley, Text to Text, 85–86;

Thomas J. Lane, Luke and the Gentile Mission: Gospel Anticipates Acts (Frankfurt: Peter Lang,

1996), 157–63; David Ravens, Luke and the Restoration of Israel, Journal for the Study of the New

Testament Supplement Series 119 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1995), 24–49, esp. 34.

14 See Joel B. Green, The Gospel of Luke, New International Commentary on the New Testament

(Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1997), 84–85.

15 As demonstrated by Green, Luke, 85, 88; likewise Joseph A. Fitzmyer, The Gospel According to

Luke I–IX, Anchor Bible 28 (Garden City: Doubleday, 1981), 338.

16 An allusion to Psalm 132:17, where a horn sprouts up from David, is probably intended. Green,

Luke, 116. See also, Bock, Luke 1:1–9:50, 20, 180. On other, more subtle Davidic allusions in the

Benedictus, see Stephen Farris, The Hymns of Luke’s Infancy Narratives: Their Origin, Meaning

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation 117

• Jesus’ birthplace is Bethlehem, called “the City of David” by

the narrator (2:4) and the angels (2:11). Likewise, Joseph’s

Davidic lineage is repeated for emphasis (2:4).17

• At Jesus’ baptism, the divine voice announces, “Thou art my

beloved Son,” words adapted from Psalm 2, the royal coronation

hymn of the Davidic kings (Ps. 2:7).18

• In Luke 3:23–28, Luke traces Jesus’ genealogy through

David.19

• In Luke 6:1–5, Jesus likens himself to David, and his disciples

to David’s band, while asserting the unique cultic prerogatives

that David enjoyed.20

• At the transfiguration (Luke 9:35), the divine voice reiterates

the royal coronation hymn (Ps. 2:7): “This is my Son, my

chosen.”21

• On entry into Jericho, Jesus is hailed twice by a blind man

as “Son of David” (Luke 18:35–43), anticipating his imminent

royal entrance to Jerusalem.22

• Luke’s description of Jesus’ triumphal entry (19:28–48) corresponds

to Zechariah 9:9–10, which in turn draws from

the narrative of Solomon’s coronation (1 Kings 1:32–40), to

and Significance Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series 9 (Sheffield:

JSOT, 1985), 95–96.

17 Appropriately, the first witnesses to the birth of the Son of David, the great shepherd king

of Israel’s memory, are shepherds (Luke 2:8–20), possibly alluding to Micah 5:2–4; see Green,

Luke, 130; Ravens, Luke, 42–43.

18 See Green, Luke, 186; Bock, Luke 1:1–9:50, 341–43.

19 On David in Luke 3:23–28, see Bock, Luke 1:1–9:50, 357. The following temptation sequence

features a Davidic allusion in its second scene. See Brawley, Text to Text, 20.

20 See Bock, Luke 1:1–9:50, 527 and Luke Timothy Johnson, The Gospel of Luke, Sacra Pagina 3

(Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 1991), 101.

21 Darrell L. Bock, Luke 9:51–24:53 (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1996), 873–74. The title “chosen” or

“chosen one” is also a Davidic epithet (Ps. 89:3). See Strauss, The Davidic Messiah in Luke-Acts,

265–67. Jesus’ statement in Luke 10:22, “All things have been delivered to me by my Father”

recalls the covenantal father-son relationship of God to the Davidic king: see Pss. 2:7–8; 8:4–8;

72:8; 89:25–27.

22 Green, Luke, 663–65; Bock, Luke 1:1–9:50, 1507–12; Joseph A. Fitzmyer, The Gospel According to

Luke X-XXIV, Anchor Bible 28A (New York: Doubleday, 1985), 1214.

118 Scott Hahn

portray the coming of an eschatological king, as a Davidide

(Zech. 12:7–13:1).23

• The climax of Luke’s institution narrative (Luke 22:29–30)

evokes key Davidic images: the paternal bestowal and covenant

conferral of a kingdom (Luke 22:30; Ps. 89:3–4); while

eating at the king’s table (2 Sam. 9:9–13); sitting on thrones,

ruling the twelve tribes of Israel (Ps. 122:3–5).

• In the passion narrative, Davidic titles are used of Jesus with

ironic contempt: “King of the Jews” (Luke 23:37–38; 2 Sam.

2:11) and “Chosen One” (Luke 23:35; Ps. 89:3–4).

• Jesus’ identity as Davidic Messiah is the climax of the three

major apostolic speeches in Acts: (1) Peter’s first sermon, at

Pentecost (Acts 2:14–36, esp. 25–36); (2) Paul’s first sermon, at

Pisidian Antioch (13:16–41, esp. 22–23, 33–37); and James’ only

recorded speech, at the Jerusalem council (15:13–21).24

The large number and wide distribution of Davidic royal motifs make a

prima facie case for the primacy in Luke of a royal Davidic Christology. However,

this Davidic Christology is manifested not only by the many direct references to

David scattered throughout key sections of Luke-Acts. On a deeper level, we can

see the entire “shape” of the Davidic monarchy—as portrayed in Old Testament

texts—is reproduced by Luke in his description of the person and mission of Jesus.

This may be demonstrated by enumerating the salient features of David’s kingdom,

and how they emerge at crucial junctures in Luke’s narrative:

1. A Divine Covenant. The Davidic kingdom was based upon a

divinely sworn covenant (tyrb in the Hebrew Masoretic text,

diaqh,kh in the Greek Septuagint translation), the only Old

Testament dynasty to enjoy such a privilege.25 The key text

showing the terms of this covenant is 2 Samuel 7:8–16;26 with

the word “covenant” occurring elsewhere, such as in Psalm

23 See Green, Luke, 683–88; and Bock, Luke 9:51–24:53, 1556–58, who point out the connections

with Zechariah 9:9 and 1 Kings 1:33 (the coronation of Solomon).

24 See the treatment in Strauss, The Davidic Messiah in Luke-Acts, 130–95.

25 Below the Masoretic text will be abbreviated mt and the Seputagint text will be abbreviated

lxx. The key text outlining the conditions and promises of this covenant is 2 Samuel 7:8-16,

although the term “covenant” only occurs elsewhere: e.g. 2 Sam. 23:5; 1 Kings 8:23–24; Ps. 89:3;

2 Chron. 13:5; 21:7; Sir. 45:25; Isa. 55:3; Ezek. 34:25 lxx. See R. P. Gordon, 1 & 2 Samuel, Old

Testament Guides 2 (Sheffield: JSOT, 1984), 71; Antti Laato, “Psalm 132 and the Development

of the Jerusalemite/Israelite Royal Ideology,” Catholic Biblical Quarterly 54 (1992): 49–66.

26 See Gordon, 1 & 2 Samuel, 71; Laato, “Psalm 132,” 56.

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation 119

89:3–4: “Thou hast said, ‘I have made a covenant with my

chosen one, I have sworn to David my servant: ‘I will establish

your descendants for ever, and build your throne for all

generations.’”27

In Luke, God’s covenant with David as described in Nathan’s

oracle (2 Sam. 7:9–16) provides all the content of the angelic

description of Jesus in Luke 1:32–33.28 Later, Jesus associates

his kingship with a “new covenant” (22:20) and says a kingdom

has been “covenanted” to him by the Father (22:29), which he

in turn “covenants” to his disciples.29

2. Divine Sonship of the Monarch. The Davidic king was the Son

of God. The filial relationship of the Davidic king to God is

expressed already in the key text of the Davidic covenant (2

Sam. 7:14), but is also found in other Davidic texts.30

Turning to Luke, we find that Jesus is the natural (not

merely adopted) Son of God (1:35), and the title is used of him

throughout the gospel.31

3. Messianic Status of the King. The Davidic king was the “Christ,”

the “Messiah” or “Anointed One.” The anointed status of

the Davidic king was so integral to his identity that he is

frequently referred to simply as “the anointed one” or “the

lord’s anointed” in Old Testament texts.32

Luke explicitly and consistently identifies Jesus as the Christ

(2:11, 4:41, etc.),33 indeed, the “Lord’s Christ” (2:26), a title

only applied to kings in the Old Testament (1 Sam. 16:6; 24:6

27 See also 2 Sam. 23:5; 1 Kings 8:23–24; 2 Chron. 13:5; 21:7; Sir. 45:25; Isa. 55:3; Ezek. 34:25 lxx.

28 As demonstrated by Green, Luke, 85, 88; likewise Fitzmyer, Luke I-IX, 338.

29 On the “covenanting” of the kingdom, see discussion of diatiqhm, i in Luke 22:29 below.

30 For example Pss. 2:7; 89:26; 1 Chron. 17:13; 28:6. “The individual most often designated as ‘the son

of God’ in the Hebrew Bible is undoubtedly the Davidic king, or his eschatological counterpart.”

John J. Collins, The Scepter and the Star: The Messiahs of the Dead Sea Scrolls and Other Ancient

Literature, Anchor Bible Reference Library (New York: Doubleday, 1995), 163.

31 See Robert C. Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts: A Literary Interpretation, 2 vols.

(Philadelphia: Fortress, 1986, 1990), 1:25.

32 See 1 Sam. 16:13; 2 Sam. 19:21, 22:51; 23:1; 1 Kings 1:38–39; 2 Kings 11:12; 23:30; 2 Chron. 6:42; 23:11;

Pss. 2:2; 18:50; 20:6; 28:8; 84:9; 89:20, 38, 51; 132:10, 17.

33 See Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, 38.

120 Scott Hahn

lxx etc.), and the ‘Christ of God’ (Luke 9:20), a title only

applied to David (2 Sam. 23:1).34

4. Centrality of Jerusalem. The Davidic monarchy was inextricably

bound to Jerusalem, the city of David and the royal capital

for the Davidic dynasty (2 Sam. 5:9), which would not have

played a significant role in Israelite history apart from David

(compare Josh. 15:63; Judg. 1:21; 19:10–12; 2 Sam. 5:6–12).35

Accordingly, Luke more than any other gospel emphasizes the

priority of Jerusalem.36 For Luke, it is theologically important

that the Word of God go forth from Jerusalem to the ends of

the earth (Luke 24:47; Acts 1:8, Isa. 2:3). The gospel begins in

Jerusalem (1:5–23), the only two narratives of Jesus’ childhood

find him in Jerusalem (2:22–52), for most of the narrative he

is traveling to Jerusalem (9:51–19:27), and the gospel climaxes

in Jerusalem (19:28–24:49), wherein the disciples are told to

“remain” (24:49).

5. Centrality of the Temple. The Davidic monarchy was inextricably

bound to the Temple. The building of the Temple

was central to the terms of the Davidic covenant from the

very beginning, as can be seen from the wordplay on ‘house’

(“Temple” or “dynasty”) in 2 Samuel 7:11–13.37 Even after its

destruction, the prophets remained firm in their conviction

34 The title “Christ” is probably always intended in a Davidic sense in Luke. See Christopher R.

Tuckett, “The Christology of Luke-Acts,” in The Unity of Luke-Acts, 133–64, at 147–48; Brian

M. Nolan, The Royal Son of God: The Christology of Matthew 1–2 in the Setting of the Gospel,

Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 23 (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1979), 173; Tannehill,

The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts, 58.

35 See Sara Japhet, “From the King’s Sanctuary to the Chosen City,” in Jerusalem: Its Sanctity

and Centrality to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, ed. Lee I. Levine (New York: Continuum,

1999), 3–15, at 6; Tomoo Ishida, The Royal Dynasties in Ancient Israel: A Study on the Formation

and Development of Royal-Dynastic Ideology, Beiheft zur Zeitschrift für die Alttestamentliche

Wissenschaft 142 (New York: de Gruyter, 1977), 118–119.

36 Fitzmyer, Luke I-IX, 164–65; Dean P. Bechard, “The Theological Significance of Judea in Luke-

Acts,” in The Unity of Luke-Acts, 675–91.

37 Heinz Kruse, “David’s Covenant,” Vetus Testamentum 35 (1985): 139–64, at 149. On the

significance of Solomon’s temple building efforts, see Victor Hurowitz, I Have Built You an

Exalted House: Temple Building in the Bible in Light of Mesopotamian and Northwest Semitic

Writings, Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series 115 (Sheffield: Sheffield

Academic, 1992); Rex Mason, “The Messiah in the Postexilic Old Testament Literature,” in King

and Messiah in Israel and the Ancient Near East: Proceedings of the Oxford Old Testament Seminar,

ed. John Day, Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series 270 (Sheffield:

Sheffield Academic, 1998), 338–64, at 348, 362; Ishida, The Royal Dynasties in Ancient Israel, 145-

147.

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation 121

that God would restore his temple to its former glory as an

international place of worship.38

What is true of Luke and Jerusalem is also true with regard

to the Temple. The gospel begins there (1:5–23), Jesus “childhood”

is set there (2:22–52),39 for most of the gospel he is

traveling there (9:51–19:27), and the climax is reached when

Jesus is teaching from the Temple in Jerusalem (19:45–21:38).

In Acts, the Temple remains the focus of the early Christian

community (Acts 2:46).40

6. International Empire. The Davidic monarch ruled over an

international empire. David and Solomon ruled not only over

Israel but also the surrounding nations.41 The psalms theologically

justify and celebrate this state of affairs,42 and the

prophets envision its restoration.43 Both the psalms and the

prophets make poetic references to the rule of the Davidide

over “all the nations,” even though such a situation was not

historically realized.

Turning to the gospel, we find that the extension of Jesus’

kingship over all the nations is anticipated throughout Luke.

Already in the infancy narratives, Simeon speaks of Jesus

as “a light of revelation to the nations” (2:32). Luke traces his

genealogy back to Adam, the father of all mankind (3:38). As

precedent for his ministry, Jesus cites the healing of Gentiles

by the prophets Elijah and Elisha (4:25–27), and he himself

heals the servant of a Roman (7:1–10), while praising his faith

above that of Israel (7:9). He predicts that “men will come

from east and west, and from north and south” to sit at table

38 Isa. 2:1–4; 56:6–8; 60:3–16; 66:18–21; Jer. 33:11; Ezek. 40–44; Dan. 9:24–27; Joel 3:18; Hag. 2:1–9;

Mic. 4:1–4; Zech. 6:12–14; 8:20–23; 14:16.

39 On the importance of the Temple in Luke 1–2, see Green, Luke, 61–62 and Nicholas Taylor,

“Luke-Acts and the Temple,” in The Unity of Luke-Acts, 709–21, at 709.

40 On the importance of the Temple in Luke-Acts generally, see James B. Chance, Jerusalem, the

Temple, and the New Age in Luke-Acts (Macon, GA: Mercer University, 1988); and Andrew C.

Clark “The Role of the Apostles,” in Witness to the Gospel: The Theology of Acts, eds. I. Howard

Marshall and David Peterson (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1998), 169–90, esp. 175–76.

41 2 Sam. 8:11–12; 10:19; 12:30; 1 Kings 3:1; 4:20–21; 10:15. See Carol Meyers, “The Israelite Empire:

In Defense of King Solomon,” in Backgrounds for the Bible, eds. Michael Patrick O’Connor and

David Noll Freedman (Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 1987), 181–97.

42 See Pss. 2:8; 18:43, 47; 22:27; 47:1, 9; 66:8; 67:2–5; 72:8, 11; 86:9; 89:27; 96:7, 99:1.

43 Isa. 2:3–4; 42:1–6; 49:1–7, 22–26; 51:4–6; 55:3–5; 56:3–8; 60:1–16; 66:18–19; Amos 9:11–12; Mic.

4:2–3; Zech. 14:16–19.

122 Scott Hahn

in the kingdom of God (13:29), and finally and most explicitly,

Jesus teaches the disciples that “forgiveness of sins should be

preached in his name to all nations, beginning from Jerusalem”

(24:47).

7. Everlasting Rule. The Davidic monarchy was to be everlasting.

Throughout the psalms and historical books identified by

scholars as the work of the Deuteronomist, there is a recurrent

theme: that the Davidic dynasty is to be everlasting (2 Sam.

7:16; 23:5; Ps. 89:35–36). Indeed, not only the dynasty but the

lifespan of the reigning monarch himself was described as

everlasting (Pss. 21:4; 72:5, 110:4).44

In Luke, the angel Gabriel promises to Mary that Jesus “will

reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom

there will be no end.”45 Jesus’ everlasting reign is mentioned

frequently elsewhere in Luke, for example, in passages where

Jesus is the mediator of eternal life (18:18–30).

Thus it is clear that all seven major characteristics of the Davidic monarchy

are manifested in Jesus and his ministry. In Luke, Jesus is the royal son of David

who journeys to the city of David as part of his mission to restore the kingdom of

David. In sum, Luke’s christology is strongly Davidic and royal.

The Davidic Kingdom and the Covenant with Creation

Already in the Old Testament, the Davidic kingdom was viewed as a recapitulation

or renewal of God’s plan for creation. In what follows, I will pursue three lines of

argument which show that certain Old Testament texts understand the Davidic

covenant as a fulfillment of the creation covenant. In the first line of argument,

we will trace the temple concept in the Old Testament in order to show that the

Temple built by Solomon, so closely integrated into the Davidic covenant, was

understood as a microcosm and embodiment of the very creation itself. In the

second line of argument, I will show that Adam is portrayed in biblical texts as

king over all creation, and similar language and imagery is also applied to David.

In the third line of argument, I will show that the Chronicler, by tracing David’s

lineage back to Adam, means to suggest that David and his covenantal kingdom

holds significance for all Adam’s descendants, that is, for all humanity, and indeed

is the climax and fulfillment of God’s purpose in creating humanity.

44 For a discussion of the tension between these texts and others which imply the Davidic covenant

can be or has been broken, see Bruce C. Waltke, “The Phenomenon of Conditionality within

Unconditional Covenants,” in Israel’s Apostasy and Restoration: Essays in Honor of Roland K.

Harrison, ed. Avraham Gileadi (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1988), 123–40.

45 See Bock, Luke 1:1–9:50, 116–17.

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation 123

Many scholars see in the first two chapters of Genesis the description of a

covenant between God and creation, in which the creation itself forms a cosmic

temple.46 However, since neither the term “covenant” nor “temple” is to be found in

Genesis 1 or 2, I must explain the exegetical basis for this view.

The Genesis creation account cannot be fully appreciated without comparison

with several other texts in the Pentateuch which, like Genesis 1, reflect the

priestly traditions of Israel. One such text is Genesis 9, the account of the covenant

between God and Noah. The language of this chapter so obviously reflects the

language of Genesis 1 (“be fruitful and multiply,” “birds of the air, fish of the sea,

and every creeping thing,” etc.) that it is not necessary to demonstrate the point.

God forms a covenant with Noah, and through him with all creation. However,

the Hebrew terms for enacting this covenant are not the usual combination tyrb

trk (literally, “to cut a covenant”) but tyrb myqh (“to confirm a covenant”).

It has often been argued that tyrb trk and tyrb myqh are synonymous

expressions that merely reflect the linguistic preferences of their presumably different

documentary sources (so-called Yahwist and Priestly sources, respectively).

However, William Dumbrell and Jacob Milgrom have both argued independently

of one another that tyrb myqh has a distinct nuance: outside of Genesis 6–9 it

is consistently used in contexts where a preexistent covenant is being confirmed

or, perhaps better, reaffirmed. The clearest examples are Genesis 17 (vv. 7, 19, 21),

where the Abrahamic covenant reaffirmed with his “seed.”47 By contrast, tyrb trk

generally indicates the initiation of a new covenant.

The question arises, how could tyrb myqh function in Genesis 9 to indicate a

confirmation of an existing covenant when no prior covenant is explicitly mentioned

in Genesis? Where could a covenant previously have been established? The heavy

repetition of the very language of Genesis 1 provides the clues and the answer. In

Genesis 9 God is reaffirming and perhaps restoring the covenant established with

the whole cosmos at creation.

Other texts seem to confirm an implicit covenant at creation. For example,

the exposition of the third commandment found in Exodus 31 sheds light on the

creation account:

Six days shall work be done, but the seventh day is a sabbath of

solemn rest, holy to the Lord; whoever does any work on the

sabbath day shall be put to death. Therefore the people of Israel

46 For a discussion of the relationship between creation and the covenant(s), see Santiago Sanz

Sánchez, La relación entre creación y alianza en la teologia contemporánea: status quaestionis y

reflexiones filosófico-teológicas [The Relation Between Creation and Covenant in Contemporary

Theology: The Status of the Question and Philosophical-Theological Reflections], Dissertationes

Series Theologica 11 (Rome: Edizioni Università della Santa Croce, 2003); William J. Dumbrell,

Covenant and Creation: A Theology of Old Testament Covenants (Nashville: Thomas Nelson,

1984).

47 Compare Lev. 26:9; Deut. 8:18; and Ezek. 16:60, 62.

124 Scott Hahn

shall keep the sabbath, observing the sabbath throughout their

generations, as a perpetual covenant. It is a sign for ever between

me and the people of Israel that in six days the Lord made

heaven and earth, and on the seventh day he rested, and was

refreshed. (Exod. 31:15–17)

Then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, commented on

this passage vis-à-vis Genesis 1:

To understand the account of creation properly, one has to read

the Sabbath ordinances of the Torah. Then everything becomes

clear. The Sabbath is the sign of the covenant between God and

man; it sums up the inward essence of the covenant. If this is so,

then we can now define the intention of the account of creation

as follows: creation exists to be a place for the covenant that God

wants to make with man. The goal of creation is the covenant,

the love story of God and man. . . . If, then, everything is directed

to the covenant, it is important to see that the covenant

is a relationship: God’s gift of himself to man, but also man’s

response to God. Man’s response to the God who is good to him

is love, and loving God means worshipping him. If creation is

meant to be a space for the covenant, the place where God and

man meet one another, then it must be thought of as a space for

worship.48

The fact that the creation account culminates on the Sabbath—which the

pious Israelite would recognize as the “sign” of the covenant (Ezek. 20:12, 20)—suggests

not only that creation is ordered to covenant, but that the covenant between

God and man is already present at creation.

Further comparisons between the Genesis 1 and the accounts of the Sinai

covenant confirm our argument. In the Sinai covenant we see an obvious recapitulation

of the heptadic patterning of Genesis 1. God’s glory covers Sinai for six days

and on the seventh he calls to Moses from the cloud of his glory (Exod. 24:16). The

divine blueprint for the Tabernacle is given in a series of seven divine addresses.49

The instructions for the making of the priests’ vestments are punctuated by seven

affirmations of Moses’ obedience to God’s command.50 The Tabernacle is built

according to divine command and seven times we are told that Moses did “as the

Lord had commanded him.”51

48 Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, The Spirit of the Liturgy (San Francisco: Ignatius, 2000), 26.

49 Exod. 25:1; 30:11, 17, 22, 34; 31:1, 12.

50 Exod. 39:1, 5, 7, 21, 22, 27, 30.

51 Exod. 40:19, 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 32.

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation 125

There is also a seemingly deliberate echo of Genesis in the words used to

conclude Moses’ building: “When Moses had finished the work” (compare Exod.

40:33; Gen. 2:2). As God blessed and hallowed the seventh day, Moses blesses the

people and sanctifies the tabernacle (compare Gen. 2:3; Exod. 39:43; 40:9). With

the conclusion of the work, God’s glory fills the Tabernacle (Exod. 40:34). This

corresponds to the divine-human rest intended for the Sabbath (Gen. 2:3; Exod.

20:8–11; 31:12–17; 35:1–3).

These intertextual correspondences have lead Moshe Weinfeld to conclude:

“Genesis 1:1–2:3 and Exodus 39:1–40:33 are typologically identical. Both describe

the satisfactory completion of the enterprise commanded by God, its inspection

and approval, the blessing and the sanctification which are connected with it.”52

Zion and the Temple of Eden

We can conclude further: the close correspondence between the building of the

Tabernacle and the creation of the cosmos indicates that the tabernacle-building is

a recapitulation of creation, and thus the tabernacle is in some sense a microcosm, a

small embodiment of the universe. Conversely, we may conclude that the universe

is a macro-tabernacle, a cosmic sanctuary built for the worship of God. Moreover,

the close integration of the Tabernacle construction with the giving of the Sinai

covenant to Israel suggests that the original construction of the cosmos likewise

took place in a covenantal context.

The same heptadic patterning of the Tabernacle construction narrative is

recapitulated in the building of Solomon’s Temple. As creation takes seven days,

the Temple takes seven years to build (1 Kings 6:38). It is dedicated during the

seven-day Feast of Tabernacles (1 Kings 8:2), and Solomon’s solemn dedication

speech is built on seven petitions (1 Kings 8:31–53). As God capped creation by

“resting” on the seventh day, the Temple is built by a “man of rest” (1 Chron. 22:9)

to be a “house of rest” for the Ark, which bears the presence of the Lord (1 Chron.

28:2; 2 Chron. 6:41; Ps. 132:8, 13–14; Isa. 66:1).

When the Temple is consecrated, the furnishings of the older Tabernacle are

brought inside it. (Richard Friedman suggests the entire Tabernacle was brought

inside).53 This represents the fact that all the Tabernacle was, the Temple has

become. Just as the construction of the Tabernacle of the Sinai covenant and once

recapitulated creation, now the Temple of the Davidic covenant recapitulated the

same. The Temple is a micocosm of creation, the creation a macro-temple.

52 Moshe Weinfeld, “Sabbath, Temple, and the Enthronement of the Lord: The Problem of the

Sitz im Leben of Genesis 1:1–2:3,” in Mélanges bibliques et orientaux en l’honneur de M. Henri

Cazelles [A Collection of Essays on Biblical and Oriental Essays in Honor of M. Henri Cazelles],

eds. Andre Caquot and Mathias Delcor, Alter Orient und Altes Testament 212 (Kevelear:

Verlag Butzon & Bercker Kevelaer, 1981), 501–512.

53 Richard E. Friedman, “The Tabernacle in the Temple,” The Biblical Archaeologist, 43:4 (Autumn

1980): 241–248.

126 Scott Hahn

Just as the Tabernacle is associated particularly with the Mosaic or Sinaitic

covenant, the Temple is associated with the Davidic covenant. No law of Moses

prescribes or even foresees a Temple. The biblical texts identify David himself as

the originator of the idea of the Temple. While David’s wish personally to build

the Temple is denied, the Lord integrates the building of the Temple into the very

constitution of the Davidic covenant, as can be seen in the wordplay on “house” in

2 Samuel 7:5–16: The Lord promises to build a “house” (dynasty) for David, and

David’s son will build a “house” (temple) for the Lord. It cannot be sufficiently

emphasized that, from the very beginning, the Temple is associated in the biblical

record specifically with David and his covenant. Tomoo Ishida, the great scholar of

ancient Near Eastern royal dynasties, remarks, “The Temple was the embodiment

of the covenant of David, in which the triple relationship between Yahweh, the

House of David, and the people of Israel was established.”54

The link between the Temple and creation is manifested also in various

Edenic motifs associated with the Temple. From the descriptions of Eden in

Genesis 2–3 and Ezekiel 28 we observe that Eden was atop a mountain (Ezek.

28) and characterized by abundant gold, precious gems, such as onyx, flowering

trees, and cherubim. Most of these elements are incorporated by Solomon into the

design and decoration of the Temple (1 Kings 6:18, 20–38; 7:18–51) and others were

incorporated into the priestly garments and liturgical furnishings of the earlier

Tabernacle (Exod. 25:31–40; 28:6–13). In fact, as Lawrence Stager has shown, it

was common practice throughout the ancient Near East for kings to build hilltop

temples surrounded by gardens to suggest the primordial garden of creation.

Solomon was no different. Textual and archeological evidence suggests he planted

botanical gardens around the Temple precincts to represent the Temple’s role as

a new Eden.

The sacred river that flows from Eden in Genesis 2:10 is later associated with

Mount Zion, site of the Temple. One of the four rivers that flow from Eden is

named the Gihon, which elsewhere in ancient Near Eastern and biblical literature

is known only as the name for the water-source for Jerusalem, flowing from the

east side of Mount Zion (Gen. 2:13; 1 Kings 1:33, 38; 2 Chron. 32:30).

This is sufficient indication that Israelite tradition saw Zion as the successor

of Eden. The correlation is even clearer in Ezekiel’s vision of the new Temple and

new Jerusalem In Ezekiel 40–48. At the beginning of the vision, Ezekiel is taken

up to a “very high mountain,” which in one sense is Zion, because upon it he sees a

new Jerusalem and a new Temple. Yet as Jon Levenson shows, the “high mountain”

of Ezekiel 40–48 is also typologically described as a new Eden. The convergence

between Zion and Eden is especially clear in Ezekiel 47:1–12, in which Ezekiel sees

a great river of life which flows out of the temple to the east, renewing creation to

its original Edenic perfection wherever it flows This river is a restoration of the

54 Ishida, The Royal Dynasties in Ancient Israel, 145.

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation 127

sacred river of the primordial garden, but now the Temple plays the role of the

garden. Zion and Eden have fused.

David and Adam as “King” and “Son of God”

Although there is no explicit expression of Adam being God’s “son,” the expression

used to describe God’s creation of Adam (WntWmdK WnmlcB “in his image and likeness,”

Gen. 1:26) suggests a divine act of fathering—as Adam is later said to “father” a son,

Seth, “in his own likeness, after his image” (AmlcK AtWmdB, Gen. 5:3).

The echoes of the Genesis story found elsewhere in Scripture affirm this

royal reading of Adam’s identity. For instance, in Psalm 8, which is filled with

references to the creation account, the “son of man (mda-!b),” is described as “made

. . . little less than God” (v. 5). God “crowns him with glory and honor” and gives

the man “dominion” over all his “works” (vv. 5–6). Specifically mentioned are some

of the various animals also found in the primordial list of Genesis—the fish of the

sea, the birds of the air, beasts of the field, and cattle (compare Ps. 8:7–8; Gen. 1:26,

28, 30; 2:20). This “royal first man motif ” can also be identified in Ezekiel 28, where

two oracles seem to be stylized as an allegory of the creation and fall of the first

man in Eden. Ezekiel describes him as a “prince” and a “king.” This primal king is

also called “the signet of perfection” (v. 12)—a symbol elsewhere associated with

royal likeness and authority (Gen. 41:42; Jer. 22:24–25).55

With authority derived from God, the first human was given a mandate to

rule the earth in God’s name, and to become, in effect, the father of many nations,

of a worldwide kingdom of God. In the Genesis account, God blesses man and

commands him to “be fruitful and multiply and fill . . . and subdue . . . and have

dominion . . . over all the earth” (Gen. 1:26, 28).

David fits this royal Adamic profile. It is interesting that “subdue” (vbk) is

used to describe David’s conquest of the nations (2 Sam. 8:11). The word “to rule” or

“have dominion” (hdr) also turns up in the royal Davidic messianic tradition. The

kingdom of David’s son is said to be a worldwide “dominion” (Ps. 72:8) and the

Davidic priest-king is to “rule” in the midst of his enemies (Ps. 110:2). As Adam’s

descendents were to fill the earth, we see similar language used to describe the

Davidic kingdom (Ps. 72:7, 16).

The authorship of Psalm 8 is attributed to David. The exalted “son of man”

described in terms of Adamic royalty in vv. 4–9 could be understood as self-reference.

After all, Psalm 89:19–37 describes David as (1) second only to God in power

55 James Barr, “‘Though Art the Cherub’: Ezekiel 28:14 and the Post-Ezekiel Understanding of

Genesis 2–3,” in Priests, Prophets, and Scribes: Essays on the Formation and Heritage of Second

Temple Judaism in Honor of Joseph Blenkinsopp, ed. Eugene Ulrich, Journal for the Study of

the Old Testament Supplement Series 149 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1992), 213–223;

Herbert G. May, “The King in the Garden of Eden: A Study of Ezekiel 28:12–19,” in Israel’s

Prophetic Heritage: Essays in Honor of James Muilenberg, eds. Bernhard W. Anderson and Walter

Harrelson (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1962), 166–176.

128 Scott Hahn

(v. 27, compare Ps 8:5, “a little less than God”); (2) having universal dominion over

creation (v. 25–27), and (3) being the firstborn son of God (vv. 26–27). His throne

or kingdom is as enduring as the sun and the moon (v. 37)—in other words, as

permanent as the creation itself.

The Davidic kingdom is, without doubt, the consuming passion of the

Chronicler and the subject matter of his composition. At the same time, the

Chronicler is not unconcerned about the purpose and fate of the rest of humanity

and creation.

The genealogies of 1 Chronicles 1–9 serve to situate the history of the Davidic

kingdom within a universal framework: a framework extending back to Adam

himself and incorporating all Adam’s descendants (1 Chron. 1:1–27), the whole

human family. In this way the Chronicler implies that the Davidic kingdom

has significance for all humanity as the fulfillment of God’s creational purpose.

Indeed, the Chronicler treats the Davidic kingdom essentially as the high point

of humanity’s development since creation. He fully realizes the fact that now—at

the time of his writing—that kingdom is in shambles; yet he clearly anticipates

the hope of kingdom restoration. Thus the two books of Chronicles, taken as a

whole, are at least implicitly eschatological, that is, they embrace a restorationist

eschatology.

It will be seen that Luke’s genealogy of Jesus (Luke 3:23–38) reflects a nearly

identical literary-theological strategy, except on the other end of the exile, with the

fulfillment of the eschatological hopes imminent. By tracing Jesus’ line of descent

back to Adam, Luke suggests that (1) the person of Jesus bears significance for every

descendant of Adam, and (2) the purposes of God in creating mankind (Adam) are

finding their fulfillment in Jesus. Luke would agree with the Chronicler that God’s

purpose, established with Adam for all people, was renewed with David for all

nations; but he would add that it has now been fulfilled by Christ in and through

the Church.

The Old Testament Background to Luke

As we turn our attention back to Luke, we ask the question: Is Luke aware of the

creational horizon behind the Davidic covenant? I would argue the affirmative:

at least in the early chapters of Luke, we observe a few texts where Davidic and

Adamic/creational motifs are simultaneously employed in the portrayal of Christ.

The clearest instance of this is in the genealogy of Christ in Luke 3:23–38. Up

to this point in the gospel, the concept of Jesus as Son of David and thus the one

to fulfill the Davidic covenant has been stressed again and again by references to

David, to Jesus’ Davidic lineage, and to various Davidic covenant texts: Luke 1:27,

32–33, 69; 2:4, 11. Immediately prior to the genealogy, the divine voice is heard from

heaven at Jesus’ baptism, echoing Psalm 2 (specifically v. 7), the royal Davidic coroChrist,

Kingdom, and Creation 129

nation hymn, by declaring “Thou art my beloved Son.” Accordingly, the genealogy

of 3:23–28 identifies Jesus as a descendant of David (v. 31), as we would expect.

But Luke proceeds to trace Jesus’ lineage all the way back to Adam, and he

declares Adam to be “the son of God” (v. 38). Elsewhere in the gospel only Jesus

is ever called “Son of God.” By calling Adam “son of God,” Luke is inviting a

comparison between the two. The comparison suggests that Jesus is a second or

new Adam, superior to the first, the father of a new humanity. Furthermore, by

tracing Jesus’ lineage back to Adam, Luke is suggesting that Jesus is significant for

all Adam’s descendants, that is to say, for all humanity and even for all creation.

Curiously, most scholars of Luke do not follow this line of thought. I. Howard

Marshall, in his well-known commentary, speaks for the scholarly consensus: “The

thought of Jesus as the second Adam . . . does not play any part in Lucan theology.”56

Similarly, Joseph Fitzmyer sees the Adamic motif as distinctly “Pauline” and having

no place in Luke. In his opinion, the genealogy merely functions to explain “the

relation of Jesus . . . to God and to the human beings he has come to serve.”57

In light of the following points, however, I find it virtually impossible to deny

that Luke employs an Adam-Christ typology:

• No other genealogy found in the Old Testament or in the

rabbinic tradition traces any individual’s origins back to

God.58 Luke is unique and intentional in doing so.

• Nowhere else in the Bible is Adam called “son of God.” Again,

Luke is unique and intentional in so doing.

• Only Jesus and Adam are identified as the “Son of God” in

Luke-Acts.

• This identification of Adam as “Son of God” is sandwiched

between pericopes (the baptism and the temptation) that

focus explicitly on Jesus identity as “Son of God”:

3:22: a voice came from heaven, “Thou art my beloved Son”

3:38: son of Adam, the Son of God.

4:3: The devil said to him, “If you are the Son of God . . .”

56 The Gospel of Luke: A Commentary on the Greek Text (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1986 [1978]),

161. See also, Marshall D. Johnson, The Purpose of the Biblical Genealogies, With Special Reference

to the Setting of the Genealogies of Jesus, Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series

8 (Cambridge: Cambridge University, 1969), 233–235.

57 Luke I–IX, 498. The same reasoning is found in other notable Lucan works, such as Robert F.

O’Toole, Luke’s Presentation of Christ: A Christology (Rome: Pontifical Biblical Institute, 2004),

171.

58 Johnson, The Purpose of the Biblical Genealogies, 237.

130 Scott Hahn

4:9: And [the devil] . . . said to him, “If you are the Son of

God . . .”

4:41: And demons also came out of many, crying, “You are

the Son of God!”

• The concept of Jesus as “Son of God” is critically important

to the message of Luke, recurring at critical junctures in

the narrative: at the annunciation (1:35), the baptism (3:22),

the temptation (4:3, 9), the transfiguration (9:35), before the

Sanhedrin (22:70, a climactic scene), and elsewhere.

In view of the fact that Luke breaks with convention by identifying Adam as

“son of God,” a term deployed strategically throughout the gospel to identify Jesus’

true identity, it seems reasonable to infer Luke’s purpose is to draw a comparison

between Adam and Jesus—for the purpose of showing how Jesus fulfills the role

of (a new) Adam for a new humanity. In fact, this inference may be corroborated

by noting the number of references to Genesis 1–3 in the preceding (baptism) and

subsequent (temptation) pericopes.

Luke’s baptismal narrative is marked by new creation motifs. For example,

the image of the dove in all three gospels is generally recognized as an allusion

to the Spirit brooding over the waters of creation (Gen. 1:2).59 As with the first

creation account, Luke’s narrative of Jesus’ baptism contains references to heaven,

to the Spirit, and to the spoken word of God. Heaven is “opened,” as it is in other

dramatic biblical accounts (Isa. 64:1; Ezek. 1:1), especially divine (new) creations

(Gen. 7:11; Isa. 24:18). What we have in Luke’s baptism scene, as in his genealogy, is

the picture of a new creation—culminating with the presentation of a new Adam.

Likewise, Jesus’ role as Son of David is simulaneously evoked, inasmuch as the

divine voice (“Thou art my beloved Son”) alludes to the royal Davidic coronation

hymn, Psalm 2 (v. 7; “I will tell the decree of the Lord. He said to me: ‘You are my

Son’”).

The allusions to creation in the baptismal account and the reference to Adam

in the genealogy both suggest that Jesus is the recapitulation of the biblical first

man. And as the first man immediately encountered rivalry and temptation by the

devil in paradise, Luke’s new Adam engages immediately in a struggle with the

personification of evil.60

Read in light of the genealogy, Jesus’ three temptations by the Devil in Luke

4:1–13 are a reprise of the temptation faced by the first son of God (Gen. 3). Adam

was tempted with food. So is the new Adam. Adam was made in God’s image and

given dominion over the world, yet fell prey to the temptation to try to become

59 See, for example, Joel Marcus, Mark 1–8, Anchor Bible 27 (New York: Doubleday, 2000), 159–

160, 165–166.

60 Marshall, Luke, 171.

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation 131

“like God.” The new Adam is tempted with worldly glory and power. Adam was

tempted to test God’s warning that he would die if he ate the forbidden fruit.

The new Adam, too, is tempted to put God’s promise of protection to the test by

throwing himself down from the Temple. In all three temptations, the new Adam,

unlike the first, resists and prevails over his tempter.

Thus, the baptism and temptation narratives in Luke 3:21–22 and 4:1–12 are

the “creation” and “temptation” of the new Man, and they correspond to Adam’s

experiences in Genesis 2 and 3. Sandwiched between the baptism and temptation

is the genealogy which explicitly evokes the memory of Adam and uses the title

“son of God” to invite a comparison between Adam and Jesus. Simultaneously,

Jesus’ role as the definitive Son of David is also being indicated, at least in the

genealogy (through the mention of David) and the baptism (through the echo of

Psalm 2:7) accounts. Davidic allusions may well be present in the temptation narrative,

however, there is not space here to explore them.61

Covenant, Kingdom, and Church at the Last Supper

The royal Davidic character and creational background of Luke’s Christology also

characterizes the ecclesiology of Acts. Succinctly stated, what is true of Christ in

Luke becomes true of the Church in Acts.

In order to see how this is so, it is useful to examine Luke’s narrative of the

institution of the Eucharist (Luke 22:14–30). This institution narrative serves as a

literary-theological bridge linking the royal Davidic identity and mission of Christ

with the early apostolic Church as the restored Davidic kingdom. The institution

narrative serves to establish the apostles as vice-regents of the Davidic kingdom,

empowering them to rule over the Church in the opening chapters of Acts. These

same opening chapters reveal, at times, the creational horizon behind the more

obvious theme of Davidic kingdom restoration.

Although there are important royal Davidic allusions in several parts of

the institution narrative, let us focus immediately on the verses of most relevance

to our thesis, namely, vv. 28–30. To the apostles, who have shared with Jesus his

trials, Jesus says, “kavgw. diati,qemai u`mi=n kaqw.j die,qeto, moi ov( path,r mou

basilei,an”(“I assign to you, as my Father assigned to me, a kingdom,” v. 29b). The

usual English translations of the verb diatiqh,mi (“assign” in the Revised Standard

Version, “confer” in the New Revised Standard Version) do not quite capture

the sense of the word for Luke. Luke’s style, as all acknowledge, is dependent

on the Septuagint, in which the phrase diati,qesqai diaqh,khn is used almost

eighty times as the equivalent of the Hebrew tyrb trk (“to make a covenant”)—in

61 The prominence of the Temple in Luke’s account is the most obvious Davidic feature seen in the

temptation account, recalling the importance of the Temple in Luke’s early narrative of John’s

birth and Jesus’ presentation and later finding in the Temple.

132 Scott Hahn

fact, diatiq, hmi even without the noun diaqh,khn can denote covenant-making.62

Since the nominal form diaqh,kh with the meaning “covenant” has just been

employed in v. 20 above, the sense of “covenant-making” would seem to accrue to

the verb diatiqh,mi here in v. 29.63 A more precise, if awkward, translation of v.

29b would thus be: “I covenant to you a kingdom, as my Father covenanted one to

me.”64

The only kingdom established on the basis of a covenant in Scripture is the

kingdom of David (Ps. 89:3–4, 28–37). Moreover, the use of father-son terminology

in v. 29b evokes the father-son relationship of the Lord with the Son of David

as reflected in 2 Samuel 7:14, and Psalms 2:7, and 89:26–27. Significantly, in each

of these three passages, father-son terminology is employed in the context of God

granting a kingdom to the Davidide (2 Sam. 7:13; Pss. 2:6, 8; 89:25, 27).

The meaning of Luke 22:29b becomes clear: God has “covenanted” a kingdom

to Jesus, since Jesus is the Son of David, the legal heir to David’s covenant

and throne (Luke 1:32–33). Now Jesus, through the “new covenant in [his] blood”

(v. 20), is “covenanting” to the disciples that same kingdom of David. This is not

the promise of a conferral (future tense), but the declaration of a conferral (present

tense).65 This present conferral of the kingdom militates against those scholars

who acknowledge a present kingdom in Luke-Acts but limit it to the person and

ministry of Christ. As Darrel Bock comments with respect to an earlier passage

(Luke 11:20), “An appeal only to the presence of God’s kingly power in the person

62 See 1 Chron. 19:19; 2 Chron. 5:10; 7:18; Ezek. 16:30; and discussion in Peter K. Nelson, Leadership

and Discipleship: A Study of Luke 22:24–30, Dissertation Series / Society of Biblical Literature

138 (Atlanta: Scholars, 1994).

63 Diatiqh,mi and diaqh,kh often bear the sense “to make a testament” and “testament/will,”

respectively, in secular Greek literature. See Walter Bauer, Greek-English Lexicon of the New

Testament, 2nd rev. ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1979), 189b, Definition 3; 183a, Def. 1).

But it does not mean that here. (Here my reading is against that of Jacob Jervell, Luke and the

People of God: A New Look at Luke-Acts [Minneopolis: Augsburg, 1972], 105 n. 24, and Nelson,

Leadership and Discipleship, 204). “Though the verb can bear such a sense [i.e. “bequeath”], its

parallel use in connection with God here hardly encourages us to move in such a direction.”

John Nolland, Luke, 3 vols., Word Biblical Commentary 35 (Dallas: Word, 1993), 1066. See

the discussion in Johnannes P. Louw and Eugene Albert Nida. Greek-English Lexicon of the

New Testament: Based on Semantic Domains. (New York: United Bible Societies, 1989), §34.43;

Marshall, Luke, 814–15; John Priest, “A Note on the Messianic Banquet,” in The Messiah:

Developments in Earliest Judaism and Christianity, ed. James H. Charlesworth (Minneapolis:

Fortress, 1992), 222–38.

64 “In Luke 22:29 in the phrase diatithemai . . . basileian, appoint a kingdom . . . exactly expresses

the formula diatithemai diathe k e n . The new covenant and the kingdom of God are correlated

concepts.” O. Becker, “Covenant,” in New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology, 3

vols., ed. Collin Brown (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1975–1978), 1:365–76

65 Bock, Luke, 1740. See also Pao, Acts and the Isaianic New Exodus, 124–127; Jerome H. Neyrey,

The Passion According to Luke: A Redaction Study of Luke’s Soteriology (New York: Paulist, 1985),

27–28.

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation 133

and message of Jesus misses the significance of this transfer of power to others and

ignores the kingdom associations Jesus makes in explaining these activities.”66

Jesus continues on in Luke 22:30 to emphasize the apostles’ vice-regal role:

“you will sit on thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel” (v. 30b). Searching for the

scriptural background of this concept of “thrones over the twelve tribes,” we find

the Davidic imagery of Psalm 122:3–5

Jerusalem, built as a city which is bound firmly together,

To which the tribes go up, the tribes of the Lord . . .

There thrones for judgment were set,

The thrones of the House of David.

The connection between the two texts is firm, in light of the collocation in

each of the three elements “tribes,” “thrones,” and “ judgment.”67 Psalm 122:5b makes

explicit the Davidic context of the promise of Luke 22:30b. The disciples, then, are

promised a share in the exercise of authority of the Davidic monarchy over all

twelve tribes. The disciples’ “appointment is an anticipation of the restoration of

Israel . . . and [they] are commissioned to govern the renewed people of God.”68 L.

T. Johnson comments on the significance of Luke’s version of this dominical saying

vis-à-vis Matthew’s:

Luke decisively alters the reference point for this prediction. . . .

In Luke the saying points forward to the role that the apostles

will have within the restored Israel in the narrative of Acts. . . .

These followers [will] exercise effective rule within the people

gathered by the power of the resurrected prophet (see, for example,

Acts 5:1–11).69

Kingdom Restoration and “ Theological Geography” in Acts

In order to grasp the ecclesiological implications of the institution narrative, it

is necessary to venture a little way into Acts. Significantly, in the opening verses

of Acts (1:3, 6), Jesus’ topic of discussion with the apostles over forty days is the

kingdom of God.70 When the disciples ask Jesus, “Lord, will you at this time restore

66 Darrell L. Bock, “The Reign of the Lord Jesus,” in Dispensationalism, Israel, and the Church: The

Search for Definition, eds., Craig A. Blaising and Darrell L. Bock (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan,

1992), 37–67.

67 Craig Evans, “The Twelve Thrones of Israel: Scripture and Politics in Luke 22:24–30,” in Luke

and Scripture, 154–70.

68 Green, Luke, 770; compare Fitzmyer, Luke X-XXIV, 1419.

69 Johnson, Luke, 345–46, 349. Also see Thomas J. Lane, Luke and the Gentile Mission.

70 On the close link between the “kingdom” in Luke 22 and here in Acts 1:1–11, see Jervell, Luke,

81–82.

134 Scott Hahn

the kingdom to Israel?” (1:6), their query may refer to Jesus’ promise in Luke 22:30b

that “you will sit on thrones.” The apostles are asking, in effect, “When will we

receive the authority promised to us?” In response, Jesus discourages speculation

about timing (v. 7), but does in fact describe the means by which the kingdom will

be restored, namely, through the Spirit-inspired witness of the apostles throughout

the earth (v. 8).71

Jesus’ geographical description of the spread of the gospel: “you shall be my

witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria and to the end of the earth”

is, on the one hand, a programmatic outline of the narrative of Acts, helping us to

recognize that the whole book concerns the spread of the kingdom (Acts 28:31).72

On the other hand, it is a Davidic map that reflects the theological geography of

God’s covenant pledge concerning the extent of the Davidic empire. Jerusalem was

David’s city (2 Sam. 5:6–10), Judea his tribal land (2 Sam. 5:5; 1 Kings 12:21); Samaria

represents (northern) Israel, David’s nation (1 Kings 12:16); and “the ends of the

earth” are the Gentiles (Isa. 49:6), David’s vassals (Pss. 2:7–8; 72:8–12; 89:25–27).73

The kingdom of David, encompassing Jerusalemites, Jews (Judeans), Israelites, and

Gentiles, will be restored as the apostles’ witness extends to “the ends of the earth”

and the evkklhsi,a grows.74

But the apostles in the narrative of Acts 1 do not yet realize the significance

of Jesus’ words or understand his transformation of their expectation of a national,

earthly kingdom to one that is international and, though manifest on earth, essentially

heavenly.75 The Spirit must still be poured out for the apostles to perceive the

transformed kingdom. Thus only after the disciples have received the power of the

Holy Spirit will they become ma,rturej, witnesses (Acts 1:8).

After the reconstitution of the Twelve, the event of Pentecost (Acts 2:1–42)

marks (1) the restoration in principle of Israel as kingdom under the Son of David,

and (2) the beginning of the apostles’ vice-regency over that kingdom. It is clear

that Luke presents us in Acts 2 with the principial fulfillment of the promised restoration

of Israel. Not only are all the Twelve (and presumably the 120) “all together

in one place” (2:1)—thus representing the nucleus of the restored Israel—but they

71 As argued by John Michael Penney, The Missionary Emphasis of Lukan Pneumatology (Sheffield:

Sheffield Academic, 1997), 70; Pao, Acts and the Isaianic New Exodus, 95 n. 143, 144; and Bock,

“The Reign of the Lord Jesus,” 45.

72 “The verse is programmatic in its significance for the narrative structure . . . That the mission

will begin in Jerusalem alludes to the restored Zion of Isaiah (Isa. 2.3).” Penney, The Missionary

Emphasis of Lukan Pneumatology, 73.

73 See Pao, Acts and the Isaianic New Exodus, 95.

74 See Penney, The Missionary Emphasis of Lukan Pneumatology, 21, 71.

75 “Jesus shifts the focus from ‘knowledge’ to mission . . . [This is] the real answer to the question

concerning the ‘restoration’ of the kingdom to Israel. Jesus’ answer contains a redefinition of

‘kingdom’ and therefore of the Christian understanding of Jesus as Messiah . . . The ‘kingdom for

Israel’ will mean for Luke, therefore, the restoration of Israel as a people of God.” Luke Timothy

Johnson, The Acts of the Apostles, Sacra Pagina 5 (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 1992), 29.

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation 135

address their message to “Jews, devout men from every nation under heaven” (v. 5),

and Luke enumerates those nations (vv. 9–11). The exile is reversed.76

The exile scattered Israel. An earlier event, recorded in Israel’s history, the

tower of Babel, scattered all mankind. At Pentecost, Babel (Gen. 11:1–9) is reversed

as well. In a brief recapitulation of the table of nations in Genesis 10, Luke lists

representatives of all mankind—both Jews and Gentile converts to Judaism (Acts

2:9–11)—from all the regions of the known world. They now remark to one another,

“How is it that each of us hears them in his own language?”

The account of Babel in Genesis (Gen.11:1–9) follows hard on the heels of the

conclusion of the flood narrative. The flood and its abatement are a new or renewed

creation event: the world is plunged again into the watery chaos of Genesis 1:2,

and emerges once more under the leadership of a new man, a new father of the

human race, a new Adam: Noah. The granting of the covenant with Noah (Gen.

9:1–17) in words that echo the original creation narrative creates the hope that in

the newly re-created earth, the original divine blessing on all humanity (whose

branches are listed in Genesis 10:1–32) may be experienced once more. The hubris

of Babel resulted in a dashing of that hope.

Now, at Pentecost, the effects of Babel are overcome. God’s Spirit is poured

out “on all flesh” (e`pi. pa/san sa,rka)—a phrase very common in the flood narrative

(Gen. 6:12, 17, 19; 7:15, 16; 8:17, 21; 9:11, 15, 16, 17) referring not only to humanity but to

every living thing in creation. The result of this outpoured Spirit is a reunification

of the human family in a way not experienced since the world had been newly

re-created by the Flood. The implication: humanity is being re-created through the

breath of God’s Spirit, who was also the agent of the Adamic first creation (Gen.

1:2; 2:7) and the Noahic re-creation (Gen. 8:1).

The New Israel at Pentecost and Beyond

To summarize: at Pentecost Babel and exile are reversed, humanity and Israel

are restored. More precisely: humanity is being restored and constituted as a new

Israel.

This restored Israel has a certain form and structure: not a tribal confederation

as under Moses, but a kingdom as under David, incorporating Israel and

the Gentiles.77 Peter’s sermon stresses the Davidic royalty of Jesus Christ (Acts

2:36).78 He preaches to the assembled exiles of Israel that Jesus is the fulfillment

of the covenant of David (v. 30)79 and the fulfillment of David’s own prophecies

76 Denova, Things Accomplished Among Us, 138, compare 169–75.

77 See Robert F. O’Toole, “Acts 2:30 and the Davidic Covenant of Pentecost,” Journal of Biblical

Literature 102 (1983): 245–58. “Although the term kingdom never appears in the entire chapter,

the imagery of rule and the features of God’s covenants are present. In fact, the chapter is

saturated with such images and allusions.” Bock, “The Reign of the Lord Jesus,” 47.

78 See Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke–Acts, 38.

79 See Bock, “The Reign of the Lord Jesus,” 49.

136 Scott Hahn

(vv. 25–28; 34–35).80 He applies to Jesus the royal Davidic enthronement psalm

(Psalm 110), asserting that Jesus is now enthroned in heaven (“exalted at the right

hand of God”) and has poured out the Spirit on the apostles as the crowd has

just witnessed (v. 33). Thus, Jesus is reigning now in heaven, and the results of

his reign are being manifest now in events that the people may “see and hear’”(v.

33).81 When Peter’s hearers accept the fact that Jesus is the presently-enthroned

Davidic king—and thus acknowledge his rightful reign over themselves—they are

incorporated into the evkklhsi,a through baptism (2:41–42; cf. 4:32–5:11, esp. 5:11).82

Not just Israel, but David’s reign over Israel has been established in principle. And

not just over all Israel, but over “all the nations under heaven” or “all flesh” as well,

that is, over all humanity and all creation.

It is important to note, however, that the Davidic kingdom is not only restored

but transformed.83 The Son of David is not now enthroned in the earthly

Jerusalem but the heavenly, “exalted at the right hand of God.” The kingdom has

been transposed from earth to heaven, even though it continues to manifest itself

on earth as the evkklhsi,a.84 This ecclesial kingdom exists simultaneously on earth

and in heaven. The king is enthroned in heaven, but the ministers (the apostles)

are active on earth.

In sum, Acts 1–2, the key introductory chapters of the book, have several

links to the institution narrative and describe the birth of the Church as the restoration

of the kingdom of David, as well as the restoration of the unity of the human

family lost shortly after the re-creation of the Flood.

Davidic covenant motifs recur elsewhere at key junctures in Acts. For example,

the prayer of the assembled believers in Acts 4:23–30 identifies the persecution of

the nascent Church as a fulfillment of the royal Davidic coronation hymn, Psalm

2. Interestingly, the beginning of the prayer invokes the Lord as both (1) the God

of creation and (2) the God of David: “Sovereign Lord . . . you made the heaven

and the earth and the sea, and everything in them. You spoke by the Holy Spirit

through the mouth of . . . David.” (4:24–25).

Later in Acts, Paul’s first recorded sermon—at Pisidian Antioch (Acts

13:16–41)—advances the same Davidic christology presented by Peter in Acts 2.

80 On the Davidic background of Peter’s sermon, see Bock, “The Reign of the Lord Jesus,” 38–39.

81 On the relationship of Luke 1:32–33 and Acts 2:24–31, see Lane, Luke and the Gentile Mission,

160.

82 See Joseph A. Fitzmyer, “The Role of the Spirit in Luke-Acts,” in The Unity of Luke-Acts, 165–84,

at 175–76; and Denova, Things Accomplished Among Us, 138 and 169–75.

83 Francis Martin compares the way in which the New Testament transforms the expectations

of the Old Testament in the very process of fulfilling them to Bernard Lonergan’s concept

of “sublation,” although Martin prefers the term “transposition.” See the discussion in his

“Some Directions in Catholic Biblical Theology,” in Out of Egypt: Biblical Theology and Biblical

Interpretation, ed. Craig Bartholomew, Mary Healy, Karl Möller, and Robin Parry (Grand

Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2004), 65–87, at 69–70.

84 So Penney, The Missionary Emphasis of Lukan Pneumatology, 75.

Christ, Kingdom, and Creation 137

Paul identifies Jesus as the promised heir to David (v. 23) and explains his person

and role in terms of the royal Davidic coronation hymn (Psalm 2, in v. 33) and the

Isaianic promise of the extension of the Davidic covenant (Isa. 55:3). Paul concludes

his proof of Jesus’ status as the Christ by citing the same (Davidic) Psalm 16 that

Peter used in his sermon at Pentecost in Acts 2:24–32.

Similarly, James’ speech at the Jerusalem council (Acts 15) applies Davidic

covenant imagery to the Church of Christ, much like Peter and Paul applied

Davidic christology to the resurrected Jesus. Recall that the question facing the

elders and apostles at the “Jerusalem Council” in Acts 15 was whether to require

Gentiles to receive circumcision. After Peter speaks against it, James confirms

Peter’s decision to embrace baptized (but uncircumcised) Gentile converts by

quoting Amos 9:11–12: “After this I will return, and I will rebuild the dwelling of

David (skhnhhn. Dauid, ) . . . that the rest of men may seek the Lord, and all the

Gentiles who are called by my name’ (Acts 15:13–18).”

The historical background and literary context of Amos’ oracle regarding

the “tent” or “dwelling” of David (Amos 9:11) is the Davidic kingdom, which at

its peak incorporated Edom (Amos 9:12a) and other Gentile nations (Ammon,

Moab, Aram)—that is, “the nations who are called by my name” (Amos 9:12b).85

Significantly, in Acts 15:14–19, James announces that the incorporation of Gentiles

into the Church is the fulfillment of Amos’ oracle concerning the restoration of the

Davidic kingdom.86 His exegetical argument presumes that the “tent of David” is

the Church. As David Pao observes:

The promise to rebuild and restore the Davidic kingdom is

explicitly made at the point in the narrative of Acts that focuses

on defining the people of God. The Amos quotation of Acts 15

shows that . . . the development of the early Christian community

is also understood within the paradigm of the anticipation

of the Davidic kingdom. The christological focus of the David

tradition should be supplemented by an ecclesiological one.87

In sum, Luke’s Davidic christology is clearly ordered to the kingdom ecclesiol-

85 John Mauchline, “Implicit Signs of a Persistent Belief in the Davidic Empire,” Vetus Testamentum

20 (1970), 287–303; Max Polley, Amos and the Davidic Empire: A Socio-Historical Approach (New

York: Oxford University, 1989), 66–82.

86 See Strauss, The Davidic Messiah in Luke-Acts, 190–92; Michael E. Fuller, The Restoration of

Israel: Israel’s Re-gathering and the Fate of the Nations in Early Jewish Literature and Luke-Acts

(New York: Walter de Gruyter, 2006).

87 Pao, Acts and the Isaianic New Exodus, 138. See also Penney, The Missionary Emphasis of Lukan

Pneumatology, 74; David P. Seccombe, “The New People of God,” in Witness to the Gospel,

350–72; and Richard Bauckham, “James and the Jerusalem Church,” The Book of Acts in Its

Palestinian Setting, ed. Richard Bauckham, Vol. 4 of The Book of Acts in Its First Century Setting,

5 vols. (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1995), 415–80, esp. 457.

138 Scott Hahn

ogy which we see unfolding throughout Acts, especially in the apostolic speeches.

At the same time, Luke presents the renewed covenant of the Davidic kingdom

against the background of the renewed creation, inasmuch as the expansion of the

Church-kingdom is “to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8), including “every nation

under heaven” (Acts 2:5), with the outpouring of the Spirit “on all flesh” (Acts

2:17).

David and his Kingdom, Christ and his Church

We have seen that the christology of Luke is strongly royal and Davidic. However,

the full significance of this royal Davidic portrait of Christ is missed unless its Old

Testament context is carefully examined. Several Old Testament texts establish a

link between the Davidic kingdom and the original form and divine purpose of

creation. The Jerusalem Temple assumes features of Eden; David is characterized

as a king exercising dominion in terms reminiscent of Adam; and the Davidic

kingdom appears as a fulfillment of God’s covenantal purposes for creation.

Luke is clearly aware of the creational background of the Davidic kingdom.

Indeed, as we have seen, his accounts of Jesus’ baptism, genealogy, and temptation

all contain intertwining allusions to creation and Davidic traditions. Jesus is Son

of David and therefore messianic king, but he is also the Son of God, and thus a

new Adam to originate a new humanity. And all that Jesus possesses—the kingdom

of David and its significance for all creation—is transmitted to the apostles

in the institution narrative. In Acts, the apostles are commissioned by Christ and

empowered by the Holy Spirit to extend the kingdom they have received to “the

ends of the earth,” to “every nation under heaven,” and to “all flesh”—references to

the (new) creation. Both the restored kingdom and the renewed creation are thus

united in the Church.

In sum, when Luke-Acts is read in light of the Old Testament—that is, in

canonical perspective—it shows how the Church’s universal mission effects the

restoration of the Davidic kingdom for all nations, just as it fulfills God’s plan and

purpose for all creation. God’s plan for Adam and creation, renewed with David

and his kingdom, is thus fulfilled by Christ in the Church.

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