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Our Lady in Scripture—IV: Daughter of Zion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2024

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The infancy narrative of the third gospel, Luke I. 5—2. 52, is very different in character from that of the first gospel, longer, richer in allusions, written from a somewhat different angle, and using a different series of events. It goes without saying that the main explicit purpose of both is the same, to introduce the gospel narrative with an account of the origin of the Messiah: Jesus is the heir to the messianic kingdom, born miraculously of a virgin, and either by blood or by legal adoption a member of the royal line. But the divergences soon begin. In Matthew the principal actor is Joseph, in Luke, Mary. In Matthew, the story is one largely of danger and conflict, the infant Messiah is taken for refuge to a foreign land, gentiles acknowledge and protect him. In Luke the narrative is almost wholly joyous and he is acclaimed by representatives of his own people.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1962 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 I am very largely indebted for the arguments in this article to Renè Laurentin, Structure et Thèohgie de Luc I-II, Paris, 1957

2 S. Lyonnet, in Biblica 20 (1939), pp. 131-141. His arguments are condensed in R. Laurentin op.cit. p. 65 footnotes

3 For the theology of this image see the series of articles by Joseph Bourke, o.p., in THE LIFE OF THE SPIRIT, March, May, November 1961, and April 1962.