Hospitality of God

Hospitality of God

by Brendan Byrne (Author)

Synopsis

Luke portrays the life and ministry of Jesus as a divine visitation to the world, seeking hospitality. The One who comes as visitor and guest becomes host and offers a hospitality in which the entire world can become truly human, be at home, and know salvation in the depths of their hearts. In The Hospitality of God Brendan Byrne, SJ, provides to-the-point commentary on those parts of Luke's Gospel that bring home to people a sense of the extravagance of God's love for them.

The Hospitality of God approaches Luke's Gospel through the interpretive key of hospitality. It looks at the Gospel as a whole, yet lingers upon scenes where the theme of hospitality is particularly prominent, such as the infancy stories, Jesus at Nazareth, Jesus in the house of Simon, the Good Samaritan, Martha and Mary, the banquet in 14:1-35, the Prodigal Son, Jesus' visit to the tax collector Zacchaeus, the institution of the Eucharist, and the Emmaus event.

Byrne stresses that those in Luke's Gospel who readily offer hospitality - chiefly the marginalized and the poor - find themselves drawn into a much deeper sphere of hospitality, the hospitality of God. Those who have difficulty sharing are challenged by Jesus to conversion so that they, too, may not be left out of the banquet of life to which God calls all human beings. Luke's Gospel, ever interested in the process of human transformation, explores this resistance to God's gift and the ways in which individuals need to be converted if they are to come to knowledge of salvation.

Luke's Gospel is written out of faith in the risen Lord. Its primary intent is to bring people of al subsequent Christian generations into saving encounter with the Lord who was raised from the dead and lives among us in the power of the Spirit. Reading and hearing the Gospel in faith allows individuals and communities to access the hospitality of God brought by Jesus. In this work, Byrne offers an invitation for all to join in the life-giving hospitality of God.

Chapters are The Prologue: 1:1-4 and the Lukan Time Frame of Salvation, The Infancy Stories I: Before the Birth of Jesus: 1:5-80, The Infancy Stories II: The Birth and Childhood of Jesus: 2:1-52, Prelude to the Ministry of Jesus: 3:1-4:13, Hospitality and Inhospitality at Nazareth: Jesus Inaugurates His Mission: 4:16-30, The Early Galilean Ministry: 4:31-6:11, The Community of the Kingdom: 6:12-49, Response to the Ministry of Jesus: 7:1-8:3, Later Galilean Ministry: 8:4-9:17, Climax of the Galilean Ministry: 9:18-50, The Journey to Jerusalem Begins: 9:51-10:24, The Way to Eternal Life: 10:25-11:13, The Prophet Continues His Way I: 11:14-12:53, The Prophet Continues His Way II: 12:54-14:35, Celebrating God's Acceptance: 15:1-32, The Hospitality of the Poor: Two Responses to Wealth: 16:1-31, Towards the End of the Journey: 17:1-18:30, Hospitality in Jericho: 18:31-19:27, Jesus in Jerusalem: 19:28-21:4, Hope and Endurance: Discourse on the Future: 21:5-38, Jesus' Journey to God: The Passion Narrative I: 22:1-53, Jesus' Journey to God: The Passion Narrative II: 22:54-23:56, Hospitality Continues: The Community of the Risen Lord: 24:1-53.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 209
Publisher: Liturgical Press
Published: 01 Jan 2000

ISBN 10: 0814623905
ISBN 13: 9780814623909

Media Reviews
. . . remarkable for the deftness and brevity with which its author draws us into the expansive, inviting world of 'the hospitality of God.' Wide scholarship and deep faith combine with keen pastoral sensitivity and clarity of expression to make Brendan Byrne a genial host at the scriptural banquet he has so splendidly provided. In this year of Jubilee there could not be a better book to read or a better gift to share.Tony Kelly, CSSR, Australian Catholic University
To a generation for whom hospitality means gourmet food and designer table linen, Brendan Byrne offers a much-needed corrective. . . . Deeply engaged both with Luke's story and with the contemporary church, Byrne's study is a genuine contribution.Beverly Gaventa, Helen H.P. Manson Professor of New Testament Literature and Exegesis, Princeton Theological Seminary
. . . a much needed and subtle reading of the Gospel of Luke. . . . Reading this book is a satisfying experience, made more so by the remarkable synthesis of the Lukan agenda offered by the 16 'theses' posted in the final pages of the book.Francis J. Moloney, SDB, Professor of New Testament, The Catholic University of America
This is an excellent resource for students, teachers, and pastors interested in Luke's gospel or in search of a helpful perspective for pastoral and homiletic reflection and preparation.Interpretation
Helpful and important book for evangelizers.Crux
. . . a fine contribution to the ongoing enterprise of reading Luke as a whole . . . this little volume is to be recommended highly.Catholic Biblical Quarterly
It is a very readable and concise commentary on the whole Gospel, aimed at the general reader. Byrne helps us to experience Jesus' life and ministry as a visitation by God that continually poses the question, How will this guest be received? Will we accept or reject him?Church
Author Bio
Brendan Byrne, SJ, is a professor of New Testament at Jesuit Theological College, within the United Faculty of Theology, Parkville, Melbourne, Australia. He is the author of Romans (1996) from the Sacra Pagina series, Galatians and Romans (2010), A Costly Freedom: A Theological Reading of Mark's Gospel (2008), Lifting the Burden: Reading Matthew's Gospel in the Church Today (2004), and Life Abounding: A Reading of John's Gospel (2014), published by Liturgical Press.