Road to Recognition in Luke 24 | Dr. Joel B. Green | Ep. 4 cover art

Road to Recognition in Luke 24 | Dr. Joel B. Green | Ep. 4

Road to Recognition in Luke 24 | Dr. Joel B. Green | Ep. 4

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Joel B. Green, senior professor of New Testament interpretation at Fuller Theological Seminary, brings decades of scholarship to a discussion about Luke 24 and how it works as both an ending and a beginning. Green has written over 60 books and offers insights into how Luke 24 ties up loose ends from the Gospel while setting up themes that continue in Acts, particularly around eating, Scripture interpretation, and the gradual recognition of who Jesus really is. The conversation explores why the companion on the road to Emmaus remains unnamed and how this invites readers to put themselves in the story, experiencing their own journey from confusion to understanding. Green's most compelling points emerge when he discusses how Jesus taught Scripture on that road to Emmaus. Rather than focusing on isolated passages, Jesus showed the disciples a sweeping pattern throughout Israel's history—that glory comes through suffering, not around it. This challenges how many people read the Bible today, looking for quick applications rather than understanding the bigger story. Green argues that real transformation happens when people's minds are opened to see this pattern, just like the disciples experienced. He emphasizes that recognition naturally leads to witness—once you see what God is doing, you want to tell others about it, making the movement from personal transformation to mission a key theme in Luke's narrative structure. COMPANION ARTICLE: https://scripturalworks.com/what-happens-in-luke-24-from-bewildered-to-commissioned-disciples-and-readers
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