Karoline M. Lewis (www.karolinelewis.com) holds the Alvin N. Rogness Chair of Homiletics at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minn. and is an ordained pastor in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. She is a graduate of Northwestern University, Luther Seminary, and has a Ph.D. in New Testament Studies from Emory University. A popular presenter, she has led conferences, workshops, and retreats throughout the country and Canada on books of the Bible, especially John’s Gospel, biblical interpretation, women in ministry, and she is a regularly featured preacher at the Festival of Homiletics. A contributing writer for www.workingpreacher.org, she is also co-host of the site’s weekly podcast, Sermon Brainwave.

 

 

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Is Salvation Really for Everyone?

by Karoline Lewis 11-30-2015

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“All flesh shall see the salvation of God” (Luke 3:1-6). Well, that depends.

It depends on where you are from. It depends on your country of origin. It depends on your religion. It depends on with whom you are associated. It depends on your race, your ethnicity, your gender, your sexual orientation. The list of criteria for salvation, contrived predominantly from our many fears, is long according to the world as we know it today, but not according to the Gospel of Luke. And since Luke is providing a particular portrait of Jesus, not according to Jesus either.

This passage from Luke for the Second Sunday of Advent points to competing worldviews. The opening verses are deceptively subversive. Into the religious reigns and imperial kingdoms of the first century C.E., the word of God comes. Emperor Tiberius, Pontius Pilate, Herod, Philip, Annas, and Caiaphas will have to tend with the rule of the word of God, a rule that insists on salvation for all.