Bible Commentary

Luke 1:66

The Pulpit Commentary on Luke 1:66

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

And the hand of the Lord was with him. This kind of pause in the history is one of the peculiarities of St. Luke's style. We meet with it several times in the gospel story and in the history of the Acts.

They are vivid pictures in a few words of what happened to an individual, to a family, or to a cause, during often a long. course of years. Here the story of the childhood of the great pioneer of Christ is briefly sketched out; in it all, and through it all, there was one guiding hand—the Lord's.

The expression, "hand of the Lord," was peculiarly a Hebrew thought—one of the vivid anthropomorphic idioms which, as has been aptly remarked, they could use more boldly than other nations, because they had clearer thoughts of God as not made after the similitude of men ().

Maimonides, the great Jewish writer of the twelfth century, in his 'Yad Hachazakah,' says, "And there was under his feet (); written with the finger of God (); the hand of the Lord (); the eyes of the Lord (); the ears of the Lord ().

All these are used with reference to the intellectual capacity of the sons of men, who can comprehend only corporeal beings; so that the Law spoke in the language of the sons of men, and all these are expressions merely, just as, If I whet my glittering sword (); for has he, then, a sword?

or does he slay with a sword? Certainly not: this is only a figure; and thus all are figures" ('Yad,' ).

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