Commentary
After the Sermon on the Plain, Luke shows Jesus' authority in action. A centurion trusts that a spoken command is enough to heal at a distance; at Nain Jesus interrupts a funeral and gives a widow her son back; to John's question he points to healings, restored sight, resurrection, and good news to the poor; then he exposes a generation that rejected both John's austerity and the Son of Man's open table fellowship. The sequence presents Jesus as exercising authority over sickness and death while forcing a decision about how God's visitation is to be recognized.
Luke 7:1-35 presents Jesus' works as the public evidence that he is God's authoritative and compassionate agent of promised restoration, and those same works disclose the difference between humble faith and a generation bent on refusing God's purpose whether it comes through John or through Jesus.
7:1 After Jesus had finished teaching all this to the people, he entered Capernaum. 7:2 A centurion there had a slave who was highly regarded, but who was sick and at the point of death. 7:3 When the centurion heard about Jesus, he sent some Jewish elders to him, asking him to come and heal his slave. 7:4 When they came to Jesus, they urged him earnestly, "He is worthy to have you do this for him, 7:5 because he loves our nation, and even built our synagogue." 7:6 So Jesus went with them. When he was not far from the house, the centurion sent friends to say to him, "Lord, do not trouble yourself, for I am not worthy to have you come under my roof. 7:7 That is why I did not presume to come to you. Instead, say the word, and my servant must be healed. 7:8 For I too am a man set under authority, with soldiers under me. I say to this one, 'Go,' and he goes, and to another, 'Come,' and he comes, and to my slave, 'Do this,' and he does it." 7:9 When Jesus heard this, he was amazed at him. He turned and said to the crowd that followed him, "I tell you, not even in Israel have I found such faith!" 7:10 So when those who had been sent returned to the house, they found the slave well. 7:11 Soon afterward Jesus went to a town called Nain, and his disciples and a large crowd went with him. 7:12 As he approached the town gate, a man who had died was being carried out, the only son of his mother (who was a widow), and a large crowd from the town was with her. 7:13 When the Lord saw her, he had compassion for her and said to her, "Do not weep." 7:14 Then he came up and touched the bier, and those who carried it stood still. He said, "Young man, I say to you, get up!" 7:15 So the dead man sat up and began to speak, and Jesus gave him back to his mother. 7:16 Fear seized them all, and they began to glorify God, saying, "A great prophet has appeared among us!" and "God has come to help his people!" 7:17 This report about Jesus circulated throughout Judea and all the surrounding country. 7:18 John's disciples informed him about all these things. So John called two of his disciples 7:19 and sent them to Jesus to ask, "Are you the one who is to come, or should we look for another?" 7:20 When the men came to Jesus, they said, "John the Baptist has sent us to you to ask, 'Are you the one who is to come, or should we look for another?'" 7:21 At that very time Jesus cured many people of diseases, sicknesses, and evil spirits, and granted sight to many who were blind. 7:22 So he answered them, "Go tell John what you have seen and heard: The blind see, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, the poor have good news proclaimed to them. 7:23 Blessed is anyone who takes no offense at me." 7:24 When John's messengers had gone, Jesus began to speak to the crowds about John: "What did you go out into the wilderness to see? A reed shaken by the wind? 7:25 What did you go out to see? A man dressed in fancy clothes? Look, those who wear fancy clothes and live in luxury are in kings' courts! 7:26 What did you go out to see? A prophet? Yes, I tell you, and more than a prophet. 7:27 This is the one about whom it is written, 'Look, I am sending my messenger ahead of you, who will prepare your way before you.' 7:28 I tell you, among those born of women no one is greater than John. Yet the one who is least in the kingdom of God is greater than he is." 7:29 (Now all the people who heard this, even the tax collectors, acknowledged God's justice, because they had been baptized with John's baptism. 7:30 However, the Pharisees and the experts in religious law rejected God's purpose for themselves, because they had not been baptized by John.) 7:31 "To what then should I compare the people of this generation, and what are they like? 7:32 They are like children sitting in the marketplace and calling out to one another, 'We played the flute for you, yet you did not dance; we wailed in mourning, yet you did not weep.' 7:33 For John the Baptist has come eating no bread and drinking no wine, and you say, 'He has a demon!' 7:34 The Son of Man has come eating and drinking, and you say, 'Look at him, a glutton and a drunk, a friend of tax collectors and sinners!' 7:35 But wisdom is vindicated by all her children."
Observation notes
- The opening transition ('after Jesus had finished teaching') links chapter 7 narratively to the authoritative instruction of 6:17-49; Luke now shows what that authority looks like in action.
- The centurion is described through layered testimony: elders call him 'worthy' because of benefactions, but he calls himself 'not worthy'; the contrast directs attention away from merit and toward faith.
- Jesus heals the slave without physical contact or presence, and the centurion's rationale is explicitly authority-based: command issued at one level produces obedience at another.
- At Nain, Jesus initiates the miracle without being asked; compassion for the widow, not a formal request, drives the action.
- The resurrection scene climaxes with 'Jesus gave him back to his mother,' a detail that foregrounds restoration as well as raw power.
- The crowd's reaction at Nain combines fear, glorifying God, prophetic identification, and the claim that God has visited his people; Luke is interested in the theological interpretation of the miracle.
- John's disciples report 'all these things,' making the prior miracles the immediate backdrop for John's question.
- Jesus answers John not with a bare self-identification formula but by directing attention to observable acts: healing, exorcism, restored sight, resurrection, and good news to the poor are the evidence set before John to interpret him rightly from Scripture-shaped categories rather than political expectation alone.
Structure
- 7:1-10: A Gentile centurion appeals through intermediaries; Jesus commends his unusual faith after healing the slave without entering the house.
- 7:11-17: Jesus encounters a widow's funeral procession at Nain, raises her only son, and the crowd interprets the event in prophetic and visitation language.
- 7:18-23: John's question about 'the one who is to come' receives an answer framed by present miracles and Isaianic-style signs, ending with a beatitude against taking offense at Jesus.
- 7:24-28: Jesus defends John before the crowds, rejecting shallow expectations and identifying John as the promised forerunner.
- 7:29-30: Luke inserts a response note contrasting those who accepted John's baptism with Pharisees and lawyers who rejected God's purpose for themselves.
- 7:31-35: Jesus diagnoses 'this generation' as impossible to please, rejecting both John's severity and Jesus' sociability, and concludes with wisdom's vindication.
Key terms
axios
Strong's: G514
Gloss: worthy, deserving
The repeated worthiness language creates a deliberate contrast between human assessments based on merit and the faith-filled humility Jesus actually commends.
pistis
Strong's: G4102
Gloss: faith, trust
Faith here is not vague admiration but confidence that Jesus' spoken command is sufficient to accomplish healing at a distance.
exousia
Strong's: G1849
Gloss: authority, right to command
The centurion's analogy explains why distance is irrelevant: Jesus' authority operates through command, not ritual proximity.
splanchnizomai
Strong's: G4697
Gloss: to feel deep compassion
Luke ties Jesus' power over death to personal mercy, preventing the miracle from being read as mere display.
episkeptomai
Strong's: G1980
Gloss: to visit, attend, come to help
The term frames Jesus' ministry as divine intervention for covenant mercy, not simply prophetic wonderworking.
ho erchomenos
Strong's: G2064
Gloss: the coming one
The phrase gathers messianic expectation into one title and allows Jesus to answer by scriptural signs rather than by adopting a politically loaded label.
Syntactical features
paired worthiness contrast
Textual signal: 7:4 'he is worthy' / 7:6 'I am not worthy'
Interpretive effect: The repetition with opposite evaluation sharpens the contrast between social honor and humble faith, steering the reader toward Jesus' valuation.
command sequence in reported speech
Textual signal: 7:7-8 'say the word... I say to this one, Go... Come... Do this'
Interpretive effect: The stacked imperatives and responses illustrate the logic behind the centurion's trust: Jesus' word functions with sovereign efficacy.
Lukan title 'the Lord' in narrative
Textual signal: 7:13 'When the Lord saw her'
Interpretive effect: This narrator-level designation invites the reader to see more than a compassionate teacher; it subtly frames Jesus' act with heightened authority.
catalog of present-tense signs
Textual signal: 7:22 'the blind see, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed...'
Interpretive effect: The compressed list presents Jesus' works as cumulative messianic evidence and echoes scriptural promise without a direct claim detached from deeds.
beatitude as warning pivot
Textual signal: 7:23 'Blessed is anyone who takes no offense at me'
Interpretive effect: The beatitude turns the answer to John outward toward all hearers, making response to Jesus the decisive issue.
Textual critical issues
Singular or plural in wisdom's vindication
Variants: 7:35 is read as 'by all her children' in many witnesses, while some manuscripts read 'by all her works/deeds.'
Preferred reading: by all her children
Interpretive effect: The preferred reading fits the immediate context of differing human responses to John and Jesus; wisdom is shown right in the people shaped by her, though the alternate reading would place slightly more stress on observable outcomes.
Rationale: The external support and the harder, more relational reading commend 'children,' and it coheres with Luke's concern for response patterns in this unit.
Old Testament background
1 Kings 17:17-24
Connection type: pattern
Note: The raising of a widow's son and his restoration to his mother strongly recalls Elijah at Zarephath, helping explain the crowd's conclusion that a great prophet has arisen.
2 Kings 4:32-37
Connection type: pattern
Note: Elisha's restoration of a woman's son forms part of the prophetic background for Jesus' life-giving act at Nain.
Isaiah 35:5-6
Connection type: allusion
Note: The blind seeing and lame walking in 7:22 echo restoration promises associated with God's saving arrival.
Isaiah 61:1
Connection type: allusion
Note: The proclamation of good news to the poor in 7:22 matches Luke's earlier programmatic use of Isaiah and frames Jesus' ministry in messianic terms.
Malachi 3:1
Connection type: quotation
Note: In 7:27 Jesus explicitly cites the messenger text to identify John as the divinely appointed forerunner.
Interpretive options
Why does John ask whether Jesus is 'the one who is to come'?
- John is wavering because Jesus' ministry of mercy did not match stronger expectations of imminent judgment.
- John is not doubting personally but sending disciples so they can arrive at conviction about Jesus.
- John's question reflects perplexity rather than unbelief: he recognizes Jesus yet seeks clarification about the form of messianic fulfillment.
Preferred option: John's question reflects perplexity rather than unbelief: he recognizes Jesus yet seeks clarification about the form of messianic fulfillment.
Rationale: Jesus does not denounce John as apostate; instead he provides scriptural evidence and then publicly honors John. The unit suggests real perplexity in light of Jesus' surprising ministry pattern, not total repudiation.
What does 'the least in the kingdom of God is greater than he' mean?
- The least kingdom participant enjoys greater redemptive-historical privilege than John because John belongs to the preparatory era before the kingdom's realized arrival in Jesus.
- The saying compares personal holiness or spiritual stature and claims even ordinary Christians are morally superior to John.
- The saying refers only to future heavenly status and not to present kingdom realities.
Preferred option: The least kingdom participant enjoys greater redemptive-historical privilege than John because John belongs to the preparatory era before the kingdom's realized arrival in Jesus.
Rationale: The immediate context concerns John's role as forerunner and the arrival of the expected one. The contrast is epochal and revelational, not a dismissal of John's personal greatness.
What is meant by 'wisdom is vindicated by all her children'?
- God's wisdom is shown right by the people who rightly respond to John and Jesus.
- The saying means wisdom is justified by the practical results of both ministries regardless of public criticism.
- The line is mainly ironic, exposing opponents without offering a positive referent.
Preferred option: God's wisdom is shown right by the people who rightly respond to John and Jesus.
Rationale: The nearby contrast between baptized tax collectors and rejecting Pharisees, together with the likely reading 'children,' favors a response-centered meaning.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read after Luke 6, where hearing and doing Jesus' words marks true response; chapter 7 supplies narrative demonstrations of such hearing in the centurion and in those who justify God.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: The miracles, the title 'Lord,' the Isaianic sign-list, and the forerunner citation together prevent reducing Jesus to a generic prophet; the text presents prophetic likeness while moving beyond it.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: The crowd's statement that God has visited his people should not be isolated from the broader unit; Luke unfolds visitation through Jesus' deeds, not through abstract terminology alone.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: The generation comparison shows that moral posture affects interpretation; entrenched refusal can mislabel both ascetic severity and gracious table fellowship.
chronometrical_dispensational
Relevance: medium
Note: The saying about the least in the kingdom being greater than John is best handled redemptive-historically; it marks transition from preparatory prophetic ministry to kingdom realization rather than erasing continuity with Israel's story.
prophetic
Relevance: medium
Note: Isaiah and Malachi backgrounds are interpretively active, but they must be governed by Luke's actual deployment of them rather than by speculative end-time schemes.
Theological significance
- Jesus' authority works through his word. The healing in 7:1-10 shows that neither touch nor physical presence is necessary for his command to take effect.
- Power and mercy are joined in Jesus. At Nain he acts from compassion toward a bereaved widow, so the raising is not a display of force detached from human misery.
- The acclamation in 7:16 links Jesus' act with God's visitation of his people. The crowd's understanding is still developing, but Luke treats the miracle as a real disclosure of divine help arriving through Jesus.
- Jesus answers messianic expectation with scripturally legible deeds: the blind see, the lame walk, the dead are raised, and the poor receive good news.
- John's greatness remains intact, yet 7:28 places him on the threshold rather than inside the realized kingdom order announced and enacted by Jesus.
- Luke ties response to revelation to moral posture. Those who accepted John's baptism are set over against leaders who refused God's purpose for themselves.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: Identity in this unit emerges through speech, action, and response rather than through abstract definition alone. The repeated 'worthy' language, the centurion's command analogy, the crowd's 'visited his people,' and the marketplace comparison all show how Luke lets concrete scenes carry theological weight.
Biblical theological: Luke places Jesus within Israel's scriptural patterns—especially prophetic restoration and promised messenger texts—while refusing to leave him there as merely another prophet. The signs given to John's messengers present fulfillment in a form that reconfigures expectation around mercy, restoration, and the nearness of God's kingdom.
Metaphysical: The passage portrays illness, demonic affliction, distance, and death as powers that do not set the terms of reality. Jesus' word crosses space, halts a funeral, and restores life, implying a world ordered under divine authority rather than closed within natural inevitability.
Psychological Spiritual: The centurion's humility does not weaken confidence; it sharpens it. By contrast, the generation in 7:31-35 shows a form of resistance that can dismiss opposite kinds of ministry with equal ease. The obstacle is not always lack of evidence but unwillingness to receive God's action in the form it takes.
Divine Perspective: God's valuation in these scenes does not track prestige or religious standing. Jesus honors a Gentile centurion's faith, shows unsolicited mercy to a widow, publicly upholds John, and exposes the culpability of leaders who would not submit to John's baptism.
Category: attributes
Note: God's sovereign power is displayed through Jesus' authority over illness, demons, and death.
Category: character
Note: Divine compassion is visible in Jesus' unsolicited pity toward the widow at Nain.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The crowd's glorifying God after the resurrection miracle ties Jesus' works to God's public glory and visitation.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: God discloses the identity of the coming one through acts that fulfill prophetic expectation rather than through detached speculation.
- Jesus fits prophetic categories, yet the unit will not let those categories contain him completely.
- John is unsurpassed among those born of women, yet the least in the kingdom stands in a greater redemptive-historical position.
- Abundant evidence is present, yet some still resist; the problem is not merely informational.
Enrichment summary
Luke 7 frames recognition of Jesus within Israel's scriptural memory and social world. In the centurion episode, public claims of worthiness give way to the man's own confession that he is not worthy, and Jesus marvels not at patronage but at trust in his authority. At Nain, the restoration of a widow's son recalls Elijah and Elisha, which explains the crowd's prophetic language and their claim that God has visited his people. Jesus answers John's question with Isaianic-style signs rather than a bare title, so messianic expectation must be read through healings, restoration, resurrection, and good news to the poor. The marketplace parable then exposes a generation whose problem is not caution but refusal: neither John's severity nor Jesus' table fellowship is allowed to stand.
Traditions of men check
Measuring spiritual legitimacy mainly by social respectability or public benefaction.
Why it conflicts: The elders commend the centurion on worthiness grounds, but Jesus commends his faith and humility instead.
Textual pressure point: 7:4-9 contrasts external worthiness claims with the centurion's 'I am not worthy' and Jesus' amazement at his faith.
Caution: The text does not deny that good works matter; it denies that such works are the basis on which Jesus responds.
Treating Jesus' miracles as bare compassion stories without christological force.
Why it conflicts: Luke uses the miracles to answer messianic expectation and to frame Jesus as the bearer of God's visitation.
Textual pressure point: 7:16 and 7:22 connect the acts to divine visitation and Isaianic signs.
Caution: Avoid overstating crowd understanding as if every witness possessed full post-resurrection Christology.
Assuming religious skepticism is always more intellectually honest than simple faith.
Why it conflicts: The unit portrays some objections as morally selective and impossible to satisfy, rejecting opposite ministry styles with equal ease.
Textual pressure point: 7:31-35 compares the generation to children who refuse both flute and dirge.
Caution: The passage does not forbid honest questions such as John's; it exposes entrenched refusal masquerading as discernment.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: honor_shame
Why It Matters: The elders argue that the centurion is 'worthy' because of his benefaction toward the Jewish community, but the centurion answers with self-humbling language and asks only for Jesus' word.
Western Misread: A reading centered on private humility or general niceness misses the public logic of honor, worthiness, and mediated appeal operating in the scene.
Interpretive Difference: Luke uses that social framework to redirect attention from status and benefaction to faith that recognizes Jesus' authority.
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: The cry 'God has visited his people' is covenantal language of divine intervention on behalf of Israel, not merely a report of strong religious feeling.
Western Misread: Reducing visitation to an inward spiritual experience or generic compassion strips the response at Nain of its scriptural force.
Interpretive Difference: The miracle functions as a sign that Israel's God is acting publicly through Jesus, which prepares for the question of whether he is the coming one.
Idioms and figures
Expression: He is worthy ... I am not worthy
Category: irony
Explanation: The repeated worthiness language creates a deliberate reversal. The elders evaluate by visible honor and benefaction; the centurion denies entitlement before Jesus.
Interpretive effect: The contrast redirects the reader from social deservingness to faith-filled humility as the proper posture before Jesus.
Expression: Say the word
Category: idiom
Explanation: The centurion treats Jesus' spoken command as sufficient action because authority is exercised through effective speech, as in military command.
Interpretive effect: This sharpens the nature of faith in the passage: confidence in Jesus' authoritative word, not in ritual proximity or physical touch.
Expression: God has visited his people
Category: idiom
Explanation: Visitation language in Scripture commonly signals God's active intervention in mercy or judgment for his covenant people. Here it is rescue-help language prompted by the raising at Nain.
Interpretive effect: The crowd is not offering a vague religious reaction; they are interpreting Jesus' deed as an event of divine intervention within Israel's story.
Expression: A reed shaken by the wind
Category: metaphor
Explanation: Jesus uses the image to deny that John was a vacillating figure moved by pressure or public mood.
Interpretive effect: It guards against treating John's question as proof that he was fundamentally unstable or false.
Expression: We played the flute for you ... we wailed ...
Category: simile
Explanation: The generation is compared to children who reject both festive and mourning games. The figure portrays people who refuse to respond appropriately no matter which register is offered.
Interpretive effect: The point is not childishness in general but selective resistance: John and Jesus are opposites in style, yet both are dismissed.
Application implications
- Approach Jesus as the centurion does: without claims of deservingness, yet with confidence that his word is enough.
- Let Jesus' works and words interpret messianic hope rather than forcing him into inherited expectations; that is the issue behind John's question and Jesus' answer in 7:22-23.
- Do not separate authority from mercy. In 7:13-15 compassion for the widow is the very setting in which Jesus displays power over death.
- Receive God's corrective call when it comes. Luke says some leaders rejected God's purpose for themselves by refusing John's baptism.
- Examine criticism for selectiveness. The complaint of 7:31-35 shows how a resistant heart can condemn both wilderness austerity and shared meals with sinners.
Enrichment applications
- Measure spiritual discernment less by public respectability and more by whether one entrusts oneself to Jesus' authority without bargaining from merit.
- Expect God's saving work to unsettle inherited religious scripts; Jesus insists that scripturally recognizable deeds, not preferred expectations, identify the coming one.
- Read mercy toward the vulnerable as part of God's covenant faithfulness, not as a softer concern detached from truth and authority.
Warnings
- Do not flatten the whole unit into a generic miracles collection; Luke has arranged these scenes to answer who Jesus is and how people respond to him.
- Do not treat John's question as either full unbelief or mere dramatic theater without remainder; the text supports genuine perplexity answered by scriptural evidence and followed by strong commendation.
- Do not turn 'least in the kingdom' into a cheap slogan of personal superiority over John; the saying is primarily redemptive-historical.
- Do not overread the crowd's 'great prophet' confession as if it exhausts Luke's christology; it is a true but still incomplete response within the narrative.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not overbuild Roman military background from the centurion analogy; the text uses ordinary command logic, not technical army detail.
- Do not turn the Elijah-Elisha resonance at Nain into a claim that Jesus is merely repeating earlier prophet patterns; Luke uses the echo to intensify recognition, not to reduce Jesus.
- Do not universalize the market-children saying into a complaint about all disagreement; it targets a generation whose refusal persists across opposite ministry styles.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Treating the centurion episode as a lesson that Jesus responds to philanthropy or social usefulness as the basis of favor.
Why It Happens: The elders explicitly present the man as worthy because he loves the nation and built the synagogue.
Correction: Luke places that public commendation beside the centurion's own 'I am not worthy' so that Jesus' amazement lands on faith in his authority, not on earned status.
Misreading: Reading the crowd's 'great prophet' confession at Nain as either the whole truth about Jesus or a uselessly deficient response.
Why It Happens: Some interpreters stop at the prophetic category, while others dismiss it because later christological claims are fuller.
Correction: The confession is true within the scene and is shaped by prophetic restoration patterns, but Luke uses it to move toward the larger claim that God has visited his people through Jesus.
Misreading: Forcing John's question into either total unbelief or a purely staged exercise for his disciples.
Why It Happens: Readers often try to remove all tension from John or else make the question a collapse of faith.
Correction: The passage supports genuine perplexity about how Jesus fulfills expectation; Jesus answers with scriptural evidence and then strongly commends John.
Misreading: Using 7:29-30 chiefly as a proof text for later theological systems.
Why It Happens: The line about rejecting God's purpose invites debates that can overshadow the narrative flow.
Correction: The local point is that refusal of John's baptism was a culpable refusal of God's revealed call. Larger doctrinal synthesis should stay secondary to that emphasis.