Luke 12 is the 12th chapter of the Gospel of Luke in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. It records a number of teachings and parables told by Jesus Christ when "an innumerable multitude of people had gathered together", but addressed "first of all" to his disciples. Early Christian tradition uniformly affirmed that Luke the Evangelist composed this Gospel as well as the Acts of the Apostles. Critical opinion on the tradition was evenly divided at the end of the 20th century.
The original text was written in Koine Greek. Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter are:
This chapter is divided into 59 verses.
Scottish minister William Robertson Nicoll calls this passage (verses 1âÂÂ12) an "exhortation to fearless utterance". Henry Alford suggests that this discourse consists "for the most part of sayings repeated from other occasions".
Nicoll suggests that this is "the largest crowd mentioned anywhere in the Gospels" but Jesus speaks "first of all" to his disciples, only turning to the multitude in verses 14âÂÂ21, in response to a question from someone in the crowd, and again in verses 54âÂÂ59. Peter asks (at verse 41) whether the parable of the faithful servant is addressed solely to the disciples or to the wider multitude (ÃÂñýÃÂñÃÂ, pantas: 'everyone').
The Jerusalem Bible notes that an alternative reading would connect the word "first" with the succeeding statement: First of all, be on your guard ... (, proton prosechete eautois). Protestant commentator Heinrich Meyer likewise argues that "ÃÂÃÂá¿¶ÃÂÿý, before all, is to be taken with ÃÂÃÂÿÃÂÃÂÃÂõÃÂõ"; it does not belong to what precedes". The Matthew Bible (1537) and Ruth Magnusson Davis' New Matthew Bible translation (2016) pick up this reading:
This verse matches :
Eric Franklin suggests that, in particular, it is Pharisaic hypocrisy which will be revealed, while David Robert Palmer translates the initial words of this verse, ÿá½Âôὲý ôÃÂ, ouden de, as "But there is nothing ...", arguing that "the particle ôàis meant to make a contrast here, between hypocrisy, in verse 1, and the disclosure of verse 2".
In Matthew's wording, Jesus speaks in the darkness and exhorts his disciples subsequently to reveal what he has said (). Luke's version has the disciples speaking in the darkness. Nicoll compares these versions:
Among the canonical gospels of the New Testament, this parable of Jesus appears only in Luke's Gospel. The parable reflects the foolishness of attaching too much importance to wealth. It is introduced by a member of the crowd listening to Jesus, who tries to enlist Jesus' help in a family financial dispute:
J. B. Lightfoot, Kuinoel (), and others note and emphasise that he was "certainly no attendant of Jesus". Meyer observes that he was "a Jew on whom the endowments and authority of Jesus produced such an impression that he thought he might be able to make use of Him in the matter of his inheritance", but considers that "whether he was a younger brother who grudged to the first-born his double share of the inheritance ... must be left in doubt".
An abbreviated version of the parable appears in the non-canonical Gospel of Thomas (Saying 63) with a longer version similar to Luke's in Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 5575.
The parable has been depicted by artists such as Rembrandt (illustrated), Jan Luyken, James Tissot, and David Teniers the Younger.
Similarly in , with a slightly longer text: Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.
This is one of several occasions in Luke's gospel where Jesus encourages almsgiving.
A series of exhortations to watchfulness and Luke's version of the parable of the faithful servant are contained in verses 35âÂÂ48. The "master" (ὠúÃÂÃÂùÿÃÂ) is portrayed as being "away at a wedding", but "the main thought here only is that he is away at a feast, and will return".
F. W. Farrar, in the Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges, makes reference to an âÂÂunwritten sayingâ of Christ, He who is near me is near the fire, which is recorded by Ignatius, Origen and Didymus.
The final verses of the chapter (verses 57âÂÂ59) make use of an illustration based on a pecuniary claim heard before the magistrates' bench (, archonta, a Lukan word also appearing four times in the Acts of the Apostles):