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Money Matters: The Divine Reversal

A Moment of Hope

Release Date: 10/28/2025

Characters at the Cradle: Zechariah, Father of John the Baptist show art Characters at the Cradle: Zechariah, Father of John the Baptist

A Moment of Hope

by David Chadwick John was the long awaited son to Zechariah and Elizabeth. His birth paved the way for Jesus’s birth. His voice prepared the way of the Lord. His life pointed to the soon and coming King. Luke 1:16-17 says this of John: “And he will turn many of the children of Israel to the Lord their God, and he will go before him in the spirit and power of Elijah, to turn the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the disobedient to the wisdom of the just, to make ready for the Lord a prepared people.” The personal calling of John’s life in God’s story grabs my heart every...

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Characters at the Cradle: Zechariah’s Angelic Visitation show art Characters at the Cradle: Zechariah’s Angelic Visitation

A Moment of Hope

by David Chadwick The story of Zechariah continues in Luke 1:8-15, which we will look at today. While serving as priest, he was chosen by lot to enter the temple during a high holy feast. Take note that even the drawing of straws is under the sovereign hand of Almighty God according to Proverbs 16:33. We serve a mighty God who has a timing and purpose for everything! Undoubtedly, while serving in the temple, Zechariah prayed for Israel, as all priests regularly did. However, I would suppose he also prayed fervently for a child, and probably more specifically a son, as sons were considered a...

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Characters at the Cradle: Zechariah Introduction show art Characters at the Cradle: Zechariah Introduction

A Moment of Hope

by David Chadwick  This week, we begin our series called “Characters at the Cradle.” Join me as we explore the major characters whose lives intersected with Jesus’s life as he entered into this world through a cradle in a manger. Zechariah is our first character. We will spend an entire week looking at his life and exploring why he is so important to the incarnation of Jesus. Luke was very careful to tell his readers exactly what was going on when Zechariah entered the story. Luke 1:5-7 begins by giving us several important insights into Zechariah’s life. He came on the scene...

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A Look at Luke: The Certainty of Things Taught show art A Look at Luke: The Certainty of Things Taught

A Moment of Hope

by David Chadwick Luke wanted Theophilus, and any future readers, to know the certainty of things taught (Luke 1:4). How were truths passed on during these biblical times? First, through oral tradition. Never underestimate the ability of people to remember what has been taught to them verbally. For some in Luke’s day, this was the only way to transmit truths to future generations. Therefore, people repeated truths through families, in public arenas, and within gatherings in order to both learn and pass on information. Without oral tradition, truths and generational realities were lost....

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A Look at Luke: Friend to Theophilus show art A Look at Luke: Friend to Theophilus

A Moment of Hope

by David Chadwick Luke wrote the Gospel of Luke as a letter to the “most excellent Theophilus” (verse 4). Who is Theophilus? This friend to Luke is another important piece in understanding who authored this book. Luke was a Greek, undoubtedly impassioned to reach those like himself. This should inspire each of us. We, most likely, have been given keys by God to reach others like us as well. Maybe you are a businessman. You have skills and knowledge to reach other businessmen. Maybe you are a mom. Chances are you have unique insights to reach other moms. And so on and so forth. Theophilus...

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A Look at Luke: The Importance of Eyewitnesses show art A Look at Luke: The Importance of Eyewitnesses

A Moment of Hope

by David Chadwick The Gospel of Luke gives an account of the life of Jesus that is significant. Written by a physician with a tremendous attention to detail, Luke’s perspective was heavily focused on the important reality that God took on human flesh to accomplish his mission. What else do we know about Luke? Let’s keep unpacking Luke 1:1-4. Dr. Luke counted on the testimonies of actual eyewitnesses. He emphasized in verse 2 that his compilations included information delivered to him from “those who from the beginning were eyewitnesses and ministers of the word.” It seems as though...

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A Look at Luke: The Beloved Physician show art A Look at Luke: The Beloved Physician

A Moment of Hope

by David Chadwick As we continue to learn more about Luke in order to further appreciate this New Testament author, let’s turn our eyes back to Luke 1:1-4. What else does Scripture teach us about him? Luke was a physician. In fact, Paul called him “the beloved physician” in Colossians 4:14. Apparently, Dr. Luke joined Paul in his missionary journeys in Acts 16:10-11, and they obviously became close friends. He may have even cared for Paul physically when he was imprisoned and/or in peril. We all know that Jesus, the Great Physician, is the ultimate supernatural healer. But it is clear...

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A Look at Luke: God Took on Flesh show art A Look at Luke: God Took on Flesh

A Moment of Hope

by David Chadwick This week, throughout the Christmas season, and even into the new year, our church is going to be doing an in-depth study of the Gospel of Luke. After doing a brief overview of Luke himself, we will be looking more specifically at the characters at the cradle. Somewhere along the way, from the conception of Jesus until his birth, you will see how each of these characters had a divine intersection with the incarnation of Jesus– the King of Kings and Lord of Lords. This week, we will focus on Luke 1:1-4. Let’s take a look at Dr. Luke. Who was he? To whom was he writing?...

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Money Matters: So What? Or So That! show art Money Matters: So What? Or So That!

A Moment of Hope

by Marilynn Chadwick Are you growing in your faith merely to become a “deeper” disciple? I call this a “so what” faith. I believe Jesus is calling us to more. God’s Word urges us to grow in our faith “so that” we’ll give our lives away to the least and lost. I hope our lessons from the Gospel of Luke will encourage us to reflect on the question, “Is my life a so what or a so that?” How can we make a difference in our world? Remember how Jesus always noticed the least and the lost. So often the poor are invisible to us. We may have to ask the Holy Spirit to help us regain...

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Money Matters: God Loves Small Things show art Money Matters: God Loves Small Things

A Moment of Hope

by Marilynn Chadwick Luke stresses the importance of the widow’s sacrificial gift. Jesus tells us the Father loves this kind of faith. We bring him glory when we trust him as our loving Provider. Such a message is vastly different from what the religious leaders were teaching. Jesus rebukes them, “What sorrow also awaits you experts in religious law! For you crush people with unbearable religious demands, and you never lift a finger to ease the burden” (Luke 11:46 NLT). Can you imagine? These teachers of the law even got mad when Jesus healed someone on the Sabbath. Luke encourages us to...

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by Marilynn Chadwick

Most of us know Luke as the physician, but did you know he’s also widely regarded as a respected historian? According to Luke’s opening verses, the author himself refers to his work as an “orderly account” rather than a Gospel (Luke 1:3).

The story of the poor widow’s sacrificial gift (Luke 21:1-4) is one of Luke’s most well-known stories about Jesus and money. It takes place near the end of Jesus’s earthly ministry.

Luke devotes much of his narrative to the journey of Jesus and his disciples (Luke 9-19). The action now moves quickly as Jesus approaches the cross. Jesus enters Jerusalem, weeps over the city, cleanses the temple, and responds to a series of heated arguments with the religious leaders. He condemns the scribes (Luke 20:45-47); honors the poor widow for her gift; and turns the tables on the rich (Luke 21:1-4).

Jesus’s confrontation with these corrupt leaders has been a continual theme throughout much of the Gospel of Luke. Luke shows us how Jesus used surprising examples for the religious leaders. His listeners would have been shocked and offended at the heroes of his stories. Some call this Luke’s “divine reversal.”

For example, children in that day were completely powerless. “People were bringing even the infants to Jesus.” (Luke 18:15 NIV). And even the disciples rebuked them. Yet, Jesus responded, “Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these” (Luke 18:16). The word, brephos, is used for infants and children—born and unborn. Luke uses the same word to describe John the Baptist who “leaped” in his mother’s womb (Luke 1:41).

Women were also considered as second class citizens. Yet Jesus, in another example of “divine reversal,” included women in his community of followers. He even entrusted the first news of his resurrection to a woman, Mary Magdalene (Luke 24:10).

Finally, there’s the example of Zacchaeus. Tax collectors were despised as traitors, working for the Roman Empire, not for their Jewish community. They were known to be corrupt. Luke tells the story of Zacchaeus’s dramatic heart change. He gave back all he had stolen and even restored twice what was required.

Throughout Luke’s Gospel, Jesus is always “flipping the script,” bringing surprising heroes to his stories. Perhaps this should give us hope for our stories as well.