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Luke 20:28 meaning

In this passage, the Sadducees, who denied the resurrection and held a strict interpretation of the Torah, confront Jesus, presenting a hypothetical situation to challenge His teachings. They used the example of a woman who had seven husbands, attempting to expose what they believed to be the absurdity of resurrection by asking to whom she would be married in the life to come. Their goal was to ridicule the belief in resurrection, not realizing that their premise failed to grasp the nature of resurrected life.

In Luke 20:28, the Sadducees’ question illustrates their misunderstanding of Scripture and the power of God. Jesus responds by asserting that in the resurrection, people do not marry or reproduce as they do in this life, for they are transformed to be like the angels. His argument emphasizes that God's relationship with historical figures like Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob implies their continued existence, rendering them not as dead but as living in God's presence. This correction reveals the Sadducees' erroneous beliefs and serves as a profound statement on the nature of life after resurrection.

Other Relevant Commentaries:

  • Matthew 28:19-20 meaning. The Great Commission (continued) Jesus commissions and commands His disciples to make more disciples of all nations. They are to accomplish this by going to the nations, baptizing new disciples in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, and by teaching new disciples to do the things Jesus commanded them. The Great Commission ends with Jesus promising to be with them until His return.
  • Luke 6:20 meaning. Jesus begins teaching His disciples in a section commonly referred to as “the Sermon on the Mount,” or sometimes, “the Sermon on the Plain.” To describe the citizens of His Kingdom, Jesus repeats the word “Blessed” (“Makarios”)—a total sense of fulfillment. 
  • Luke 7:27-28 meaning. Jesus continues to affirm the role of John the Baptizer as the forerunner to the Messiah. In doing so, He is testifying to the crowds that He Himself is the Messiah.