John Kilgallen, «What Does It Mean to Say That There Are Additions in Luke 7,36-50?», Vol. 86 (2005) 529-535
Given the early development of the tradition about the divinity of Jesus and the
Marcan, then Lucan conviction about his authority to forgive sins, it seems
reasonable to see how Luke 7, 47-50 are not an addition from outside the story of
the woman, Simon and Jesus. Rather, they can be seen as known by earliest
editors of the story, with the story passed on and developed as circumstances
required.
- «Acts 28,28 — Why?» 2009 176-187
- «Luke 20,13 and i1swj» 2008 263-264
- «Luke wrote to Rome – a Suggestion» 2007 251-255
- «Hostility to Paul in Pisidian Antioch (Acts 13,45) — Why?» 2003 1-15
- «Martha and Mary: Why at Luke 10,38-42?» 2003 554-561
- «‘With many other words’ (Acts 2,40): Theological Assumptions in Peter’s Pentecost Speech» 2002 71-87
- «The Obligation to Heal (Luke 13,10-17)» 2001 402-409
- «`The Apostles Whom He Chose because of the Holy Spirit'
A Suggestion Regarding Acts 1,2» 2000 414-417
- «The Strivings of the Flesh
(Galatians 5,17)» 1999 113-114
- «Jesus First Trial: Messiah and Son of God (Luke 22,66-71)» 1999 401-414
- «The Importance of the Redactor in Luke 18,9-14» 1998 69-75
- «Was Jesus Right to Eat with Sinners and Tax Collectors?» 2012 590-600
106 Th. Booij
SUMMARY
Psalm 141 has national distress as its background. The speaker of this text prays
for discipline, not to be enticed by the ‘delicacies’ of profiteers, ‘workers of
mischief’, and thus become involved in their intrigues. Discipline, such as a
righteous person may teach him, will enable him to seek justice for these people
when the present regime is overthrown. At the end of the psalm the speaker asks
his God that he himself be guarded from evil which the ‘workers of mischief’
may plot against him. In vv. 4-6 all 3rd person plural suffixes refer to those called
ˆwaAyl[p; they are also the subject of w[mvw (v. 6b). In v. 4 twll[ means
‘fabrications’. In v. 5 w dw[ can be understood as ‘in the end’, and tw[r as
‘troubles’.