Greek Key Terms:
Context: Luke's account of the crucifixion emphasizes the cosmic signs accompanying Jesus's death. Verse 44 records darkness over the whole land from noon until 3 PM. Verse 45 explains the darkness: "the sun's light failed," and immediately adds, "and the curtain of the temple was torn in two." Luke uniquely places the veil's tearing before Jesus's death (v. 46), creating theological emphasis: the veil tears as Jesus is dying, demonstrating that His sacrifice is opening access to God.
Connections:
Christological Connection: Luke's account of the torn veil (23:45) uniquely places it before Jesus's death, emphasizing that the veil tears as Jesus is dying—demonstrating that His sacrifice is opening access to God in real time. The darkness covering the land and the sun's light failing signal cosmic significance: Jesus's death is world-altering judgment and redemption. The veil prescribed in Exodus 26:31-33 had enforced separation between sinful humanity and holy God for 1,500 years—Leviticus 16:2 warned of death for unauthorized entry behind it. Now, as the true Lamb of God is sacrificed, God tears the veil "in two" (meson—completely split), announcing that the barrier sin created is destroyed. Hebrews interprets the torn veil as Christ's torn flesh: "the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain, that is, through his flesh" (Hebrews 10:20). What excluded under the old covenant (veil barring access) becomes what includes under the new covenant (Christ's flesh opening access). The darkness evokes exodus plague (Exodus 10:21-23) and eschatological judgment (Amos 8:9), connecting Jesus's death to both redemption from bondage and satisfaction of divine justice. The veil's tearing announces: the way into God's presence is open; the Most Holy Place is accessible; the blood of Jesus grants "confidence to enter the holy places" (Hebrews 10:19). Luke's placement—veil tears as Jesus dies—creates theological emphasis: atonement is being accomplished; access is being opened; the old covenant is passing away; the new covenant is being inaugurated. What the high priest did once yearly with animal blood behind the veil, Christ does once for all with His own blood, securing eternal redemption and opening the way to God's presence for all who believe.
Connection Method(s): Typology (Direct, Backward-Looking); Redemptive-Historical Progression — Luke's placement of the veil-tearing before Jesus' death emphasizes that Christ's sacrifice actively opens access to God, marking the transition from old to new covenant.
Trajectory Table: 167 - Veil (Access Through Christ's Flesh)