NT Text: Luke 10:27
OT Source(s):
Source: G.K. Beale & D.A. Carson, Commentary on the NT Use of the OT (Luke 10:25-37); Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Reference Type: Direct Quotation
Connection Method(s): Promise-Fulfillment + Longitudinal Theme (Law and Righteousness)
Anchor Text: Lev 19:18 — Love Your Neighbor
Significance: In Luke's distinctive setting it is the lawyer, not Jesus, who recites the two-commandments summary — the Shema (Deut 6:5) joined to Lev 19:18, "and 'Love your neighbor as yourself'" — and Jesus affirms it: "You have answered correctly; do this and you will live" (10:28). (The love-of-God side of this recitation is documented separately at Luke 10:27 → Deut 6:5; this pair isolates the Lev 19:18 half.) The detail is significant: that a Torah expert can pair these two verses unprompted shows the love-summary was already recognized in Second-Temple Jewish piety as the integrating principle of the law — Jesus is confirming a reading, not inventing one, exactly as Lev 19 itself invites by climaxing its interpersonal statutes in v. 18. Yet the lawyer's flawless recitation immediately collapses into evasion — "And who is my neighbor?" (10:29) — exposing the gap between quoting the command and keeping it. Jesus's "do this and you will live" is not works-righteousness offered as the gospel but the law's own honest verdict, designed to drive the self-justifying heart to despair of itself and to the One who alone has perfectly loved God and neighbor. The telos: Lev 19:18 cannot be reduced to a memorizable maxim or shrunk to a manageable circle of neighbors; it is kept only by the love Christ embodies in the very parable that follows, the true Neighbor who crosses every barrier to bind up the wounds of the half-dead — and only such a Christ-given love, not bare moral effort, finally makes "do this and live" anything but a sentence of death.
Related Trajectory Tables: (none yet — see Anchor Text §7 on the "Two Greatest Commandments" TT gap)