Commentaries:
Robertson's Word Pictures (NT)
When the days were well-nigh come (en tw sumplhrousqai tav hmerav). Luke's common idiom en with the articular infinitive, "in the being fulfilled as to the days." This common compound occurs in the N.T. only here and Luke 8:23; Acts 2:1. The language here makes it plain that Jesus was fully conscious of the time of his death as near as already stated (Luke 9:22, Luke 9:27, Luke 9:31).
That he should be received up (thv analhmyewv autou). Literally, "of his taking up." It is an old word (from Hippocrates on), but here alone in the N.T. It is derived from analambanw (the verb used of the Ascension, Acts 1:2, Acts 1:11, Acts 1:22; 1 Timothy 3:16) and refers here to the Ascension of Jesus after His Resurrection. Not only in John's Gospel (John 17:5) does Jesus reveal a yearning for a return to the Father, but it is in the mind of Christ here as evidently at the Transfiguration (Luke 9:31) and later in Luke 12:49 f.
He steadfastly set his face (autov to proswpon esthrisen). Note emphatic autov,
he himself, with fixedness of purpose in the face of difficulty and danger. This look on Christ's face as he went to his doom is noted later in Mark 10:32. It is a Hebraistic idiom (nine times in Ezekiel), this use of face here, but the verb (effective aorist active) is an old one from sthrizw (from sthrigc, a support), to set fast, to fix.
To go to Jerusalem (tou poreuesqai eiv Ierousalhm). Genitive infinitive of purpose. Luke three times mentions Christ making his way to Jerusalem (Luke 9:51; Luke 13:22; Luke 17:11) and John mentions three journeys to Jerusalem during the later ministry (John 7:10; John 11:17; John 12:1). It is natural to take these journeys to be the same in each of these Gospels. Luke does not make definite location of each incident and John merely supplements here and there. But in a broad general way they seem to correspond.
Other commentary entries containing this verse:
Luke 8:23
Luke 9:51
Luke 16:26
Luke 17:11
John 4:4
Acts 1:2
Acts 2:1
1 Peter 5:10
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