Lux Domini
And he called one of the servants, and asked what these things meant.

What does Luke 15:26 mean?

In the latter part of this parable we have the character of the Pharisees, though not of them alone. It sets forth the kindness of the Lord, and the proud manner in which his gracious kindness is often received.

Key themes

PrayerJustice and mercySalvationGraceSpirit

Read with

Keep this verse inside Luke 15:23-27 and alongside a few nearby related passages.

Commentary on Luke 15:26

Safe and sound - In health.

Key words

called

And he called one of the servants,.

servants

And he called one of the servants,.

Context in Luke 15

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Luke 15 belongs to the middle movement of the book, especially the section often described as journey to Jerusalem. Luke emphasizes salvation for the poor and the outsider, prayer, joy, women, table fellowship, the Holy Spirit, and the universal reach of Christ’s mission. Read this chapter with the wider themes of salvation, Spirit, and prayer in view so the individual verses keep their proper weight.

salvationSpiritprayerjoy

Explore by topic

Bible verses about prayer

Passages on asking, persistence, confession, dependence, and the way prayer shapes Christian life and attention.

Bible verses about justice and mercy

Key texts on public righteousness, neighbor-love, social ethics, compassion, and the prophetic refusal to separate worship from justice.

Bible verses about salvation

Central texts on sin, grace, faith, Christ’s saving work, and the Bible’s announcement that salvation is received rather than achieved.

Bible verses about grace

Key passages on God's unmerited favour, the grace of Christ, salvation by grace through faith, and how grace transforms the way believers live.