Luke the Evangelist
Luke the Evangelist is said to be the man who wrote the Gospel of Luke and Acts of the Apostles in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. Irenaeus, Eusebius of Caesarea and Jerome say that he was a friend of Saint Paul and a doctor, and that he accompanied Paul on some of his travels. These people also say that he was of Greek origin, from Antioch in Syria.
Modern-day scholars think that the person that wrote the two books was not the same that accompanied Paul. Paul had a theology that was special, and slightly different from that of other writers of the New Testament. The two books written by Luke never refer to this theology. Also, the name of Paul's companion is never linked to writing the two books. The Acts of the Apostles often tell things about Paul which Paul does not tell himself in his letters.
Luke wrote about the Three Wise Men who visited Jesus in the Bible. Luke never said there were 3 wise men, only wise men from the east.
Luke The Evangelist Media
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Print of Luke the Evangelist
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James Tissot, Saint Luke, Brooklyn Museum
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Saint Luke as depicted in the head-piece of an Armenian Gospel manuscript from 1609, held at the Bodleian Library
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Saint Luke the Evangelist, a medieval Armenian illumination by Toros Roslin
Luke the Evangelist painting the first icon of the Virgin Mary
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Winged altar of the Guild of Saint Luke, Hermen Rode, Lübeck (1484)
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Reliquary of St. Luke the Evangelist in Padua
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Luke writing
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FRANCE - OCTOBER 02: Saint Luke, from the Gospel of Saint Riquier, or the the Gospel of Charlemagne, manuscript, France ca 800. (Photo by DeAgostini/Getty Images)