Greed and the Dark Powers in Luke-Acts: The Cosmic Battle from Jerusalem to Rome
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Date
2025-05Author
Blythe, Michael
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
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This dissertation examines how Luke interweaves socio-economic exploitation and
dark spiritual powers in Luke-Acts to depict a cosmic conflict culminating in Rome. It
explores the central research question: how does Luke’s narrative unify wealth ethics and
spiritual phenomena in forging a theological vision of resistance to evil? The study
addresses its rationale, scope, and methodology, demonstrating how literary and historicalcritical approaches illuminate the socio-economic and political backdrop behind Acts’s
trajectory “to the ends of the earth.” A review of scholarship highlights discussions on
wealth and poverty, spiritual warfare—including magic and exorcisms—and Luke’s stance
toward the Roman Empire, identifying a gap in studies that integrate these themes.
Establishing Luke-Acts as a unified, prophetic historiography, the dissertation examines
dating, audience, genre, and authorship, proposing that Luke’s writings function as a
retrospective theological account shaped by empire. The analysis explores Jesus’s initial
battles against demonic forces in Galilee and his teachings on reversal, setting the stage for
conflict with Jerusalem’s elite. A detailed exegesis of key passages demonstrates how
greed and dark forces intersect in figures such as Judas, Ananias and Sapphira, Simon
Magus, Agrippa I, Elymas, the spirit of Python in Philippi, and the Artemis cult in Ephesus.
These episodes reveal that the misuse of wealth serves as a potent weapon of darkness, yet
also highlight the Holy Spirit’s role in dismantling oppressive structures. As Paul advances
to Rome, these conflicts intensify, culminating in a confrontation between the early church
and economic and imperial systems under satanic influence. Despite these challenges, the
Spirit-empowered witness of the early believers ultimately prevails. The conclusion
synthesizes these findings, arguing that Luke consistently presents greed as an ally of dark
powers while emphasising the Spirit’s power to liberate humanity from both spiritual and
economic bondage. Finally, the study considers avenues for further research, including
implications for postcolonial contexts and contemporary prosperity theology.
Publisher
ANU
Description
A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Award of the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Religion (Phd In Religion) in the Department of Religion in the School of Religion and Christian Ministry of Africa Nazarene University
