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JESUS Film (Full Movie 4K) | The Life of Jesus Christ from the Gospel of Luke

Intro

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Creation, Rebellion, and the Promise of a Redeemer God created the heavens and the earth, formed humanity in his image, and breathed life into them for relationship with him. Tempted by Satan, humanity disobeyed, was separated from God, and expelled from Eden. God’s holiness required justice, yet his love revealed a plan: Abraham’s halted sacrifice and the provided ram foreshadowed a greater substitute who would bear sin and restore fellowship—the promised Messiah.

Prophecies of the Coming Messiah The prophets foretold a virgin conceiving the Son of God, a birth in Bethlehem, a humble entry into Jerusalem, and betrayal by a close companion. They described an anointed One who brings good news to the poor, binds broken hearts, and frees captives. In history, Jesus appeared and his life stood to be measured against these promises.

A Miraculous Birth and Early Witnesses Gabriel announced to Mary a Holy Spirit–conceived son named Jesus whose kingdom will never end; Elizabeth blessed her and Mary magnified God. A census led Joseph and Mary to Bethlehem, where Jesus was born in a stable; angels told shepherds a Savior had arrived, and they spread the news. In the temple, Simeon recognized God’s salvation in the child and blessed him; later in Nazareth, the family raised him in ordinary life. At twelve, he remained in the temple among teachers, called it his Father’s house, and grew in wisdom and favor.

John’s Call to Repentance and Jesus’ Testing John preached repentance and baptism for forgiveness, urging generosity, honesty, and contentment in daily life. He announced One mightier who would baptize with the Holy Spirit and fire and separate wheat from chaff. Jesus was baptized, the Spirit descended like a dove, the Father’s voice affirmed him, and in the wilderness he withstood the devil’s temptations by the word of God.

Good News Announced and Rejected at Nazareth In the Nazareth synagogue, he read Isaiah’s promise of liberty, sight, and salvation and declared it fulfilled. The hometown rejected him and sought to kill him, but he walked away unharmed. By the lake he taught with piercing clarity, contrasted humble repentance with self-righteousness, and revealed power with a miraculous catch that called fishermen to gather people.

Calling and Commission, Compassion and Blessing He raised a twelve-year-old girl from death with a word and urged silence about the wonder. He summoned the tax collector Matthew, prayed through the night, and chose twelve apostles including Peter, James, John, and Judas Iscariot. He blessed the poor, hungry, and hated with God’s kingdom, warned the rich and satisfied, and commanded enemy-love, openhanded giving, mercy, and the Golden Rule.

Great Forgiveness, Great Love He pressed for generous measures, warned against blind guides, and demanded self-examination before correction. In a Pharisee’s home, a sinful woman wept over his feet; a parable of two debtors exposed that those forgiven much love much. He declared her sins forgiven and sent her in peace, revealing divine authority to pardon.

Signs of the Kingdom and the Sower’s Secret He traveled with the Twelve and restored women, raised a widow’s only son at Nain, and told John’s messengers to report the blind seeing and the lame walking. He taught the sower’s parable: the word meets hard paths, shallow rock, choking thorns, and good soil that perseveres to fruit. Light belongs on a stand, hearing must be careful and fruitful, and true family consists of those who hear and obey God’s word.

Mastery over Storms and Spirits He stilled a deadly storm and challenged fearful followers about faith. Across the lake, he freed a tormented man from a legion of demons that rushed into swine. Rejected by the locals, he departed while commissioning the restored man to tell what God had done.

Bread in the Wilderness and the Revealed Son Five loaves and two fish, blessed and broken, fed a vast multitude with abundance remaining. Peter confessed him as God’s Messiah; he foretold rejection, death, and rising, calling all to take up the cross and treasure the soul above the world. On the mountain his face shone as he spoke with Moses and Elijah; the voice from the cloud named him the Chosen Son, and a tormented child was healed when the disciples had failed.

Prayer, Trust, and Mustard-Seed Faith Prayer honors the Father, seeks his kingdom, depends on daily bread, lives in forgiveness, and pleads for deliverance; those who ask receive, and the Father gives the Holy Spirit. Freedom from anxiety looks to ravens and lilies and trusts God’s care. Even mustard-seed faith moves what seems immovable, and woe is warned for those who cause little ones to stumble; the kingdom grows like a seed that becomes shelter for many.

Kingdom Generosity and Sabbath Freedom He ate with tax collectors and outcasts, saying the sick need a physician and he came to call sinners. A small flock need not fear, for the Father delights to give the kingdom; sell possessions, give to the poor, and store unfailing treasure in heaven. On the Sabbath he loosed an afflicted daughter of Abraham after eighteen years, exposing hypocrisy that waters animals yet resists human release.

Eternal Life, the Kingdom Within, and Neighbor-Love A wealthy ruler learned that commandment-keeping is not enough and was told to sell all, give to the poor, and follow; entrance for the rich is impossible with men but possible with God. The kingdom does not arrive with outward signs, for it is within, and the Son of Man’s day would follow suffering and rejection. Love for God and neighbor sums the law, the Samaritan’s mercy defines true neighborliness, and the least becomes greatest as children and the humble receive the kingdom.

The Road to Jerusalem and the King’s Arrival A blind beggar cried out and received sight by faith; in Jericho, Zacchaeus welcomed him, gave to the poor, made restitution, and salvation came to his house. On the way he announced suffering, death, and resurrection foretold by the prophets and set his face toward Jerusalem. He entered on a donkey amid praise that stones themselves would echo, wept over the city’s missed peace, and foretold its siege and ruin.

House of Prayer and the Cornerstone Rejected He cleansed the temple of commerce, declaring it a house of prayer, and taught daily while opposition hardened. He honored a poor widow who gave all she had, challenged claims to authority with a question about John’s baptism, and exposed hypocrisy. With the vineyard parable he warned murderous tenants and declared the rejected stone the cornerstone, then taught to render to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s.

Passover, the Cross, the Empty Tomb, and the Call to All Nations At Passover he gave bread and cup as his body and blood of the new covenant, exposed a betrayer, modeled servant greatness, and foretold Peter’s denial while preparing his followers for trials. In Gethsemane he yielded to the Father’s will, was betrayed with a kiss, arrested, mocked, denied, and condemned by the council, Pilate, and Herod as Barabbas was released. Crucified between criminals, he prayed for his executioners, promised paradise to a penitent, yielded his spirit as darkness fell and the temple curtain tore, and was laid in a tomb. Women found the tomb empty; angels announced his resurrection, he appeared to his followers, opened the Scriptures, commissioned repentance and forgiveness to all nations beginning at Jerusalem, and promised the Spirit and his abiding presence to the end of the world. His life fulfilled prophecy; his death and rising reconcile believers to God, inviting all to receive him by faith, live in prayer, Scripture, fellowship, and witness, and walk in the assurance of eternal life.