Samaria, the land of gentiles

Samaria, the land of gentiles; From luke's point of view, the Lord has been with his disciples for quite some time in Samaria. It seems like a few months or at least a few weeks. But it is almost inconceivable that the Lord, along with his disciples, would stay with his disciples for so long, to perform miracles and spread teachings. The Lord himself commanded, "Don't go to the foreign country, enter the town of Samaritan's" (Matthew 10; 5). How do you combine this with the Luke Gospel Book of Travel? This is rather from the fact that Luke's message is not an actual travel book. At least, it is natural to think so.

Materials other than Marco; Thus, from the second part of the Luke Gospel, we can hardly know how Jesus Christ traveled in the public life. Luke writes as a journey, so I think the same is true of the other Gospels in a different relationship, as I think it is. I can not think of this as saying which is true and which is wrong. As we have seen so far. Other than Luke's author, there is no gospel that has written a summary of the Lord's journey of public life. Other gospels write only very fragmented things about the Lord's journey. It can not be said that it is a journey, it is like setting the place, speaking of the background for bringing out the word of the Lord and the miracle.

That is why I want this travel book, which is unfolded in the second part of the Luke Gospel, to be true in order to know the state of the missionary journey that makes up the majority of the public life of the Lord. However, this is only the selfish thought of the reader. Luke's author never thought of writing a travel book. So what did he want to write in that second part?