Luke 22:17-18

Luke 22:17-18

[17] And  he took  the cup,  and gave thanks,  and said,  Take  and  divide  it among yourselves:  [18] For  I say  drink  of  the fruit  of the vine,  until  the kingdom  of God  shall come. 

What does Luke 22:17-18 Mean?

Contextual Meaning

There were four times that participants in the Passover meal drank together, commonly referred to as four cups. The Passover opened with a prayer of thanksgiving followed by the drinking of the first cup. Then the celebrants ate the bitter herbs and sang Psalm 113-114. Next they drank the second cup and began eating the lamb and unleavened bread. Then they drank the third cup and sang Psalm 115-118. Finally they drank the fourth cup. The cup in view in this verse may have been the first of the four. If it was, Jesus evidently did not participate in the drinking of the following three cups ( Luke 22:18). [1] The other Gospel writers did not refer to the first cup, so this may have been the third cup, the Song of Solomon -called cup of redemption. This view assumes that Jesus did participate in the drinking of the first and second cups, which would have been normal. "From now on" or "again" ( Luke 22:18) could mean either after this cup or after this Passover. I favor the view that Jesus was referring to the cup, not the Passover, and that this was the third cup. Luke rearranged the order of events in the upper room considerably, as comparison with the other Gospels seems to indicate. Matthew and Mark have Jesus saying what Luke recorded in these verses just after what Luke recorded in Luke 22:20.
Jesus continued to lead by giving thanks to God and then encouraging the apostles to partake. His action was similar to making a toast. However, His announcement that He would not drink the fruit of the vine again until He did so with His guests in the kingdom was not customary. It reinforced His previous statement that the kingdom would come. Jesus was stressing the certainty of the kingdom"s coming. This was necessary since His impending arrest and death would cause the apostles to question whether it would come.