AGuest..A 30 second google search came up with this : http://bible.cc/luke/1-3.htm Note the footnote.
I read your reference, dear PP (again, peace to you!)... en totale... thank you! Unfortunately, all I see are various opinions and commentaries on what [others believe] Luke "meant" or did not mean. Most of which is inaccurate. For example:
From Barnes:
"2. We see the nature of Luke's inspiration. It was consistent with his using his natural faculties or his own powers of mind in investigating the truth. God, by His Holy Spirit, presided over his faculties, directed them, and kept him from error.
In order - This word does not indicate that the exact order of time would be observed, for that is not the way in which he writes; but it means distinctly, particularly, in opposition to the confused and broken accounts to which he had referred before."
Mr. Barnes is incorrect in that (1) he totally overlooks the Greek transliteration of the word kathexes for his personal opinion, and (2) Luke was not inspired... by the Holy Spirit or anything other than his commission from Theophilus. We can discern that it is opinion because Barnes doesn't identify the source of his position that the word means anything other than in consecutive, successive, subsequent, or chronological order... including the Holy Spirit.
From Clarke:
"the Spirit of God presided over and directed his inquiries, so that he discovered the whole truth, and was preserved from every particle of error."
Again, it was Theophilus... and not the Most Holy One of Israel... who commissioned Luke. Now, if you want to speculate that perhaps Theophilus was inspired to ask Luke TO make an account, well, okay. But the question would be, why didn't the Holy Spirit just tell Theophilus what occurred himself? Indeed, why didn't he just tell Luke... rather than having him interview others? The Holy Spirit leads into all truth... so that ones do not need ANYONE to be teaching them. So, what need did Luke have TO interview others... when the very One about whom he wrote could have told him himself?
From Gill:
"Being moved to it by the Holy Ghost; for he did not undertake this work of himself, merely by the motion of his own will, but was influenced, and directed to it by the Spirit of God, as well as by him assisted in it:"
Same thing. He undertook at the request/direction of... and influence by... and most likely received some manner of payment from... Theophilus... not the Most Holy One of Israel... OR the Holy Spirit, Christ.
The other commentaries not only adhere to the word meaning consecutive order, but make no reference to the Holy Spirit. I don't know what their reasoning is for the second, but mostly likely it has to do with the actual transliteration of the word as to the first, which Barnes, Clarke and Gill seem to disagree with... but state no source for such disagreement (other than opinion).
MY reasoning for the second (that Luke was not inspired, by God, the Holy Spirit, or otherwise) is twofold: (1) because of what it means to BE so inspired... and (2) the fact that Luke did not give credit TO God, Christ, or the Holy Spirit... saying that it was one of them who TOLD him to write... which those who ARE inspired always do.
To be "inspired," dear one, means:
(1) that one is IN SPIRIT (i.e., has transcended the flesh... by means of an anointing with holy spirit which they received FROM the Holy Spirit... so as to be IN spirit)... when
(2) one is GIVEN what to write (so that one doesn't HAVE to interview others, as the Holy Spirit leads one into such truth himself and not through others); led by the Holy Spirit AS they write (so as to know WHAT to write so, again, no need to interview anyone); for which
(3) such one is TOLD to write.
None of these are true for ANY of the NT writers... except John. All of the others wrote as if from memoirs... or in the present (as Paul, et al., did with their letters). True, what one may KNOW of God, Christ/Holy Spirit, spirit matters, etc., may be the result of direct influence/teaching by the Holy Spirit... but that does not make it "inspired." What is inspired is considered "scripture" or "sacred writings", which the NT is not. The only "scripture" in the NT... is the Revelation GIVEN to John, who was IN SPIRIT at the time he wrote... and TOLD to write.
The only "scripture" in the OT is "Moses, the Psalms, and the Prophets." The rest are histories, chronologies, letters, and records... all of which were combined WITH "scripture"... to create the Bible.
I hope this helps!
Your servant and a slave of Christ,
SA