Posted on 11/06/2015 8:00:44 AM PST by Salvation
To most of us, parables are stories told by Jesus to illustrate and clarify what He teaches. We have read the parables in the context of two thousand years of a tradition that interprets them in a certain way. But in their original context, parables are really more like riddles. The apostles noted that while Jesus would speak to the crowds in parables, when He retreated into the house with the apostles He would explain the meaning (cf Mat 13:36). Plain teaching is given âin the house,â in the Church, but among the crowds itâs parables.
To experience the riddle-like quality of a parable consider this made-up parable (without millennia of preaching tradition to explain it):
A man went out to wash his car. He took with him a bucket filled with soapy water and some sponges. As he washed the car, some of the dirt came off at once. Some of it came off only after much scrubbing. Some of the dirt didnât come off at all. Let him who has ears to hear, take heed.
Hmm⦠Itâs a bit of a riddle. You sort of get it, but much is also unclear. Perhaps there are several interpretations. But what does the author really want us to learn here? In a sense we are left with more questions than answers, but at least it makes us think.
This was likely the first reaction to many of the parables. Frankly, some of them still puzzle and admit of various interpretations.
Take for example the parable of the man with a hundred sheep, or the woman with ten coins (which we read at daily Mass on Thursday). In one sense the parables clearly emphasize Godâs care for even one lost sinner.
But the stories in themselves donât make a lot of sense. They challenge our conventional thinking; they are quirky and describe people doing things that we most likely would not do. Who would ever do what the shepherd of the lost sheep or the woman with the lost coin did? No one, really. One one level, theyâre just plain crazy.
Perhaps that is one of the most fundamental points Jesus is making here. Our heavenly Fatherâs love for us is just plain crazy. By using the word âcrazy,â I do not mean that it is irrational, but it does stretch the limits of our human thinking. So permit a preacherâs hyperbole so that we can enter into the astonishing quality of Godâs love and mercy. It cannot be understood or really explained in human terms. Who really understands unlimited and unconditional love? Who can really grasp the depths of Godâs mercy? His grace is amazing in that it goes completely beyond our ability to comprehend; it transcends human concepts. Thank God! If God were like us weâd all be in trouble. Frankly, weâd all be in Hell!
Letâs look at both parables. The full texts can be found here: Luke 15.
I. The Parable of the Lost Sheep – The Lord speaks of a shepherd who leaves ninety-nine sheep in order to search for one that is lost. Would a shepherd really do this? Probably not! The passage drips with irony, even absurdity. Perhaps if the shepherd thought that the lost sheep was likely nearby he might venture over the next hill, but the average human shepherd would probably cut his losses and stay with the ninety-nine. Many of us might even consider it irresponsible to leave ninety-nine in order to search for one.
Some people try to make sense of this parable by appealing to possible shepherding practices of the first century. Many of the Fathers of the Church postulated that the âninety-nineâ were the angels in Heaven and we, fallen humanity, the straying sheep that God goes off to find. The angels in turn rejoice when the âlost sheepâ is found. Perhaps.
But what if trying to âsolveâ the parable or have it make sense misses the point: that Godâs love for us is extravagant, personal, puzzling, and just plain âcrazy.â Maybe it is teaching that God loves us for âno good reason.â He seems to love us even more when we stray. He intensifies His focus on the one who strays. To us this is not only crazy, it is dangerous and possibly enabling. Donât try to figure it out. Donât analyze it too much. Just be astonished, be amazed. Yes, this is crazy. That God loves me is crazy, unexplainable.
II. The Woman and the Lost Coin – A woman loses a drachma, a small coin. Itâs not worth that much, really, perhaps one dayâs wages. In modern terms, it would equate to less than a hundred dollars. Itâs not insignificant, but not really a huge amount either. She sweeps diligently for it. So far, this seems reasonable. Iâd probably look around a while for a missing âBenjamin.â
But then it gets crazy. She finds it and rejoices to such an extent that she spends most, if not all of it, on a party celebrating the found coin!
But that is exactly the point. God doesnât count the cost. He doesnât weigh His love for us in terms of whether it is âworth it.â Some try to explain the craziness away by suggesting that perhaps the coin had sentimental value as part of her dowry or a ceremonial head-dress of ten coins. But here, too, overanalyzing and trying to explain or make sense of it may well miss the point.
This woman is crazy because God is crazy. He is crazy to love us this much. His love for us is extravagant beyond what is humanly reasonable or explainable. Donât try to figure it out. Donât analyze it too much. Just be astonished, be amazed. Yes, this is crazy. That God loves me is crazy, unexplainable.
Some will object to this reading of the parables, preferring the authority of the Church Fathers or of other traditional readings. But these interpretations are not dogmatic and parables of this nature may admit of various interpretations.
Remember, too, that Jesus addressed this parable to: the Pharisees and the teachers of the law who muttered, âThis man welcomes sinners and eats with themâ (Lk 15:1). These were men who thought they had it figured out: God loves us because we keep the precepts of the Law. Isnât it possible that to them, Jesus gives this retort: âWhat if God loves you for no human reason at all? What if God loves because God is love and that is what love does: it loves? What if you cannot simply account for Godâs love in human terms?â
You can take this theory or leave it, but at least allow it to illustrate that many of the parables had and still have a riddle-like quality, and that simply settling in on one explanation may sacrifice that. Jesus gave us parables in order to challenge us and to provoke conversation both among and within ourselves. Donât end the conversation too quickly. Even after hearing the usual explanation, consider asking, âWhat else could this parable mean?â
Good Points, good parables too.
The 30,60,100 from the Parable of Sower are found in scripture, but in riddle form. - Each has specific meaning and Judaism and Christianity can’t teach them as they are currently formed..
What a blessing to see what He meant in those specific numbers and how it relates to anyone’s journey in the wilderness..
But again, religion can’t teach it- but He can for anyone with ears to hear..
Monsignor Pope Ping!
“A man went out to wash his car. He took with him a bucket filled with soapy water and some sponges. As he washed the car, some of the dirt came off at once. Some of it came off only after much scrubbing. Some of the dirt didn’t come off at all. Let him who has ears to hear, take heed.”
Answer: Take the car to a car wash. That gets all the dirt off all the time.
Great, free, book on parables: https://books.google.com/books?id=LCE2AQAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=fonck+parables&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CCYQ6AEwAGoVChMIy7HR3KD8yAIVFuljCh1S6QF1#v=onepage&q=fonck%20parables&f=false
Thank you for that link.
Wrong.
The Lord, God our Father will always search for and wait for the lost soul to return.
An quick example would be Isaiah 4:1. It should read this way,..In the Last Days, 7 churches in Revelation 2-3, which 7 represents all religions, will call themselves Christian( one Man), we will make up our own doctrine and call what we want righteous, only keep calling ourselves Christian even though we know He would not approve, just so we can not be called Antichrist or Satan worshipers. That explains abortion, sodomy, fornication, and other sins accepted in the church today. The parable of the virgins speaks of His Bride getting ready to go with Him while others that are foolish,â¦not so much. Levin is sin, Egypt is the world, Sodom is sexual immorality, a horn is power like a king, and on and on. If you canât read this way, you will inevitably misinterpret what Jesus was saying to us.
A most important read is the letters to the churches in Revelation 2-3. The church of brotherly love in Philadelphia does it right and in Rev 3:10 is promised to be Raptured out of the Tribulation. All the others will remain behind to meet the Beast. In each church, Jesus says He knows their works, but you need to change something to go with me. The letter to Thyatira is speaking to the RC church specifically. Repent or be left behind in the Tribulation. vs Rev 2:22. If we look at Matt 12:31, Jesus was talking about blaspheming the Holy Spirit and after that, only spoke in parables. Matt 13:13-17, speaks of why He spoke in parables. What He explained is, if you donât have the Holy Spirit, you canât understand it and will NOT turn from your evil ways. This is where He fully explains that you need eyes to see and ears to hear, to fully understand what the meaning of the parable that He is speaking. Anytime you see âears to hearâ you should know there is more to what you read than the words on the page. As a last example, Matt 13:35 specifically says He is revealing secrets hidden from the foundation of the world. That is why you should recoil when someone describes parables as âmoral storiesâ. You canât possibly understand hidden secrets from God if you donât read the Word in the Spirit. The Holy Spirit is the seal of God saying you belong to Him and will be with Him in Heaven. To think you can read the Bible on your own is foolishness. The Holy Spirit is our teacher.
your reply is without substance wrt my statement - and the quote from the OP is still wrong - stone dead wrong. Any cowboy or shepherd will tell you so.
Interesting. Thanks!
roamer I currently have sheep and have ran cattle in the past and you are spot on. There is a reason the Bible uses humans and sheep in a parallel sense. Just watching and dealing with my sheep I can tell you that it is amazing how similar both species are and usually not for the good.
I had a ewe, one feeder calf, and about 80 angora goats...If they were out in the back pasture, all I had to do was clang on the metal grain bucket, I am sure you have hear of the “stampede”No one stayed behind...LOL you just had to remember not to stand in the doorway...they got grained once a day, usually in the late afternoon...
I agree.
I figured I knew where the ninety and nine were and they would be easy to find. But the missing one could be cast if it were and adult or lost if it were a lamb. So it was a matter of course to go looking.
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