{"id":296,"date":"2013-02-21T16:54:50","date_gmt":"2013-02-21T16:54:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/buildingontheword.org\/?page_id=296"},"modified":"2021-09-13T20:58:10","modified_gmt":"2021-09-14T00:58:10","slug":"the-parables-of-jesus","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/buildingontheword.org\/bible-study\/the-parables-of-jesus\/","title":{"rendered":"The Parables of Jesus"},"content":{"rendered":"
There are many forms of writing within the New Testament. One can identify hymns and commands, beatitudes and miracle stories, commissions and revelations. But it would be difficult to find a form more important and influential than that of the parable. Parables stick in our minds and grow in our hearts. They resonate with vibrations which are both practical and unsettling. More so than any other form, they provide us with a glimpse of the kingdom of God.<\/p>\n
We will examine the parables of Jesus. Scattered throughout the gospels, these succinct images capture the essence of Jesus’ message and convey the particular style of his teaching. One cannot study the parables without appreciating more deeply the power and creativity of Jesus’ ministry. In parables we can understand why people from every state of life were drawn to listen to Jesus and became convinced that he was a teacher sent from God.<\/p>\n
What is a parable? How does a parable work? Why is its approach effective? We begin with a definition given by C. H. Dodd in 1935: “A parable is a metaphor or simile drawn from nature or common life, arresting the hearer by its vividness or strangeness, and leaving the mind is sufficient doubt about its precise application to tease it into active thought.” Most of what we need to know about parables is contained in this one sentence. Let us now draw out its implications.<\/p>\n
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Since a parable is a metaphor, it produces meaning by pulling together two separate realities and asserting a connection between them. One of these realities is God’s kingdom, for parables strive to give us a glimpse of God’s activity in our midst. The realities which parables juxtapose to the kingdom, however, are neither theoretical nor spiritual. They are, as Dodd states, “drawn from nature or common life.” Therefore, the kingdom is not said to be like grace, prayer, or salvation. Instead the kingdom is like “a merchant in search of fine pearls” or “a man with two sons.” Parables function through concrete images and vivid scenes which can easily be imagined: a sower sowing seed, a woman who loses a coin, a king who holds a wedding banquet for his son. The common images and characters draw us in and engage us. As Dodd says, they “arrest the hearer.” They present us with something familiar, something we can understand.<\/p>\n
Yet the vividness of the parables does not mean that their significance is clear. Quite the opposite. Although images in the parables are concrete and commonplace, the particular connections between the images and God’s kingdom often remain in doubt. In what way is the kingdom like a mustard seed or like a field of weeds and wheat? Why are all the workers in the vineyard paid the same wage? Why are some of the bridesmaids shut out of the feast? The parables leave these important questions unresolved. Yet this lack of clarity is their strength. The doubt concerning meaning forces us to think. As Dodd says, a parable “teases the hearer into active thought.” The parable poses a question with which we must struggle. It begins a sentence we must finish. Parables are incomplete without our participation.<\/p>\n
Parables then function through vividness and doubt. They draw us in by their concrete images of life only to lead us to a question we are pressed to answer. It is the genius of the parable that in the attempt to resolve such questions we will uncover fundamental truths about God, ourselves, and the connection between us.<\/p>\n
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The unresolved question which every parable contains often carries a destructive element. Because the parable does not offer us pre-made answers, because it forces us to struggle with its meaning, what we already know is insufficient. Because the parable poses its question in images we had not expected, the categories in which we hold our present answers must often be jettisoned and re-made. Old structures must be torn down and new ones built.<\/p>\n
The parable insists that it will not be business as usual. To use parable language, new wine cannot be poured into old wineskins (Mark 2:22). Since the message of the gospel is new and revolutionary, it cannot be held in categories which are tired and outmoded. Parables insist that if their truth is to be captured, former values and established conclusions must be overturned. God is telling us something new. New wineskins are required to hold it. The old is destroyed so that the new might be embraced.<\/p>\n
This discovery of a fresh vision is ongoing. Parables by their nature keep generating new meanings and insights. It is impossible to limit any parable to only one truth. The parable we read today carries a message different from the one it offered us five years ago. A parable may signify one thing to readers in the United States and something different to believers in Brazil or Kenya. Because parables pose new questions to new readers and insist that previous convictions be torn down, parables are always re-creating meaning for new times and places. Thus the meaning of any parable is never exhausted.<\/p>\n
Parables are important because they destroy so as to re-create. They adapt to the needs of new people in every age. Parables are always tearing down what we think we know so as to present us again with the new wine of the gospel.<\/p>\n
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Jesus appreciated the power of parables. Scholars agree that the parables of Jesus convey to us the clearest insight into his message and method of teaching. Jesus knew that if the gospel was to be received, people needed to be engaged in its discovery. The lack of clear meaning within the parables forces such engagement. Throughout the gospels Jesus encourages the involvement of his hearers in drawing out a parable’s significance. He often guides their thinking with questions: “”Which one of you…”; “Which of these three was the neighbor…”; “What then will the owner of the vineyard do to them?”; “Will not God grant justice to his chosen ones…?” Jesus knew that when anyone is personally involved in a process of discovery, the insights which emerge will be deeper and more salvific than any pre-made, generic truths could be. Jesus intended that the truth of his gospel be appropriated in this profound and personal manner. The truth we discover as our truth is a lasting truth. It has the power to change us.<\/p>\n
Change is necessary for those who would accept Christ’s message. The new wine of the gospel cannot be poured into old pre-conceptions. If we are to receive the Good News we must open ourselves to new and at times frightening ways of thinking. Jesus knew that parables had the capacity to explode one set of pre-conceptions and thus open the way to another mode of living. Jesus often introduces into his parables characters which we would never expect in our own experience: a good Samaritan, a widow who gains justice from a crooked judge, a shepherd who seeks after one lost sheep. The purpose of such strange inversions is not simply to challenge an idea but to introduce a shift so fundamental that a whole way of thinking is upset and a new way of living is born. Jesus’ parables have the power to subvert the world as we have conceived it. They topple our presuppositions and invite us to build a new understanding with the pieces which remain. The truths which emerge from this process surprise us. They are truths we had no way of anticipating. Jesus knew that the kingdom of God was always new and alive. He understood that parables were the perfect vehicle by which to reflect that life and newness.<\/p>\n
Jesus’ parables also allow us to penetrate the heart of mystery. God is pure spirit and totally different from any part of creation. There is no manner in which the human mind can fully grasp the grandeur of God. Yet the parables of Jesus permit us to recognize some aspect of God’s action towards us. They are able to speak through their concrete imagery. Using a multiplicity of characters they present God as a Shepherd, King, Father, Sower, Judge, Vineyard owner, Bridegroom, and Friend asleep at midnight. Each role is only a glimpse of who God is for us, but each glimpse reveals a truth. Such truth is the most fitting way to speak of God, because it communicates without attempting to dispel God’s mystery.<\/p>\n
Jesus used parables because he knew that they were well suited to function in the midst of such mystery. With their mixture of vividness and doubt they guide us into a relationship with God which we can never control and only partly understand. Jesus taught in parables because he knew that those who were willing to enter the process of discovery which parables provide would be engaged, confused, dismayed, uplifted, and finally surprised by joy.<\/p>\n
Although the parables of Jesus were distinctive, they were not unique. Jesus used parables because he was Jewish. In the Jewish traditions which have come down to us there are numerous examples of the rabbis using parables to illustrate their teachings. In this article we will examine two of these parables which demonstrate a clear similarity to the teaching of Jesus. This comparison reminds us that Jesus gained strength and inspiration from his Jewish heritage. Because he heard and understood the wisdom of other Jewish rabbis, he was able to formulate his own parables and reveal the mystery of God.<\/p>\n
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In Matthew Jesus ends his famous Sermon on the Mount with a small parable. The parable is an exhortation to the hearer to apply the sermon to life:<\/p>\n
Everyone then who hears these words of mine and acts on them will be like a wise man who built his house on rock. The rain fell, the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house, but it did not fall, because it had been founded on rock. And everyone who hears these words of mine and does not act on them will be like a foolish man who built his house on sand. The rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell\u2014and great was its fall! (Matt 7:24-27)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Jesus uses this parable to argue that his teaching must not only be heard but also put into practice. Not acting on the words of Jesus will lead to the ruin of the house, which is to say the ruin of one’s life.<\/p>\n
This emphasis on the need to act upon what one hears mirrors one of the great Jewish debates at the time of Jesus: was it more important to study the Torah or to practice it? Some rabbis argued that it was more essential to practice the Torah, for what was the benefit of knowing its demands if those demands were not followed? Other rabbis disagreed. They pointed out that it was impossible to practice the Torah unless one first knew what it required. For them the study of the Torah was primary. Jesus sides with the rabbis who stressed the primacy of practice. Even though both knowledge and practice were necessary, he believed that it was most important to act upon what was known.<\/p>\n
We possess testimony of another Jewish rabbi who adopted a position similar to that of Jesus and used a parable to assert it. In the Jewish tractate Avot Derabbi Nathan <\/em>the following parable is attributed to Rabbi Elisha b. Avuyah:<\/p>\n
A man who has good deeds to his credit and has also studied much Torah, to what is he like? To one who builds [a structure and lays] stones below [for the foundation] and bricks above, so that however much water may collect at the side it will not wash it away. But the man who has no good deeds to his credit, though he has studied Torah, to what is he like? To one who builds [a structure and lays] bricks first [for the foundation] and then stones above, so that even if only a little water collects, it at once undermines it.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
When we realize that Rabbi’s Elisha’s bricks are made of clay and therefore much less durable than the stones, there is a remarkable similarity between his parable and that of Jesus. Both rabbis would argue that hearing and study are essential but not enough. Without good works, without doing what you know, the house will fall.<\/p>\n
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What Is God’s Forgiveness Like?<\/h3>\n
Another effective Jewish parable is found in the first chapter of Seder Eliyahu Rabbah. <\/em>There the rabbis are discussing the attitude of God on the Day of Atonement. This day, of course, is the day on which Israel expresses its sinfulness and asks God for forgiveness. The rabbis are debating how God views this day. Does God approach it with regret and misgivings or with openness and enthusiasm? They could have answered the question directly, but instead they offer the following parable.<\/p>\n
As God approaches the Day of Atonement, to what can it be compared? It is like a mortal king whose servants and household members decided to take the garbage of the house and throw it out of the king’s private doorway. Instead of disposing of the refuse in the proper manner, day after day they would take table scraps, waste materials, and dirt from the latrine and throw it outside of the king’s private passage. After many days the exit through that door was totally obstructed. One day the king opened his private passage to go out and saw the garbage. Great was his rejoicing! For he knew this house was clean.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Thus, the rabbis say, are we to understand the Day of Atonement. As God pardons the iniquities of Israel, there are no misgivings. To the mountains and to the hills, to the streams and to the valleys, God says, “Come and join Me in My great rejoicing, for I am about to pardon the sins of my people Israel.”<\/p>\n
The rabbis could have simply taught that God rejoices in forgiving us. But they knew that using the parable would enhance their message. The parable draws us into the story, into the stupid action of the servants, into the surprise reaction of the king. On a level which is more pervasive than intellectual truth, we realize that it is not the foolishness of our sins but the forgiveness of God which is important.<\/p>\n
We do not have a parable from Jesus about a king finding garbage outside his private doorway. But the joy and graciousness of God’s forgiveness can be found in many of Jesus’ parables. The rabbinic parable demonstrates that Jesus’ proclamation of a gracious and forgiving God was an inheritance from his Jewish faith. It is a false stereotype of Judaism to characterize it as a religion of legalism and fear in which God is seen as a judge rather than a loving father. This parable of the refuse on the king’s doorway carries a message of forgiveness which is very close to one of Jesus’ most famous parables. The wildly forgiving king who rejoices to find garbage at his back door is a mirror image of the wildly forgiving father who runs out to embrace his prodigal son.<\/p>\n
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Jesus, Jewish Rabbi and Messiah<\/h3>\n
The two rabbinic parables which we have examined are a limited reminder that the parables of Jesus emerged from the vibrant Jewish life of the first century. Christians proclaim Jesus as Messiah and Savior of the World. For us Jesus holds a unique place in God’s plan for salvation. But the exalted position of Christ within our faith should not be used to separate him from the real historical influences into which he was born and in which he exercised his ministry. Even as we hold Jesus as unique Son of God, we also uphold the true human process through which Jesus embraced his Jewish heritage and shaped his gospel in light of it.<\/p>\n
In 1985 the Vatican Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews issued Notes on the Correct Way to Present the Jews and Judaism in Preaching and Catechesis in the Roman Catholic Church. <\/em>That document emphasizes that Jesus was and always remained a Jew. He was fully a man of his time which was the Jewish-Palestinian environment of the first century. He shared in the hope and anxieties of the Jewish people (#12). Jesus was influenced by the teachings of other Jews around him, sharing with them a belief in the resurrection of the body, Jewish forms of piety, addressing God as father, and seeing love of God and neighbor as the first commandment. He used the methods of teaching which were popular among the Jews of his day. Included among these was the frequent use of parables (#17-18).<\/p>\n
In the view of the Vatican commission these connections between the teaching of Jesus and that of other Jews of the first century do not detract from his status as our Savior. They enhance its wonder. To see Jesus a man of his time cannot but emphasize both the reality of the incarnation and the very meaning of the history of salvation (#12). Therefore, even as we are moved by the innovation of Jesus’ teaching, we must acknowledge his indebtedness to the Jewish tradition. That tradition nurtured in the historical Jesus a love of God as his savior and a means to reveal that love through the power of parables.<\/p>\n
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\n<\/div>\n<\/a>Lamp, Leaven, Salt, and Net: Four Little Parables Show Us How to Live<\/h1>\n
Some parables in the gospels are lengthy and dramatic. Others are brief, consisting of only one or two verses. It is easy to dismiss these smaller parables, imagining that we can quickly grasp their meaning and then move on. However, if we take the time to wrestle with the metaphors which the smaller parables offer us, we will not leave them disappointed.<\/p>\n
I have selected four brief parables, each centering on a single image. Together they suggest that every disciple of Jesus is called to live with wisdom, patience, sacrifice, and hope.<\/p>\n
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The Parable of the Lamp: Don’t Be Foolish<\/h3>\n
The Parable of the Lamp can be found in Matt 5:15, Mark 4:21, and Luke 8:16. We will examine Matthew’s version: “No one after lighting a lamp puts it under the bushel basket, but on the lampstand, and it gives light to all in the house.” This little parable quickly describes an action which all of us would consider foolish. Why would someone go through the trouble of finding and lighting a lamp and then put it under a bushel basket? It would be a wasted effort, because the very purpose of the light to illumine would be frustrated.<\/p>\n
The parable draws us in with this silly action. It leads us to the question: How does this foolishness apply to us? Matthew helps us with the answer. He states in the previous verse that we are the light of the world. Our light as disciples is thus associated with the light which should not be hidden. Read in this way, the parable informs us that we have been created by God with talents and gifts, and those blessings are meant to be used in God’s service. To deny, refuse, or ignore these gifts is a senseless act. Pretending that we are ungifted is but an excuse to avoid our calling. Concluding that we are unworthy is to reject the dignity with which God has endowed us.<\/p>\n
The irrational action of the one who hides a lamp under a bushel basket can be\u00a0our action. Every time we deny the gifts God has given us we act as a fool. The first step in following Christ is wisdom, the wisdom to know who we are and to act accordingly.<\/p>\n
The Parable of the Leaven: Don’t Be Anxious<\/h3>\n
The Parable of the Leaven is found in Matt 13:33 and Luke 13:20-21. This time we will look at Luke’s version: “To what should I compare the kingdom of God? It is like yeast that a woman took and mixed in with three measures of flour until all of it was leavened.” This parable describes a commonplace action. How does such an action reveal the kingdom of God? When leaven is mixed into flour, it begins a slow but active process. Even though the amount of yeast is small compared to the flour, the yeast changes everything. Given the right conditions and sufficient time, flour becomes bread.<\/p>\n
As we work and pray for God’s kingdom we can become anxious when our resources seem too small and the progress seems too slow. We attempt to change a bad habit, deepen a relationship, or confront an injustice. We have limited time and energy. The steps we take seem to be absorbed into the problem without any effect. We are tempted to conclude that our best intentions have been wasted. We begin to worry that nothing will make a difference.<\/p>\n
The parable of the leaven calls us to take a deep breath and relax. We have done our part. We have offered our best. Now we must trust that God will use our efforts as leaven in flour. The results will not be immediate, but that need not concern or disturb us. The process of change has begun and with God’s power will continue until our action leavens all that is necessary. Our effort, though hidden and small, becomes part of a divine process which cannot be stopped. A follower of Christ must be patient, patient as God takes our small actions and turns them into leaven for the world.<\/p>\n
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The Parable of Salt: Don’t Be Selfish<\/h3>\n
The little parable of salt is found in Matt 5:13, Mark 9:49-50, and Luke 14:34-35. Here is Mark’s version: “For everyone will be salted with fire. Salt is good; but if salt has lost its saltiness, how can you season it? Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace with one another.” Though brief, the parable raises many questions: How will we be salted with fire; how can salt be in us; how does salt relate to following Christ?<\/p>\n
We can suggest an answer by noting that Leviticus 2:13 requires that salt be added to all the grain offerings made to God. Salt, then, is an aspect of sacrifice. When we understand the meaning of salt as one of sacrifice and self-giving, then the parable advises us to give of ourselves, even when it is demanding, even when it is difficult. Life is not easy, and challenges abound. Perhaps this is what “to be salted with fire” means. Yet Christians do not shut down amid such challenges. They open out, giving themselves for a greater good.<\/p>\n
Mark’s parable further specifies the direction of the sacrifice. Mark says that if we have salt in ourselves, we can have peace with one another. Thus the self-giving to which the parable calls us is one by which we serve the community. The follower of Jesus is willing to give of self, even when it is difficult, so that there can be unity and peace among us. Salt, then, is the sacrifice required to allow relationships to heal and to grow.<\/p>\n
The little parable of salt is a call to sacrifice. As Israel was called to add salt to the offerings in the temple, Christians are called to have salt within them, enhancing the sacrifice of their lives. By letting go of their own advantage and prerogatives, they create peace within the community and build up the Body of Christ.<\/p>\n
The Parable of the Net: Don’t Be Discouraged<\/h3>\n
The parable of the net occurs only in Matt 13:47-48, “Again, the kingdom of heaven is like a net that was thrown into the sea and caught fish of every kind; when it was full, they drew it ashore, sat down, and put the good into baskets but threw out the bad.” This parable is about evaluating and separating. From the huge and mixed catch of fish, some are identified and good and others as bad. The two groups are then divided one from the other. How is such an action to be associated with the kingdom of God?<\/p>\n
In God’s kingdom evaluation will be accompanied by separation. This is very different from our every-day situation. In our present world there is plenty of evaluation. We judge things as good and bad, as just and unjust. We see the terror of war and oppression. We are confounded by the injustice of the innocent suffering and the abandonment of the poor. Our world is always evaluating. Often its judgments are correct. But little separation occurs. The good and the bad continue on, side by side, with little reward or punishment for either of them. The person who strives to live justly is tempted to discouragement. The good suffer; the evil thrive. Evaluations appear of little use when all goes on as it did before.<\/p>\n
In this light, the parable of the net is a parable of hope. It points to a time when there will not only be evaluation but also separation. God, of course, is the One who will both judge and divide. This parable tells us that God can be trusted. The follower of Jesus should not be discouraged by the mixed nature of life and the way in which evil flourishes. There will come a day when the net will be cast and the catch will be separated. The good will be treasured and the bad will be thrown away. Then goodness will extend throughout all of God’s kingdom.<\/p>\n
The four parables we have examined each point to an essential truth of the Christian life. As followers of Jesus we are called to live in wisdom, patience, sacrifice, and hope: the wisdom of claiming of our own dignity, the patience to see God using our efforts for a good purpose, the sacrifice which allows peace to happen, and the hope which trusts that one day God’s justice will cover the earth.<\/p>\n