It is a
commonplace that the most effective way to explain to explain a complex issue,
event, or relationship is to tell a story. This use of story is as old as
storytelling itself.
One kind
of storytelling – the use of the parable – is strongly associated with Jesus,
largely because of the accounts of the parables in the gospels. But Jesus didn’t
invent the parable. By New Testament times, the parable was commonly used by
the Pharisees and rabbis to explain or illustrate Mosaic law, says R.S. Sproul
in What
Do Jesus’ Parables Mean?. Jesus often used the form of the parable but
in a very different way. “Jesus used them to give new revelation,” Sproul
writes. And he points out that you find the parable used anywhere in the New
Testament except in the gospels.
In this
relatively short and concise account that’s part of the Crucial Question
series, Sproul examines 11 of the parable of Jesus. They include the unjust
judge; the rich fool; Lazarus and the rich man; the Hidden treasure and the
pearl of great price; the workers in the vineyard; the Pharisee and the tax
collector; the unforgiving servant; the good Samaritan; the prodigal son; the
wise and foolish bridesmaids; and the talents. All of these are recorded in the
gospels of Luke and/or Matthew.
Sproul points
out that, for a long time, the parables were interpreted using the so-called “allegorical
method,” which looked at everything, and every detail, in a parable is having
deep theological significance. Today, parables are interpreted as having one
central point, and so Sproul does not get bogged down in examining every single
detail of each parable.
He also
points out that the parables were used to explain Jesus’ teaching – for those
who had an understanding. And they were used to conceal, for those who did not.
People might still understand the point of a good story, even if they didn’t
grasp that Jesus was teaching about the kingdom of God.
R.C. Sproul |
Until his
death in December of 2017, Sproul led Ligonier
Ministries, based in Sanford, Florida. He
wrote numerous books, articles, sermons, and speeches on Christianity, church
history, theology, Calvinism, Reformed theology, and related topics. The Crucial Questions series now
includes some 30 topics which are free as eBooks, and volume on
conscience is a part of the series.
The
parables are familiar, but familiarity doesn’t suggest they should be
overlooked. They include some of the bedrock meaning of what Jesus taught about
the kingdom of God. Sproul’s What Do
Jesus’ Parables Mean? provide both a solid introduction and a succinct
explanation.
Related:
Top photograph by David Werbrouck
via Unsplash. Used with permission.
This is good, Glynn, because some of the parables are so familiar we've stopped hearing them. Sproul certainly had a way of breaking open the truth for his readers and listeners.
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