The Parables of Jesus
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The Parables of Jesus

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The Parables of Jesus

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About This Book

William Barclay brings to these "best-known stories in the world" new force and significance for the modern reader. Each chapter analyzes an individual parable--identifies its theme, explains it in the light of the language and customs of the ancient world, and clearly interprets its meaning for us today.

The William Barclay Library is a collection of books addressing the great issues of the Christian faith. As one of the world's most widely read interpreters of the Bible and its meaning, William Barclay devoted his life to helping people become more faithful disciples of Jesus Christ.

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CHAPTER ONE

He taught them in Parables

The Immortal Stories

There are certain stories which are not so much the heritage of the scholar and the material of the theologian as the possession of every man; and such are the parables of Jesus. Even in an age when men know less and less of the Bible, and care less for it, it remains true that the stories Jesus told are the best known stories in the world.

The Method all Men knew

We must begin by asking, Why was it that Jesus used parables? Why was it, that, so often, when He wished to open men’s minds to some part of God’s truth, He did it by telling them a story?
There are two lines along which we may find an answer to that question. The first is historical. In all times in their history the Jews were familiar with teaching by means of parables. To make men see truth in such a way had always been a favourite method of their teachers.
There are parables in the Old Testament. The most famous of them is in 2 Samuel 12: 1–7. David coveted Bathsheba, the wife of Uriah, and in order to gain possession of her he deliberately arranged to have Uriah sent to his death (2 Samuel 11). For a time David was quite unaware that he had done anything wrong. So Nathan came to David and told him a simple story. “There were two men,” said Nathan, “who lived in a certain city. One was rich and had flocks and herds in abundance and all that his heart could desire. The other was a poor man who possessed one ewe lamb which was so dear to him that it was almost as one of his own family. A friend came to visit the rich man and he grudged to take of his own numerous flocks to set a meal before him; so he took and slaughtered the ewe lamb which was all that the poor man had.” David was a generous soul, and at the story his heart kindled. “Tell me,” he said, “who that man was. I swear that he will die for this and before he dies he will make restitution.” Back came Nathan’s answer like a bolt from the blue, “You are the man.” That was a parable used to open a king’s eyes. We find another famous parable in Isaiah 5: 1–7. When Jesus used parables He was using a method which, long before, the prophets had often most effectively employed.
Not only did the prophets use parables; the contemporary Rabbis, the great scholars and teachers of the day, often used parables to get their lessons across. Here are some examples.
When Moses was feeding the sheep of his father-in-law in the wilderness, a young kid ran away; Moses followed it until it reached a ravine, where it found a well to drink from. When Moses got up to it, he said, “I did not know that you ran away because you were thirsty. Now you must be weary.” He took the kid on his shoulders and carried it back. Then God said, “Because you have shown pity in leading back one of a flock belonging to a man, you shall lead My flock Israel.”
Rabbi Pinchas ben Jair said, “If thou seekest after the words of the Law as after treasures, God will not withhold from thee thy reward. It is like a man who lost a sela, or some other coin in his house, and lighted a lamp until he found it. If then a man kindles many lights seeking that which affords but an hour’s pleasure in this world, until he finds it, how much rather shouldst thou dig for the words of the Law which assure thee of life in this world and the next, than for treasures.”
As we listen to that story we can hear the voice of Jesus telling the story of the coin that was lost (Luke 15: 8–10).
There is another older Jewish parable which tells of a king’s son who had fallen into evil courses. The king sent his instructor to him with the message, “Come to thyself, my son.” But the son sent back answer to his father: “With what face can I return? I am ashamed to come into thy presence.” Thereupon his father sent him word: “My son, should a son be ashamed to return to his father? If thou returnest will it not be to thy father that thou comest?”
Here we catch an echo of the parable of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15: 11–32).
Elisha ben Abujah said: “A man who does good works and who learns much Law, with whom is he to be compared? To a man who builds a house with stones for its foundation and bricks of clay above. Though the floods come and beat upon the side thereof, they cannot wash it away from its place. And a man who does not do good works and yet learns the Law, with whom is he to be compared? To a man who builds with bricks of clay first, and thereafter with stones. Even if but a little water flows it falls at once.”
Surely here is a glimpse of the parable of the Wise and Foolish Builders (Matthew 7: 24–27).
It was the greatness of Shakespeare that from the stuff of Holinshed he made the immortal texture of his plays; it is of the greatness of Jesus that He took a common form of Jewish teaching and filled it with new meaning and beauty.

The Method all Men Need

Jesus used parables for other reasons than that they were an established form of teaching among his countrymen. He was speaking in the first instance to Jews, and it was a characteristic of the Hebrew mind to be intensely practical. Once Cromwell said to his troops, “We speak things.” He meant that he was not dealing with abstract ideas, but with concrete realities. That was of the very essence of the Jewish mind.
There was one basic difference between the Greek and the Jewish mind. The Greek loved argument for argument’s sake. Whether or not the argument ever reached any conclusion did not greatly matter. The Jew, on the other hand, was intensely interested in reaching conclusions; and, further, these conclusions had to be such that they led to action. The question of the Jewish mind was: In view of all this, what must I do? Because of this a story from real life leading up to practical action was the very thing that appealed to the Jew.
But the parabolic method appeals to far more than the Jew. It has a well-nigh universal appeal for the ordinary man with the ordinary mind. Most of us tend to think in pictures; and most of us have difficulty in grasping abstract ideas. Philosophers can argue until doomsday about a definition of beauty or of goodness without reaching finality. But if we can point and say, “that is a beautiful woman; that is a good man,” then at once beauty and goodness become intelligible because they have become embodied in a person. If Jesus had argued purely abstractly, using only ideas, few might have understood Him. But He knew what was in man; and He gave us these cameo-like pictures we call parables so that the great ideas He wished to teach might become comprehensible.

This World and the next

There is another and fundamental reason why Jesus used parables. A parable has been defined as “an earthly story with a heavenly meaning.” That is to say, Jesus used earthly things to lead men’s minds to heavenly things. As someone has said, “He believed that there is no mere analogy but an inward affinity between the natural and the spiritual order.” Paul said the same thing when he said that the visible world is designed to make known the invisible things of God (Romans 1: 20).
For Jesus the whole wide world was the garment of the living God. Archbishop Temple said, “Jesus taught men to see the operation of God in the regular and the normal—in the rising of the sun and the falling of the rain and the growth of the plant.” Sir Christopher Wren lies buried in St. Paul’s Cathedral, that great Church which his own genius designed. On his tombstone is the simple inscription, “If you want to see his monument, look about you.” Jesus would have said that about God. He would have said: “If you want to know what God is like, look at the world. If you want to know what the Fatherhood of God is, look at human fatherhood at its finest and highest.”
This is important. There has always been a line of so-called Christian thought which despises this world as altogether evil. A Puritan was out walking with a friend. They passed a lovely flower by the wayside and the friend remarked upon its beauty, whereat the Puritan returned, “I thank God I have learned to call nothing lovely in this lost and sinful world.” That was the precise opposite of the point of view of Jesus. His very use of parables shows that it was his conviction that the things of this world can lead a man’s thoughts direct to God, if he will only see.

The sudden Awakening

It has been pointed out that one of Jesus’ greatest reasons for using parables was this—He wanted to persuade men to pass a judgment on things with which they were well acquainted, and then to compel them to transfer that judgment to something to whose significance they had been blind. That is exactly what Nathan did with David. He told him a story, whose meaning David saw with crystal clarity. On that situation which he saw so clearly David passed a judgment. “Now,” said Nathan, “take that judgment and apply it to yourself.”
That was what Jesus was always doing in His parables. He told a story the meaning of which anyone could see, and the hearers could not help passing some kind of judgment even as the story was being told. Then Jesus demanded that they take that judgment and pass it on to something to which they had been blind. If we apply that principle to almost any of the parables, we will see that they are sudden vivid flashes meant to make men see things which they were well able to see, but which either through deliberate blindness or through dullness of spirit they had never seen.

The Master Craftsman

Here is another thing which we must bear in mind when we study the parables. We sit down and read a parable; we think over it; we probe it and analyse it to bring out its inner message. We thrill to its interest, and often its sheer beauty touches our hearts. But it may be that we have never fully realized that every one of Jesus’ parables was produced on the spur of the moment. They were not composed in the calm of the study where a man could sit and think up the story and polish the language like a lapidary polishing a jewel. They were produced instantaneously, in the cut and thrust of debate.
C. J. Cadoux said of the parables, “A parable is art harnessed for service and conflict. . . . Here we find the reason why the parable is so rare. It requires a considerable degree of art, but art exercised under hard conditions. In the three typical parables of the Bible the speaker takes his life in his hands. Jotham (Judges 9: 8–15) spoke his parable of the trees to the men of Sechem and then fled for his life. Nathan (2 Samuel 12: 1–7) with the parable of the ewe lamb told an oriental despot of his sin. Jesus in the parable of the Wicked Husbandmen used His own death sentence as a weapon for His cause. . . . In its most characteristic use the parable is a weapon of controversy, not shaped like a sonnet in undisturbed concentration but improvised in conflict to meet the unpremeditated situation. In its highest use it shows the sensitiveness of the poet, the penetration, rapidity and resourcefulness of the protagonist and the courage that allows such a mind to work unimpeded by the turmoil and danger of mortal conflict.”
Long ago Luther said that Paul’s letter to the Galatians was “like a sword flashing in some great swordsman’s hand.” That is what the parables are like. What an insight we get into the sheer genius of the mind of Jesus when we remember that the parables are not carefully composed works of art, but sudden, lovely improvisations in the dust and heat of conflict. Apart altogether from their religious value, they stand supreme amongst the products of the mind of man.

The Principle of Interpretation

There is one final matter of general introduction before we set ourselves to the interpretation of the individual parables. It is of primary importance to decide just how we are going to interpret them.
For a very long time it was the almost universal custom to interpret them as allegories. An allegory is a story in which every person, event, detail has an inner meaning and stands for something else. The two most famous allegories in the English language are Bunyan’s “Pilgrim’s Progress,” and Spenser’s “Faerie Queene.” At many times the parables have been interpreted like that.
C. H. Dodd quotes Augustine’s interpretation of the parable of the Good Samaritan. A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho; Adam is meant; Jerusalem is the heavenly city of peace from the blessedness of which Adam fell; Jericho means the moon, and signifies our mortality, because it is born, waxes, wanes and dies. Thieves are the devil and his angels. Who stripped him, namely, of his immortality; and beat him, by persuading him to sin; and left him half dead, because in so far as man can understand and know God, he lives, but in so far as he is wasted and oppressed by sin, he is dead; he is therefore called half dead. The Priest and Levite who saw him and passed by signify the priesthood and ministry of the Old Testament, which could profit nothing for salvation. Samaritan (in Hebrew) could mean Guardian, and therefore the Lord Himself is signified by this name. The binding of the wounds is the restraint of sin. Oil is the comfort of a good hope; wine, the exhortation to work with fervent spirit. The beast is the flesh in which Jesus deigned to come to us. The being set upon the beast is belief in the incarnation of Christ. The inn is the Church where travellers are refreshed on their return from pilgrimage to their heavenly country. The morrow is after the Resurrection of the Lord. The two pence are either the two precepts of love, or the promise of this life and of that which is to come, or, possibly, the two sacraments. The innkeeper is the apostle Paul. The promise he makes to pay any extra expenses incurred, is either his counsel of celibacy or the fact that he worked with his own hands lest he be a burden to any of the brethren.
One thing is quite clear about an interpretation like that. No one on earth could produce it unless he sat down in a study and worked at the parable for hours and days together. For that very reason it is obviously the wrong interpretation. We have to remember two things. First, the parables were weapons of controversy, struck off in the heat of the moment. Second, in the first instance they were always spoken to an audience, always heard by a body of listeners, not read. And for the most part they would be heard once, as a sermon is heard. No one listening to a thing for the first time could ever make the necessary mental transpositions to produce an interpretation like that. The parable is essentially a sword to stab men’s minds awake; and therefore its interpretation can never be that which could be discovered only after long labour in the study. It must be that one single truth the story illuminates which leaps out to meet the listener’s mind.

Two Things to remember

If that be so, two things stand out. First, to understand any parable properly we need to have a knowledge of the circumstances in which it was spoken. In many cases we have that, and when we have it, the parable must always be interpreted in the light of its background. Sometimes we do not possess that background and must try to reconstruct it; but when we do possess it, it must dominate our interpretation. Second, and we will do well always to remember this, it is obviously impossible to find the whole of the Christian faith in any one parable. The parable was originally spoken by Jesus to illustrate one aspect of truth, to stress that particular aspect of the truth which the ne...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half title
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Contents
  6. Acknowledgments
  7. Foreword
  8. Dedication
  9. 1. He taught them in Parables
  10. 2. The Sower and the Seed
  11. 3. The Kingdom of God is at Hand
  12. 4. So is the Kingdom of God
  13. 5. An Enemy hath done This
  14. 6. Of Every Kind
  15. 7. When it is Grown
  16. 8. Till the whole was Leavened
  17. 9. Hid in a Field
  18. 10. He Sold all that he had
  19. 11. Go Thou and do Likewise
  20. 12. Even as I had Pity on Thee
  21. 13. A Certain Rich Man
  22. 14. God be Merciful
  23. 15. Inasmuch
  24. 16. How Much More
  25. 17. Thou Fool!
  26. 18. If it Bear Fruit—Well
  27. 19. And the Door was Shut
  28. 20. God Forbid!
  29. 21. The Children of This World
  30. 22. Yet there is Room
  31. 23. Not having a Wedding Garment
  32. 24. Whatever is Right I will give you
  33. 25. Well Done!
  34. 26. Faithful in Little
  35. 27. Joy in Heaven
  36. 28. Go in Peace
  37. 29. The Last State of that man is worse than the First
  38. 30. Which did the Will of his Father?
  39. 31. He Counteth the Cost
  40. 32. We are Servants
  41. 33. He that humbleth himself shall be Exalted
  42. 34. Founded upon a Rock