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Emanuel12
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Could the parables that Jesus taugh have been real events that he wittnessed(as God) before his incarnation ?
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No, I don’t think that’s a reasonable suggestion. ‘Parable’ is the Greek for a Hebrew word, which shows up even in the OT as a particular rhetorical form. The fact that the evangelists ID these stories as ‘parables’ points to the fact that they recognize them as such.Could the parables that Jesus taugh have been real events that he wittnessed(as God) before his incarnation ?
That’s quite the leap of logic you just made there, in two small words! There’s quite a chasm between “humans act in human ways” and “an arbitrary story is an account of an actual event”!Yes, definitely. Human beings are only capable of many but a still finite set of actions. Human behavior has not changed in over 2,000 years.
That doesn’t mean that He always spoke in a literalistic idiom.Jesus always spoke the truth.
In Luke 13:32, Jesus calls Herod a “fox”. Is Herod really a fox?Jesus always spoke the truth. Human behavior has only limited ways of playing out, such as the parable of the traveler who was beaten and robbed.
Except that’s exactly the point of a parable: to describe something heavenly in a human way. It doesn’t mean that the parable is based on a true story, and a parable doesn’t lose its power merely because it isn’t based on a true story.When Jesus says “There was a man…” I believe Him. Debating literal as opposed to telling a non-literal story to make a point profits no one.
But when Scripture tells you that it’s only a parable, you disbelieve it?When Jesus says “There was a man…” I believe Him.
I think this is a really good point. Even if three ‘real’ stories are sometimes woven into one parable. Perhaps the realness of the stories helps make them so powerful and poignant even 2000 years later.They could have been true. Keep in mind that Our Lord, in His divine nature, knew every thing that every human being had ever done or seen, in the entire history of the world. He would have had no shortage of human experience from which to draw parables.