As I see it, there are two lessons:
Sure… but to what end? In this parable, it’s
so that you don’t end up in hell…!!!
I think it is vague in this area, on purpose.
Had the teaching on purgatory been presented at this point, though? Would it have been recognized by the original intended audience? Or would they have recognized it as ‘eternal punishment’?
That’s an important consideration in discerning the meaning of the evangelist…
Well the people in Purgatory do not go into Heaven either.
This is the really interesting part: the saints in heaven and the souls in purgatory
are able to pray for others; however, it’s not possible to pray someone out of hell. The allegory we’re seeing here, when the rich man asks for their assistance, is that the response is “sorry; we are unable to help you.”
It’s hell. Really. This isn’t a “until you pay the last penny” parable – that’s found elsewhere.
My priest said Lazarus, being in Abraham’s bosom, was in purgatory.
He was either speaking loosely, or mis-spoke. “Abraham’s bosom” (a.k.a. the “Limbus Patrum”) was a temporary place of waiting until Christ opened the gates of heaven. It was not necessary to be suffering purgation in order to be there. Yes, both of these are understood to be the abode of the dead. But, if not the ‘hell’ we speak of today, then certainly a “waiting room of torment” on the way there.
Of course not…you confuse the events of Easter Sunday with Holy Saturday
Jesus rose on the third day – you confuse the Western and Hebrew ways of counting the start of the day (Christ was raised on Sunday, which began with sunset on Saturday).
besides that, hell or purgatory is a state of the soul, and not a physical “location”, so that point is questionable too
Sure. But that’s a weak point. Just because they’re not physical, doesn’t mean you can’t talk about what they’re experiencing, using the allegory of “location.”