The sinners / weak |
The self-righteous |
The prodigal son (each of us)
who genuinely thought he had lost his relationship with
his father (cp. God) for ever (Lk. 15:11-32). |
The elder son who said he'd
never disobeyed his father (cp. God), and who in the
end walks away from his father. |
The sinner who hasn't got the
faith to lift up his eyes to God, weighed down with the
weight of his seemingly irreversible sins (Lk. 18:1-8). |
The self-righteous Christian
man who looks up to God with what he thinks is a
good conscience and thanks Him that he is better than others,
feeling that the sinful brother praying next to him is somehow
too far gone. |
The weak labourer (no employer
wanted to hire him) who works one hour but is given a day's
pay for it. We are left to imagine him walking away in disbelief
clutching his penny (cp. the faithful with salvation at
the judgment) (Mt. 20:1-16). |
The strong self-righteous Christian
labourer who works all day and complains at the end that
the weak labourer has been given a penny. " Go thy
way..." (Mt. 20:14) could imply he is fired from the
Master's service because of this attitude. This would fit
in with the way the other parables describe the second man
as the rejected one. |
The builder whose progress
appeared slow, building on a rock, symbolizing the difficulty
he has in really hearing the word of the Lord Jesus. |
The self-righteous Christian
builder who appeared to make fast progress (Mt. 7:24-27),
who apparently finds response to the word very easy. |
The (spiritually) sick who
need a doctor, represented by the stray animal who falls
down a well and desperately bleats for pity (Lk. 14:5 RSV). |
Those self-righteous Christians
who don't think they need a doctor aren't helped by Christ
(Mt. 9:12) |
Those with a splinter in their
eye, from God's viewpoint, who are seen as in need of spiritual
correction by other believers (Mt. 7:3-5). |
Those self-righteous Christians
with a plank of wood in their eye, from God's perspective,
but who think they have unimpaired vision to see the faults
in their brethren. |
Those who guard the house and
give food to the other servants (Mt. 24:45-51). |
Those who are materialistic
and beat their fellow servants. |
The man who owed 100 pence
to his brother (Mt. 18:23-35), but nothing to his Lord (because
the Lord counts him as justified). |
The man who owed 10,000 talents
to his Lord, but would not be patient with his brother who
owed him 100 pence. He had the opportunity to show much
love in return for his Lord's forgiveness, on the principle
that he who is forgiven much loves much (Lk. 7:41-43). |
The man who takes the lowest,
most obscure seat at a feast is (at the judgment) told to
go up to the best seat. We are left to imagine that the
kind of humble man who takes the lowest seat would be embarrassed
to go up to the highest seat, and would probably need encouragement
to do so. This will be exactly the position of all those
who enter the Kingdom. Those who are moved out of the highest
seats are characterized by " shame" , which is
the hallmark of the rejected. Therefore all the righteous
are symbolized by the humble man who has to be encouraged
(at the judgment) to go up higher. |
The man who assumes he should
have a respectable seat at the feast (Lk. 14:8-11). Remember
that the taking of places at the feast represents the attitude
we adopt within the ecclesia now. |
The spiritually despised Samaritan
who helped the (spiritually) wounded man. |
The apparently righteous Levite
and Priest who did nothing to help (Lk. 10:25-37). |
The men who traded and developed
what they had (Lk. 19:15-27). |
The man who did nothing with
what he had, not even lending his talent to Gentiles on
usury; and then thought Christ's rejection of him unreasonable. |
The son who rudely refuses
to do the father's work, but then does it with his tail
between his legs (Mt. 21:28-32). |
The self-righteous Christian
son who immediately and publicly agrees to do his father's
work but actually does nothing. The Father's work is saving
men. Note how in this and the above two cases, the self-righteous
are rejected for their lack of interest in saving others
(both in and out of the ecclesia) (2) . |
The king who realizes he cannot
defeat the approaching army (cp. Christ and His Angels coming
in judgment) because he is too weak, and surrenders. |
The king who refuses to realize
his own weakness and is therefore, by implication, destroyed
by the oncoming army (Lk. 14:31,32). |
Those who think their oil (cp.
our spirituality) will probably run out before the second
coming (Mt. 25:1-10). |
Those self-righteous Christians
who think their oil (spirituality) will never fail them
and will keep burning until the Lord's return. |