Interpreting the Parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus: It's Really Good News!

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Diakonos

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Jan 19, 2019
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Anacortes, WA
the Rich Man, Lazarus, and Abraham all have bodies - which disqualifies the passage as being literal and qualifies it as parabolic.
Are you basing that off of the mention of a finger, a breast, and a tongue? God (the Father) has eyes and hands but doesn't have a body. Biblical authors use anthropomorphic descriptions to convey spiritual realities. They don't have bodies. They are disembodied spirits, just like the spirits Jesus went and preached to who are now in prison when His body was in the grave for 3 days.

do I think the trees and bramble bushes in Jotham's parable correspond to anything in real life? Of course not.
Interestingly, Jesus was echoing the parable of Jotham's trees when He said "learn the parable of the fig tree". The bramble resembles the Antichrist's kingdom, which promises protection to the world, but can't actually offer any, and ends up consuming all other nations. Trees in the Bible, many times, symbolize nations. For example, the Fig tree represents National Israel (Mark 11, Matt 24, Rom 11).


dead guys don't know anything, speak, remember anything, have emotions, devise plans like having people sent back from the dead to warn their 5 brothers, have anything to do with anything under this sun
“Then two hundred men went with Absalom from Jerusalem, who were invited and went innocently, and they did not know anything.”
(2 Samuel 15:11)
Do you suppose those 200 men were unconscious too? Or perhaps there's a context that should be considered?

Why do you think Solomon keeps using the phrase "under the sun" throughout Ecclesiastes? It's extremely important to have a coherent understanding of the book. Otherwise, it's easy to quote things out of context (like Job's friend's bad advice).
 

Amanuensis

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Jun 12, 2021
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In posts #137 and #139, I went into great detail on my view of this story.
Ok, i read them.

You attempted to make an allegory out it. An allegory is not a parable. These are distinctly different forms of Hebrew literature.

Trying to assign meaning to all the details to make them represent something else is an allegory and there is no possible way that Jesus had any of those things in mind that you described. There is no possible way that you could prove that he did. It is simply your imagined opinion that are not at all persuasive for so many reasons it is just not necessary for me to explain.

A parable would require you to identify the main lesson. You started to explain it in Part 2 because frankly it is too obvious to miss but you messed it up by adding things that the text does not say. You put words in the rich mans mouth and thoughts in his head that it is impossible to prove that he meant and we know he didn't say them since we have his words before us to read.

You said...
"the rich man then pleads for Lazarus to be allowed to visit his father's house to warn his five brothers of the consequences of continuing in their current path of hypocrisy and indifference to the well-being of the common people. Jesus specifically mentions the five brothers to even more directly point His message toward the currently ruling high priest family, which at that time had five brothers serving in the position of high priest. Abraham retorted that honoring his request was not necessary because his brothers already had the warnings from Moses and the Prophets. But the rich man persists and claims that if Lazarus is raised from the dead and personally brings the message of warning to his brothers, then they would repent of their actions. But Abraham is not convinced of the rich man's claim and replies that there is no use to send Lazarus because the brothers have already refused to believe the warnings personally delivered to them by the Man whose death and resurrection was predicted in the writing of Moses and the Prophets. If they would not believe the Man written about by Moses and the Prophets, then what would be the point of sending Lazarus, a lowly beggar to try to convince them of their error?"

However, what the rich man ACTUALLY said was that he wanted Lazarus to warn his brothers so that they would not come to this place of torment. It is important that you stick to what he said, and not what you think he meant.
You added your own ideas about what the rich man wanted to warn his brothers about instead of the plain words of the text which you should have stated.

"so that he may warn them, lest they also come into this place of torment.’ "

Therefore, if we stick to the text, then the Lesson is that Moses and the Prophets (scripture) warned of a place of torment for the wicked dead and if they do not believe what Moses and the prophets said about the place of torment for the wicked dead then they will not believe if one comes back from the dead (Lazarus, to warn them ABOUT THIS PLACE OF TORMENT. as the rich man had in mind).

You have no authority to change the objective of the rich man from WARNING ABOUT THIS PLACE OF TORMENT and making the rich man say some made up diatribe about other things he did not say to Abraham.

Your attempt to change the lesson to something that is not stated in the text is not the way you read a parable.

Also you can't make up a long Allegory and then call it a parable and change the rules between Allegory and parable until you have forced it to say whatever you want it to say. This is the stuff that Christian cults do. No biblical scholar will support making a parable an allegory and call it a parable. That is just ignorance of hebrew forms of literature.

If you want to argue that it is an Allegory then use that as your arguement. If you want to argue that it is a parable then please understand the difference. A parable uses something common to the listeners and makes a point that is easier to grasp because of the parable than it would have been by just making the statement alone. In this case the main point, the "Gotcha" moment, the "Ah Ha, I see it now" comes from the statement that If they don't believe the scriptures they won't believe if they see something supernatural like one coming back from the dead. But in this case it is specifically stated that what they will not be convinced about is the warning about a place of torment. That is what he wanted Lazarus to warn them about. That is what they should be able to know by reading Moses and the Prophets. And if they don't respect the scriptures that warn about a place of torment for the wicked dead then sending Lazarus won't change there mind and ultimately they won't believe if Jesus rises from the dead.

But be assured of this, whether you apply it to the rich mans five brothers who serve no other purpose than unnamed characters in a parable or whether you apply it to the whole body of unbelieiving Jews, there is a place of torment for the wicked dead warned about in Moses and the Prophets.

Those that take head to these warnings in the scriptures and believe God's word will believe in Jesus, and repent and escape that terrible fate but those who disrespect the scripture and don't care about what it says will not believe even if one comes up from the grave and is seen by them. They might be frightened for a minute but they will go back to their old ways ungenerated unless they come to the Word of God and let it change them.

There is a place of torment for the wicked dead and Moses and the prophets warn of it. Only those that believe the scriptures will escape, and no supernatural visits from ghosts will do the kind of heart change that the scriptures will do in the believer.
 
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Also you can't make up a long Allegory and then call it a parable and change the rules between Allegory and parable until you have forced it to say whatever you want it to say.
I never called it a parable, just an allegory, which is similar, but like you said, is used differently in literature.

I added the extra wording to try to explain where I was coming from, not to add anything extra to the account itself. I have no intention of adding anything to the Bible that is not already there.
 

Amanuensis

Well-known member
Jun 12, 2021
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I never called it a parable, just an allegory, which is similar, but like you said, is used differently in literature.

I added the extra wording to try to explain where I was coming from, not to add anything extra to the account itself. I have no intention of adding anything to the Bible that is not already there.
Fair enough. I do agree that more than the rich man was intended in the story. I do believe he was once again undermining their false confidence in thinking they were children of Abraham and could expect partaker of the promises prophesied when they had no respect to the things that the scripture warned them would happen to those who forsook mercy and trusted in their position, in race or religion.

And yet with all that the lesson still must include that they should have known from Moses and the Prophets that there is a place of torment awaiting the wicked dead. And only believing the scriptures will convince them of this fact. A heart that humbles itself before the word of God and agrees with God and aligns itself with the scriptures is the heart that has the faith to believe. Faith comes by hearing the word not by seeing supernatural things happen that wow the senses.
 
Aug 3, 2019
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I am curious. How did the dogs help him?

I don't see any indication that the dogs were sent by God. Seems like dogs did what dogs do. They are gross like that and eat their own poo too.

It seems to me that the dogs are in the story to reveal that this was not a scene at the rich man's gate that could have gone unnoticed and therefore the rich man was guilty of knowingly neglecting the beggar's condition.

Dogs licking his sores adds a level of detail to the story that removes any doubt that the rich man was unaware of what was happening at his gate. Therefore the listener to the parable has such questions answered (did the rich man know?) by the details of this story, i.e. a pack of dogs licking his sores. Not something that wouldn't cause a scene.
Compostman also thinks the wicked can partake of God's agape love.
 
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As an SDA. I completely agree with you that the Rich Man and Lazarus story cannot be talking about a real place because it contradicts a whole bunch of other scriptures.

But also as an SDA, aren't we supposed to demonstrate love toward everyone the same way Jesus does, no matter how much they disagree with us?

"Beloved, let us love one another, for love is of God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. He who does not love does not know God, for God is love. There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves torment. But he who fears has not been made perfect in love." - 1 John 4:7,8,18

I understand your frustration with people who insist on overlooking the host of passages which describe God as merciful, gracious, fair, and righteous, and instead turn God into some evil demonic tyrant who would allow people to be tormented in pain forever. If I believed that God is like that, I would be joining the ranks of unbelievers who claim they cannot believe a God exists who would do that to His own creatures. Many people have already left Christianity based on this one misunderstanding of what God really is like.

While I am alive, I prefer to believe in a God who loves me and wants to save me, and then after I die, find out I was wrong, rather than the other way around. It would be so disheartening to live my life in fear of eternal torment, and then find out after I die that all that mental anguish was unnecessary, because a loving, merciful, fair, and gracious God would never torment His creatures in a forever burning fire.

Everyone has the freedom to make up their own minds on which way they view God, so please knock off the rude comments. They do not help anyone to see God's love.
Hi...what rude comments?
 
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Now you are talking about an Allegory.

There is no need for the objects and examples in a parable to represent something else to teach a lesson.
Is it an allegory or a parable?
There is a difference.
I concede that it could be a parable. I do not concede that it is an allegory.
If it is a parable it has to have a main point. One easily grasped by the listeners.
Not a riddle, not a mystery, not an allegory that needs a key to understand what each detail really represents.
A parable contains familiar examples from things people understand usually from daily common life like farming etc, and has a clever twist or "Gotcha" moment that is easy to grasp.

In this case it would be that the Scriptures should be sufficient to warn them of the place of torment that awaits them and if that does not work for them because of their lack of respect toward the scripture then supernatural visits from dead people will not work either.

It is clearly the lesson of the parable.
I think you're splitting hairs. The crux of the issue is simply this: Is the story of the Rich Man and Lazarus literal or symbolic? It cannot be literal for if so, it contradicts the rest of Scripture.

A parable is a short story given to teach a lesson, the elements of which often cannot and do not happen in real experience. Jesus used the parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus to teach a critical lesson to those to whom the parable applies and it's got NOTHING to do with what happens when we die or an afterlife place of torment or comfort.
 
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does God tell lying parables full of the doctrines of demons?
that's your assertion.



so what are you calling God when you say He teaches with doctrines of demons?
this is all previously covered. it's not a game.
examine yourself.
No matter how much you repeat this nonsense, no one is swayed by it. No one thinks Jesus would be "lying" if He intended the Rich Man and Lazarus to be symbolic, only you. Their objections have to do with a major "proof" passage for Immortal Soul/Eternal Torment doctrine being shown to be no proof at all, which I believe is the case.

I hope you don't insult Jesus as being a "liar" at His Second Coming because you see us saints ascending to Him instead of stalks of harvest wheat.
 
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As an SDA. I completely agree with you that the Rich Man and Lazarus story cannot be talking about a real place because it contradicts a whole bunch of other scriptures.

But also as an SDA, aren't we supposed to demonstrate love toward everyone the same way Jesus does, no matter how much they disagree with us?

"Beloved, let us love one another, for love is of God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. He who does not love does not know God, for God is love. There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves torment. But he who fears has not been made perfect in love." - 1 John 4:7,8,18

I understand your frustration with people who insist on overlooking the host of passages which describe God as merciful, gracious, fair, and righteous, and instead turn God into some evil demonic tyrant who would allow people to be tormented in pain forever. If I believed that God is like that, I would be joining the ranks of unbelievers who claim they cannot believe a God exists who would do that to His own creatures. Many people have already left Christianity based on this one misunderstanding of what God really is like.

While I am alive, I prefer to believe in a God who loves me and wants to save me, and then after I die, find out I was wrong, rather than the other way around. It would be so disheartening to live my life in fear of eternal torment, and then find out after I die that all that mental anguish was unnecessary, because a loving, merciful, fair, and gracious God would never torment His creatures in a forever burning fire.

Everyone has the freedom to make up their own minds on which way they view God, so please knock off the rude comments. They do not help anyone to see God's love.
Let's get something straight: the 3AM are to be presented with "loud voice" - because church people are headed to Christless graves every day because they sit in church, NOT BECAUSE THEY LOVE GOD, but because they want fire insurance -- as evidenced by their steadfast resistance to the idea of keeping all Ten Commandments or any other such "reasonable service" to God.

I suspect you are a typical life-long SDA whose bored with the truth and sits on the sideline instead of getting into the battle because you've never known the turmoil of trying to reconcile a God of love with One Who will supposedly burn eternally those who spurn Him. Don't you wish to see people freed from this seemingly inescapable snare of Satan? Did not Jesus refer to those who blind others to the truth with their false beliefs as "of your father the devil"? Perhaps you think Jesus as rude, as well?
 
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Yes, I know about Seventh Day Adventist theology and Ellen G White who claimed to be a prophet. It’s another American revivalist sect with whom I disagree with some things on. This happens to be one of them.
I'd be careful throwing around that word "sect" if I were you.

It is not the Baptist, Methodist, Congregationalist, Pentecostal, Church of Christ, Mormon, JW, and certainly not a single one of the countless non-denominational churches or any other, but the SDA church which comes closest to qualifying as the Biblically identified and prophesied global body of Christ...and is more a "movement" than a church.

Here in my town, we have a Baptist or Catholic church on just about every street corner, but you get yourself far out into the 3rd world where the people are as poor as Bill and Hillary claimed to be when the left the White House, and you'll find only TWO churches: the Catholic and the SDA. That's why a Bible society DISCONTINUED the publication of their "Partners" spreadsheet which contained the Protestant churches listed in rows across the top and the countries of the world in columns down the side, with a "dot" placed in every spot a denomination was active in a country. EVERY CHURCH, naturally, had a dot in the rich countries of the world, but there was and is only ONE church that had dots all the way down in almost every single one of the 200+ countries of the world.
 
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Are you basing that off of the mention of a finger, a breast, and a tongue? God (the Father) has eyes and hands but doesn't have a body. Biblical authors use anthropomorphic descriptions to convey spiritual realities. They don't have bodies. They are disembodied spirits, just like the spirits Jesus went and preached to who are now in prison when His body was in the grave for 3 days.
Two things:
1) The use of anthropomorphic descriptions of God and angels is understandable, seeing they are not "anthro". There is no need to anthromorphize that which is already anthro, ie: humans.
2) The assumption that "consciousness in death" is a "spiritual reality" and then claiming the characters of Luke 16 are anthropomorphized is circular reasoning.
Interestingly, Jesus was echoing the parable of Jotham's trees when He said "learn the parable of the fig tree". The bramble resembles the Antichrist's kingdom, which promises protection to the world, but can't actually offer any, and ends up consuming all other nations. Trees in the Bible, many times, symbolize nations. For example, the Fig tree represents National Israel (Mark 11, Matt 24, Rom 11).
No He wasn't. He was referring to a natural phenomenon to illustrate a relationship between circumstance and time, in this case, the time of the end.
“Then two hundred men went with Absalom from Jerusalem, who were invited and went innocently, and they did not know anything.”
(2 Samuel 15:11)
Do you suppose those 200 men were unconscious too? Or perhaps there's a context that should be considered?

Why do you think Solomon keeps using the phrase "under the sun" throughout Ecclesiastes? It's extremely important to have a coherent understanding of the book. Otherwise, it's easy to quote things out of context (like Job's friend's bad advice).
If you can find me a place where the Bible says these 200 knew not anything AND had no memory AND had no emotions AND have nothing to do with anything done under the sun AND praise not the Lord AND maintain themselves in total darkness AND maintain themselves in total silence AND are unable to perceive either the success or failure of their children AND I'll concede there's a bit of parallelism between these 200 and Solomon's dead.

But, it's obvious CONTEXTUALLY that the knowledge lacked by these 200 refers to a lack of knowing about Absalom's scheme, unlike the "know not anything" of Solomon which any thinking person will know refers CONTEXTUALLY to "total cerebral inactivity".
 
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Ok, i read them.

You attempted to make an allegory out it. An allegory is not a parable. These are distinctly different forms of Hebrew literature.

Trying to assign meaning to all the details to make them represent something else is an allegory and there is no possible way that Jesus had any of those things in mind that you described. There is no possible way that you could prove that he did. It is simply your imagined opinion that are not at all persuasive for so many reasons it is just not necessary for me to explain.

A parable would require you to identify the main lesson. You started to explain it in Part 2 because frankly it is too obvious to miss but you messed it up by adding things that the text does not say. You put words in the rich mans mouth and thoughts in his head that it is impossible to prove that he meant and we know he didn't say them since we have his words before us to read.

You said...
"the rich man then pleads for Lazarus to be allowed to visit his father's house to warn his five brothers of the consequences of continuing in their current path of hypocrisy and indifference to the well-being of the common people. Jesus specifically mentions the five brothers to even more directly point His message toward the currently ruling high priest family, which at that time had five brothers serving in the position of high priest. Abraham retorted that honoring his request was not necessary because his brothers already had the warnings from Moses and the Prophets. But the rich man persists and claims that if Lazarus is raised from the dead and personally brings the message of warning to his brothers, then they would repent of their actions. But Abraham is not convinced of the rich man's claim and replies that there is no use to send Lazarus because the brothers have already refused to believe the warnings personally delivered to them by the Man whose death and resurrection was predicted in the writing of Moses and the Prophets. If they would not believe the Man written about by Moses and the Prophets, then what would be the point of sending Lazarus, a lowly beggar to try to convince them of their error?"

However, what the rich man ACTUALLY said was that he wanted Lazarus to warn his brothers so that they would not come to this place of torment. It is important that you stick to what he said, and not what you think he meant.
You added your own ideas about what the rich man wanted to warn his brothers about instead of the plain words of the text which you should have stated.

"so that he may warn them, lest they also come into this place of torment.’ "

Therefore, if we stick to the text, then the Lesson is that Moses and the Prophets (scripture) warned of a place of torment for the wicked dead and if they do not believe what Moses and the prophets said about the place of torment for the wicked dead then they will not believe if one comes back from the dead (Lazarus, to warn them ABOUT THIS PLACE OF TORMENT. as the rich man had in mind).

You have no authority to change the objective of the rich man from WARNING ABOUT THIS PLACE OF TORMENT and making the rich man say some made up diatribe about other things he did not say to Abraham.

Your attempt to change the lesson to something that is not stated in the text is not the way you read a parable.

Also you can't make up a long Allegory and then call it a parable and change the rules between Allegory and parable until you have forced it to say whatever you want it to say. This is the stuff that Christian cults do. No biblical scholar will support making a parable an allegory and call it a parable. That is just ignorance of hebrew forms of literature.

If you want to argue that it is an Allegory then use that as your arguement. If you want to argue that it is a parable then please understand the difference. A parable uses something common to the listeners and makes a point that is easier to grasp because of the parable than it would have been by just making the statement alone. In this case the main point, the "Gotcha" moment, the "Ah Ha, I see it now" comes from the statement that If they don't believe the scriptures they won't believe if they see something supernatural like one coming back from the dead. But in this case it is specifically stated that what they will not be convinced about is the warning about a place of torment. That is what he wanted Lazarus to warn them about. That is what they should be able to know by reading Moses and the Prophets. And if they don't respect the scriptures that warn about a place of torment for the wicked dead then sending Lazarus won't change there mind and ultimately they won't believe if Jesus rises from the dead.

But be assured of this, whether you apply it to the rich mans five brothers who serve no other purpose than unnamed characters in a parable or whether you apply it to the whole body of unbelieiving Jews, there is a place of torment for the wicked dead warned about in Moses and the Prophets.

Those that take head to these warnings in the scriptures and believe God's word will believe in Jesus, and repent and escape that terrible fate but those who disrespect the scripture and don't care about what it says will not believe even if one comes up from the grave and is seen by them. They might be frightened for a minute but they will go back to their old ways ungenerated unless they come to the Word of God and let it change them.

There is a place of torment for the wicked dead and Moses and the prophets warn of it. Only those that believe the scriptures will escape, and no supernatural visits from ghosts will do the kind of heart change that the scriptures will do in the believer.
It's not necessary to split these hermeneutical hairs for two reasons:
1. The debate is over whether Jesus spoke literally or symbolically, not whether the symbolism best fits the definition of fable, allegory, or parable.
2. Our focus should be figuring out why Jesus would say these dead men were in possession of their resurrection bodies THOUSANDS OF YEARS BEFORE He and others taught collectively of the time when the dead receive them, as well as other contradictions which arise if we make this story literal.

If square peg theology don't fit, Immortal Soul doctrine, you must quit.
 
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Are you basing that off of the mention of a finger, a breast, and a tongue? God (the Father) has eyes and hands but doesn't have a body. Biblical authors use anthropomorphic descriptions to convey spiritual realities. They don't have bodies. They are disembodied spirits, just like the spirits Jesus went and preached to who are now in prison when His body was in the grave for 3 days.
So, the list of elements of this "literal" passage grows, right? First, "Abraham's bosom" isn't his literal bosom, but a symbol for something else...now, fingers, tongues, eyes, bosoms, faces with which to recognize each other, ears with which they heard each other, legs for Lazarus to carry himself back to the 5 brothers, etc....are all now supposed to be symbolic, as well, right?

The plot keeps thickening.
 
Jul 23, 2018
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Then the rabbit hole just gets deeper from my perspective. How did Abraham gain the omniscient ability to know how his brothers would react? Anyone with any sense who sees someone come back from death, especially after a period of time, and they’re discussing the afterlife would believe them.

I don’t think Abraham is being literal. Throughout scripture the miracle of resurrection had a profound impact on those who witnessed it and knew about it.

I don’t think it’s true that a resurrection would have had no effect on the brothers of the rich man; that’s why it isn’t literal and is a parable.

Clearly the point Abraham was trying to make was that it’s better to obey the Law and Prophets than to die and get to the afterlife and find out the hard way that it’s too late to go back and fix it.
That means, according to your logic, that in the future we will be adjacent to hell and talk to those ones burning.?
 
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So, the list of elements of this "literal" passage grows, right? First, "Abraham's bosom" isn't his literal bosom, but a symbol for something else...now, fingers, tongues, eyes, bosoms, faces with which to recognize each other, ears with which they heard each other, legs for Lazarus to carry himself back to the 5 brothers, etc....are all now supposed to be symbolic, as well, right?

The plot keeps thickening.
You are the one declaring it is all metaphor.

So decipher what every item means.
 
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Luke 16
19-31 “There was once a rich man who used to dress in purple and fine linen and lead a life of daily luxury. And there was a poor man called Lazarus who was put down at his gate. He was covered with sores. He used to long to be fed with the scraps from the rich man’s table. Yes, and the dogs used to come and lick his sores. Well, it happened that the poor man died, and was carried by the angels into Abraham’s bosom. The rich man also died and was buried. And from among the dead he looked up and saw Abraham a long way away, and Lazarus in his arms. ‘Father Abraham!’ he cried out, ‘please pity me. Send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue, for I am in agony in these flames.’ But Abraham replied, ‘Remember, my son, that you used to have the good things in your lifetime, while Lazarus suffered the bad. Now he is being comforted here, while you are in agony. And besides this, a great chasm has been set between you and us, so that those who want to go to you from this side cannot do so, and people cannot come to us from your side.’ At this he said, ‘Then I beg you, father, to send him to my father’s house for I have five brothers. He could warn them about all this and prevent their coming to this place of torture.’ But Abraham said, ‘They have Moses and the Prophets: they can listen to them.’ ‘Ah no, father Abraham,’ he said, ‘if only someone were to go to them from the dead, they would change completely.’ But Abraham told him, ‘If they will not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they would not be convinced even if somebody were to rise from the dead.’”

We know that this story is about the grave, not Heaven and Hell as we know of it. There is nothing in the text that says it is a parable. The only one's who came centuries later are those that deny that Hell is eternal punishment Matthew 25:46. I do not remember the first person who taught that, but I think it was after 1500 AD.

Maybe, someone knows.
Agree
 
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Wait, God stepped out onto NOTHING and spoke to NOTHING and from NOTHING sprang forth EVERYTHING, but you're going to limit His ability to bring forth from nonexistence the dead who ceased to exist when at death their Body returned to the Dust and the Spirit returned to God Who gave it?

Perhaps you need a broader concept of Who and What God is?
when i read your answer it is a no brainer you are on the wrong track.
 
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Wait, God stepped out onto NOTHING and spoke to NOTHING and from NOTHING sprang forth EVERYTHING, but you're going to limit His ability to bring forth from nonexistence the dead who ceased to exist when at death their Body returned to the Dust and the Spirit returned to God Who gave it?

Perhaps you need a broader concept of Who and What God is?
This would be an excellent siggy line
 

posthuman

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Jul 31, 2013
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Question 3: Is Christ giving a false pagan narrative as though it is true?

People tell children fairy tales (such as Little Red Riding Hood) all the time to help them understand a lesson. Does that mean they are trying to convince the children that the story is true? Of course not! The children are more interested in the interaction of the characters and the story's meaning, not whether the fairy tale has any bearing in reality.

I believe the same principle applies to Jesus' telling the story of the Rich Man and Lazarus. The point of Jesus telling the story is to teach a lesson through its meaning, rather than to prove/disprove its theological soundness.
so, you do think Jesus is essentially teaching lies, but 'that's OK because He means well' ?

yes people lie to their children with stories about the easter bunny. and people excuse their lies.

but does God lie?
does God need you to excuse His lies?
 

Aerials1978

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Dec 10, 2019
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I'd be careful throwing around that word "sect" if I were you.

It is not the Baptist, Methodist, Congregationalist, Pentecostal, Church of Christ, Mormon, JW, and certainly not a single one of the countless non-denominational churches or any other, but the SDA church which comes closest to qualifying as the Biblically identified and prophesied global body of Christ...and is more a "movement" than a church.

Here in my town, we have a Baptist or Catholic church on just about every street corner, but you get yourself far out into the 3rd world where the people are as poor as Bill and Hillary claimed to be when the left the White House, and you'll find only TWO churches: the Catholic and the SDA. That's why a Bible society DISCONTINUED the publication of their "Partners" spreadsheet which contained the Protestant churches listed in rows across the top and the countries of the world in columns down the side, with a "dot" placed in every spot a denomination was active in a country. EVERY CHURCH, naturally, had a dot in the rich countries of the world, but there was and is only ONE church that had dots all the way down in almost every single one of the 200+ countries of the world.
Now you’re starting to get in the territory of what is the true Church and that becomes quite dangerous.
I'd be careful throwing around that word "sect" if I were you.

It is not the Baptist, Methodist, Congregationalist, Pentecostal, Church of Christ, Mormon, JW, and certainly not a single one of the countless non-denominational churches or any other, but the SDA church which comes closest to qualifying as the Biblically identified and prophesied global body of Christ...and is more a "movement" than a church.

Here in my town, we have a Baptist or Catholic church on just about every street corner, but you get yourself far out into the 3rd world where the people are as poor as Bill and Hillary claimed to be when the left the White House, and you'll find only TWO churches: the Catholic and the SDA. That's why a Bible society DISCONTINUED the publication of their "Partners" spreadsheet which contained the Protestant churches listed in rows across the top and the countries of the world in columns down the side, with a "dot" placed in every spot a denomination was active in a country. EVERY CHURCH, naturally, had a dot in the rich countries of the world, but there was and is only ONE church that had dots all the way down in almost every single one of the 200+ countries of the world.
Now you’re starting to get into the territory of what is the real church and that is dangerous. The church body are those that belong to Christ and have a unity with Him through the Holy Spirit(One body, one Spirit). So are you SDA? Again, I agree with a lot of their teaching as it’s Biblically based, but once the “God gave me the true revaluation” stance comes about, that should be a red flag that something is not quite right.