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

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posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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#41
Only in parable, but both impossible and Biblically contradicting in real life.
this is literally you calling God a liar and a peddler of myth.
this is literally you saying God contradicts 'real life'


Christ was 3 days and 3 nights in Sheol - did Christ cease to exist?
 

Webers.Home

Well-known member
May 28, 2018
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Oregon
cfbac.org
#42
.
there is a natural realm and a spiritual one

( I would revise that just a bit to say there is a natural realm and a
supernatural. But I'm not insisting; just saying.)

Well; until somebody out there can explain to me how a corpse is able to
communicate with another corpse from grave to grave, I will remain
compelled by reason and logic to conclude that Luke 16:19-31 speaks of
realities instead of fantasies.

Plus:

Luke 16:25 . . Abraham said: Son, remember . . .

Now right there we should bring in Solomon because he said:

"As for the dead, they are conscious of nothing at all." (Ecc 9:5)

It's likely to me that Solomon's "the dead" refers to people's remains, i.e.
their corpse. So if people's corpse is incapable of consciousness, then how
did Abraham and the rich man manage to conduct a sensible conversation
with each other in the afterlife?

Anyway: I should think that one of the negative aspects of perdition is
memory. How people down there retain their memories sans the brain cells
they left behind with their corpse, I don't know; but they do, just as the rich.
man in that story is able to experience thirst sans a flesh and blood tongue.
Apparently God has some sort of file transfer protocol that silicon valley has
yet to discover.

The older one gets, the more memories they accumulate, and many of those
memories haunt us with terrible regret. However, people down below not
only have to cope with their bad memories, but also the good ones too, and
I should think it's remembering the good things they enjoyed in life that
makes their situation only worse in the heat.

If everybody was born and raised in an oven; and never once ventured out;
that would be the only life they've ever known, so they wouldn't have a clue
what it's like to really live. For them the old maxim "Ignorance is bliss"
would certainly hold true. For example: many of the people born and raised
in Kim Jong-Un's North Korea sincerely believe the entire world is no better
off than they are because they just simply don't know any better.
_
 
Dec 29, 2021
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#43
Revelation states their smoke and torment will be forever. The Eternal Damnation of the Lake of Fire is for forever.

But the Parable is not actually about Hell, it's about the Jews losing the position and place they had in God, and the Gentiles taking their place.
 
Jul 23, 2018
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#44
No. Jesus did not say any such thing about this narrative. When Christ specifically named the beggar as Lazarus, and specifically related the dialogue between Abraham and the rich man, He made it clear that He was relating an actual account of what happened in Sheol/Hades.

GAEBELEIN'S COMMENTARY
Luke 16:19-31
A solemn paragraph closes the chapter. Avoid the use of the word “parable” in connection with these verses. The Lord said, “There was a certain rich man.” It is history and not a parable. The derision of the Pharisees on account of the Lord’s words about the unjust steward must have been based upon their trust in the law and the promise of the law, that temporal blessings and riches were in store for all who keep the law. The story our Lord relates is aimed once more at the sneering, unbelieving, self-righteous Pharisees.
Yes
It in no way fits a parable.
 
Mar 4, 2020
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#45
So why would Jesus say "a certain beggar named Lazarus"? He could have simply said "a beggar".
I don't know, but being a beggar by a rich man's gate, being covered in sores, and people being cruel to him isn't the gospel of how you get to paradise. Jesus never said that anywhere else. Jesus said the way to the Father is through faith in Him.

So if this story is literal, in my honest opinion, it creates a lot of problems. Jesus often used imaginary concepts or figurative language to explain real ideas.

For example, Jesus will come as a thief in the night. This does not mean Jesus is a thief or is condoning the sin of theft, it's just a comparison. In the parable of the 10 Virgins, people say the oil is the Holy Spirit and the 5 wise virgins told the 5 foolish to go purchase more oil. As we know from Acts 8:18-22, trying to purchase the Holy Spirit with money is a sin. The parable of the 10 virgins does not condone committing sin, however it just uses concepts to explain something.

In this same way, the rich man and Lazarus is not a real method of going to paradise; those who are covered in sores, lay at a rich man's gate, and beg and have no faith in Christ do not receive the gift of eternal life like the beggar apparently did. So I'm certain this is just a parable.

I believe almost all the commentators and perhaps the lexicons did not want to deal with the reality of Sheol/Hades.
I don't know if they were trying to circumnavigate the truth, but I generally agree that we cannot trust commentaries from people as gospel. They may be helpful and interesting, but they are not the final word.

The Greek word there should have been transliterated as "Hades", not "hell" which has caused a lot of confusion. Please see my thread here:
Why are so many Christians still so confused about the afterlife?
That's an interesting read and I enjoyed it, but from my perspective it's highly debatable and covers a lot of points I disagree with. However, the main point about Sheol/Hades is interesting, but there isn't enough clear-cut scripture about a place with literal gates near the center of the Earth. I would love to know more about that though.
 
Dec 29, 2021
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#46
Most Parables are recorded in some similar form or fashion among the 4 Gospels.
But the Parable of the Rich Man/Lazarus cannot be found in the other 3 Gospels.
Kind of Strange how Luke heard this, but Matthew, and Peter [Mark his Disciple], and John did not hear this to record it.
One would think the Disciples were aware of every Teaching of Christ, but Luke, is the only one who did.
 
Dec 29, 2021
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#47
Most Parables are recorded in some similar form or fashion among the 4 Gospels.
But the Parable of the Rich Man/Lazarus cannot be found in the other 3 Gospels.
Kind of Strange how Luke heard this, but Matthew, and Peter [Mark his Disciple], and John did not hear this to record it.
One would think the Disciples were aware of every Teaching of Christ, but Luke, is the only one who did.
I think it is because Luke was a Gentile, and he heard this and was for him, because: the Parable is not actually about Hell, it's about the Jews losing the position and place they had in God, and the Gentiles taking their place.
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
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#48
Nah, Christ Who is God cannot lie, according to Scripture. However, fools have been lying since time immemorial, especially repeating the same lie of the Serpent who said, "Ye shall not surely die".

I would challenge you to spend a full moon Halloween night in the safest place in town - a cemetery - for a $100, but you'd never show, though, right? You know them people are all dead...but not SURELY, right?
LOL, a challenge to spend the night in the Voodoo cemetery of Louisiana for only $100 the crime in that state is off the hook you going to have to raise the price to 10,000. Now those dead they ain't no problem it's the living that will kill you LOL.
 
Jul 23, 2018
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#49
The popular yet erroneous teaching about Rich Man and Lazarus has succeeded to both strike fear in the hearts of Christians and drive countless others to atheism, because those who refuse to recognize this passage in Luke 16 as the parable that it is use it to advance the false idea of Eternal Torment - a doctrine of devils - because they know then can't substantiate a doctrine on an uninterpreted parable. Here's the other side of the story:


Might help to get factual.
"But ABRAHAM SAID, Son, remember that thou in thy lifetime receivedst thy good things, and likewise Lazarus evil things: but now he is comforted, and thou art tormented."

23 And in hell he lift up his eyes, being in torments, and SEETH ABRAHAM afar off, and Lazarus in his bosom.
29 ABRAHAM SAITH unto him, They have Moses and the prophets; let them hear them.

IF IT IS A LIE, as we are be made to believe, then Abraham said NOTHING and Jesus lied.
 
Mar 4, 2020
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#50
Might help to get factual.
"But ABRAHAM SAID, Son, remember that thou in thy lifetime receivedst thy good things, and likewise Lazarus evil things: but now he is comforted, and thou art tormented."

23 And in hell he lift up his eyes, being in torments, and SEETH ABRAHAM afar off, and Lazarus in his bosom.
29 ABRAHAM SAITH unto him, They have Moses and the prophets; let them hear them.

IF IT IS A LIE, as we are be made to believe, then Abraham said NOTHING and Jesus lied.
I touched a bit on this in a previous post, but people don't go to torment for receiving good things and people don't go to comfort for receiving evil things. That's not even the path to condemnation/salvation pre or post crucifixion.
 
Jul 23, 2018
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#51
No, he was in a fish belly.
Well, technically, His 3 days/nights in "the grave" ("Sheol/Hades") was not much more than 24 hours via Inclusive Reckoning.
Only in parable, but both impossible and Biblically contradicting in real life.
Where's does it say Jesus took anyone out of "Abraham's Bosom" or that He took "all" the saints that had ever gone to the grave to heaven? No where.
"They" who? Yes, there are some who are in heaven, but not "all".
Had this passage been a literal story, there would be numerous contradictions with the other passages of Jesus, Solomon, David, Peter, Job, and others, as well as with common sense reality, like:
  1. the dead in possession of knowledge, wisdom, emotions, memory, ability to break silence and devise plans
  2. the dead in possession of their resurrection bodies before they are to receive them in the last day resurrection
  3. a man totally on fire able to observe and interact with others as easily as a slightly annoyed Karen in Macy's
  4. Abraham's bosom being the size of the moon to accommodate all the dead that lived the past 4,000 years
  5. the dead able to return to and interact with those in the land of the living
Christians, the only way to avoid creating all these Scriptural contradictions which the Immortal Soul/Eternal Torment crowd has created for themselves is to accept that this passage in Luke 16 is merely a parable, and then attempt to discern what is the interpretation....OR JUST WATCH THE VIDEO AND SAVE A LOT OF TIME.
Ok
If it is a parable show me the interpretation.
 
Jul 23, 2018
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#52
I touched a bit on this in a previous post, but people don't go to torment for receiving good things and people don't go to comfort for receiving evil things. That's not even the path to condemnation/salvation pre or post crucifixion.
how does what you just said apply to anything of the story.
 
Jul 23, 2018
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#53
No, he was in a fish belly.
Well, technically, His 3 days/nights in "the grave" ("Sheol/Hades") was not much more than 24 hours via Inclusive Reckoning.
Only in parable, but both impossible and Biblically contradicting in real life.
Where's does it say Jesus took anyone out of "Abraham's Bosom" or that He took "all" the saints that had ever gone to the grave to heaven? No where.
"They" who? Yes, there are some who are in heaven, but not "all".
Had this passage been a literal story, there would be numerous contradictions with the other passages of Jesus, Solomon, David, Peter, Job, and others, as well as with common sense reality, like:
  1. the dead in possession of knowledge, wisdom, emotions, memory, ability to break silence and devise plans
  2. the dead in possession of their resurrection bodies before they are to receive them in the last day resurrection
  3. a man totally on fire able to observe and interact with others as easily as a slightly annoyed Karen in Macy's
  4. Abraham's bosom being the size of the moon to accommodate all the dead that lived the past 4,000 years
  5. the dead able to return to and interact with those in the land of the living
Christians, the only way to avoid creating all these Scriptural contradictions which the Immortal Soul/Eternal Torment crowd has created for themselves is to accept that this passage in Luke 16 is merely a parable, and then attempt to discern what is the interpretation....OR JUST WATCH THE VIDEO AND SAVE A LOT OF TIME.
You did not show a single contradiction.
 
Aug 3, 2019
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#54
do people cease to exist when they die?
what does Jesus say about that, and what do you say?
Jesus says they will be "destroyed" in hell.

Let's ask the author of the New Testament in Modern Speech, Dr. R. F. Weymouth, one of the greatest Greek scholars of modern times, what he thinks about what Jesus said:

"My mind fails to conceive a grosser misrepresentation of language than when five or six of the strongest words which the Greek tongue possesses, signify to 'destroy" or "destruction', are explained to mean "maintaining an everlasting but wretched existence". To translate 'black' as 'white' is nothing to this."

And on 1 Corinthians 15:18 KJV, "By 'perish', the Apostle here apparently means "pass out of existence".

And on Hebrews 9:28 KJV, "The use in the N.T. of such words as 'death', 'destruction', 'fire', 'perish' to describe future retribution point to the likelyhood of fearful anguish followed by extinction of being."
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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#55
Jesus says they will be "destroyed" in hell.

Let's ask the author of the New Testament in Modern Speech, Dr. R. F. Weymouth, one of the greatest Greek scholars of modern times, what he thinks about what Jesus said:

"My mind fails to conceive a grosser misrepresentation of language than when five or six of the strongest words which the Greek tongue possesses, signify to 'destroy" or "destruction', are explained to mean "maintaining an everlasting but wretched existence". To translate 'black' as 'white' is nothing to this."

And on 1 Corinthians 15:18 KJV, "By 'perish', the Apostle here apparently means "pass out of existence".

And on Hebrews 9:28 KJV, "The use in the N.T. of such words as 'death', 'destruction', 'fire', 'perish' to describe future retribution point to the likelyhood of fearful anguish followed by extinction of being."
um...


please answer the question:
does physical death = cessation of existence?
your view, Christ's view.


is Jesus spouting nonsense in Luke 16, in your estimation?
put yourself on the record - don't be ashamed of what you believe.

i believe God. how bout you
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
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#56
Jesus is completely authoritative in the word of God over anyone who has spoken before HIM or words recorded after HIM.


NOw said about HIMself and Judgment in Matthew 25:31-34, 41-43



31 “When the Son of Man comes in His glory, and all the holy angels with Him, then He will sit on the throne of His glory. 32 All the nations will be gathered before Him, and He will separate them one from another, as a shepherd divides his sheep from the goats. 33 And He will set the sheep on His right hand, but the goats on the left. the unbeliever from the believers is separated.


34 Then the King (Jesus)will say to those on His right hand, ‘Come, you blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world:



41 “Then He
(Jesus)will also say to those on the left hand, ‘Depart from Me, you cursed, into the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels: 42 for I was hungry and you gave Me no food; I was thirsty and you gave Me no drink; 43 I was a stranger and you did not take Me in, naked and you did not clothe Me, sick and in prison and you did not visit Me.’ Jesus will say this to the unbelievers

He uses sheep and goats to bring contrast to those who are his and not because He has said HE is the great Shepard and we are HIS sheep are we really sheep? NO! BUT we are HIS people literally. Is the devil real? YES!. Did God prepare a place for the devil? Yes
IS that place of hell supernatural to keep a spirit being that the devil and his angels are? YES! is the devil going there forever? YES.


Those who are unbelievers going there forever? YES. Did Jesus say that? YES! Hell is eternal and God is eternal and gave eternal life.

Anyone who is self-decieved thinking hell is not eternal doesn't know the word of God and the words of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Some use word games like annihilation which is a concept from a carnal mind thinking of a spiritual place or supernatural.


They have taken out of context the eternal location of hell created by an eternal God who can separate one forever and have torment forever at the same time. Human reasoning even says how can something burn forever? YOU do not want to find out, do you? Hell is a faith place as well as heaven meaning you have to believe God that hell is real and heaven is real choose wrongly you will find out about one or the other without faith you can't see God or Please him, but Hell one will be horribly surprised as Jesus told in the parable of Lazarus & the Rich man. A Parable is not all Jesus said about hell but HE used them to bring the understanding of that place which is real and eternal.
 
Aug 3, 2019
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#58
sounds great!
let's go
the cemetery is usually the most peaceful place in any city; i spent a lot of my childhood there
((lol @
you think the guy with the skeletal avatar is afraid of cemeteries??))


Better to go to the house of mourning
than to go to the house of feasting,
for that is the end of all men;
and the living will take it to heart.
(Ecclesiastes 7:2)
a laundry basket, into which i will discard my cloak
You'll discard nothing. You'll simply dissemble into nothingness when the Breath returns to God and your Body to the dust.

Why do you and the rest of the Immortal Soul crowd want to be God, as Lucifer wanted? Why do you insist it is YOU who return to God at death, and not simply the Breath of God as stated in Genesis 2:7 KJV?

You all know full well none of you can "return" to the moon, but for some reason you insist you can "return" to God, though you've no sooner ever been in heaven as on the moon.

"Wilt thou yet say before him that slayeth thee, I [am] God? but thou [shalt be] a man, and no God, in the hand of him that slayeth thee." - Ezekiel 28:8 KJV​
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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#59
You'll discard nothing. You'll simply dissemble into nothingness when the Breath returns to God and your Body to the dust.

Why do you and the rest of the Immortal Soul crowd want to be God, as Lucifer wanted? Why do you insist it is YOU who return to God at death, and not simply the Breath of God as stated in Genesis 2:7 KJV?

You all know full well none of you can "return" to the moon, but for some reason you insist you can "return" to God, though you've no sooner ever been in heaven as on the moon.

"Wilt thou yet say before him that slayeth thee, I [am] God? but thou [shalt be] a man, and no God, in the hand of him that slayeth thee." - Ezekiel 28:8 KJV​
um...

does a person cease to exist when the physical body dies, yes or no?

what do you say, and what does Christ say?

is Luke 16 a pack of lies, or is it the word of God?
is Jesus a liar, deceiver, and spreader of mythical fairy tales?
is your opinion compatible with God's truth
 
Aug 3, 2019
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#60
“Then He (Jesus)will also say to those on the left hand, ‘Depart from Me, you cursed, into the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels:
You Immortal Soul/Eternal Torment guys are so easy, bro! Sodom and Gemmorah suffered the vengeance of this "eternal fire" too, but are they still burning? NO! They are under the Dead Sea!

"Everlasting Fire" refers not to the process, but the result.
IS that place of hell supernatural to keep a spirit being that the devil and his angels are? YES! is the devil going there forever? YES. Those who are unbelievers going there forever? YES. Did Jesus say that? YES! Hell is eternal and God is eternal and gave eternal life.
Really? Ezekiel would be to differ with you. He says God's fire is going to turn him into ashes "and never shalt thou be anymore". Satan will burn up and out of existence. John also would like a word. He says those who love the world will "pass away" but only "they that doeth with will of God abide forever".
Anyone who is self-decieved thinking hell is not eternal doesn't know the word of God and the words of the Lord Jesus Christ.
To which "hell" do you refer? The "grave" is most certainly eternal for those who will die the Second Death from which there will be no resurrection.......but the "fiery, burning, blazing hell"? It will consume the resurrection bodies of the wicked until there is nothing left, at which time they and it will be among the "former things" which will be "passed away".
Some use word games like annihilation which is a concept from a carnal mind thinking of a spiritual place or supernatural.
What you call "word games" we call "proper use of the English language".
They have taken out of context the eternal location of hell created by an eternal God who can separate one forever and have torment forever at the same time. Human reasoning even says how can something burn forever?
What "external location" of hell are you talking about? There is no "external location" of hell burning at this moment! It will burn in the future! Peter plainly says - and you can read it in that plain English I was just talking about - that God's plan is to "RESERVE the unjust UNTO the day of judgment TO BE punished." - 2 Peter 2:9 KJV

On his wedding anniversary, does a man dress to the nines and take his equally elegant wife to a fancy restaurant and say to the maitre' d, "I want to make a reservation", or does he make the reservation ahead of time before his anniversary?

The Immortal Soul crowd does a good job of never letting the meanings of words or the context in which they are used stop them from insisting God was wrong and the Serpent was right! :LOL:

Hell is a faith place as well as heaven meaning you have to believe God that hell is real and heaven is real choose wrongly you will find out about one or the other without faith you can't see God or Please him, but Hell one will be horribly surprised.
This is the only thing I can agree with you because it says nothing about any eternal torment in an eternal hell.
Jesus told in the parable of Lazarus & the Rich man. A Parable is not all Jesus said about hell but HE used them to bring the understanding of that place which is real and eternal.
I'm glad you admit it's a parable...now watch the video and you'll finally realize Jesus didn't present this parable to teach us about the afterlife because if He intended it to, He would have created the numerous Scriptural contradictions which erupt from the Immortal Soul/Eternal Torment crowd's interpretation which they choose to ignore.