This is the completion of Jesus' teachings on wealth from this chapter. It seems to move the issue to the heart or attitude of people, and for some reason include divorce. It concludes with the parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus. The elements of this part of the chapter are hard to follow and the details can be distracting from seeing a main point (sort of like the last one).
Read through the entire chapter at least once to get a sense the overall context. As you begin to focus on the statements of Jesus in verses 14 through 18, seek the connecting thread. Break down the parable based on the preceding statements of Jesus and His audience. As we noticed last week it's good to read the parable in a few translations. This one may have as many differences as the previous one, but it's still a great exercise. The NIV with NASB, NLT with ESV, and NRSV with NKJV are good pairings (any of the first suggestions with any of the second will work as well). Make notes and questions for yourself as you go. Then see what commentaries have to say.
After you done your own work, go back through with the questions below:
- Once again, the Pharisees are close enough to hear Jesus speaking to His disciples. So, how likely is it that at least some Pharisees made up the number of Jesus' disciples (not the 12, but followers)?
- These Pharisees scoff at Jesus. So, following closely enough to hear Him speak to His disciples, they don't necessarily buy in or completely buy in to His views of righteousness. Why do you think that might be? How close do you think we need to be to Jesus' views to be considered disciples?
- The Pharisees "justify" themselves, a term which nearly every translation uses, but what do you think this means? Look at the Greek word on the Blue Letter Bible here. If you want more information, follow the link to the root word (G1342). How does this help you understand what the Pharisees were doing? How does this help you see this activity in yourself?
- The final statement of verse 15 is interesting in that it sounds very much like a blanket statement about everything lifted up among people being detested by God. Why do you think Jesus put it that way? What point do you think He's trying to make?
- Jesus uses the word "abomination" or "detestable thing" which is actually a technical theological term in Judaism. Look at the Greek word on Blue Letter Bible here. Pay special attention to its usage in other places. How do you think the Pharisees heard Jesus' statement? What do you think they thought when He said that?
- In verse 16, we have a really strange statement by Jesus. This is one verse that really needs several versions, not just one to get a good sense of. Here again, the Blue Letter Bible will provide an excellent set of parallels. Pay special attention to the KJV, NIV, NASB, and ESV translations of it. What do you think Jesus means about John being a "boundary" of some sort? What do you think Jesus means by people entering the Kingdom of God by force? What do you think was preached before John if it wasn't the "Kingdom of God"?
- Verse 17 is a well-known statement from Matthew (17:18) as well. How do you think this statement relates to the two previous verses?
- Verse 18 has parallels in Matthew (5:31-32, 19:9) and Mark (10:11,12). How do you think this teaching on divorce relates to wealth, the law, and what God finds detestable? Why do you think Luke put it here?
- The parable of the "Rich Man & Lazarus" begins with the setting of the two characters in verses 19 through 21. What are your first impressions? Why do you think Jesus made them so incredibly opposite?
- The rich guy ends up in hell, and Lazarus in "heaven". Why? What clues do you have for why one went one place and the other to the other?
- The description of the "after-life" is pretty spooky, one side can see the other but neither can get to the other. What do you think of that?
- Hell (Hades) is "torment" in verse 23, or "agony" due to "flame" in verse 24. What do you think of this description, in agonizing torment by fire yet able to see the other side where they aren't?
- Notice Lazarus never speaks in this parable. Why do you think might be important to Jesus' point?
- Abraham has several comments on the rich man's situation (verses 25, 26, and 29), they get progressively more depressing (from irreconcilable agony to it being his own fault). What do you think of this assessment of the description of this afterlife?
- The rich man constantly wants Lazarus to do this or that, come here, go there. What does this tell you about the rich man's understanding of himself and Lazarus? How different do you think this is from when they were both alive?
- Obviously Abraham's final statement relates to Jesus' resurrection and people's persistent unbelief. Why do you think Jesus would include that to people following Him closely? What does that tell you about people, even those who follow Him closely?
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