New Testament Gospel Doctrine Lesson #18

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So here’s the plan: each week that the gospels are covered in Sunday School, I will post one question from my book along with a brief discussion of the issues that it raises.

We know Luke 15:11-32 as “The Parable of the Prodigal Son,” although that title is not scriptural. How would it affect your interpretation of the story if you called it the parable of:

(1) the Prodigal Sons?

(2) the Loving Father?

(3) the Return Home?

(4) the Lost Sons (which has the advantage of making it parallel to the other two parables in this chapter)?

(5) the Plan of Salvation?

(6) the Forgiving Father?

(7) the Father and Two Different Sons?

(8) the Father’s Love?

Can you think of any other apt titles? (This may be an interesting exercise to do with all of the parables). What are the risks of giving parables titles?

(adapted from Search, Ponder, and Pray: A Guide to the Gospels)

The titles that have traditionally been given to scripture stories (“The Cleansing of the Temple,” “The Anointing at Bethany,” “The Parable of the Prodigal Son”) are as powerful as they are dangerous. They do an awful lot of interpretive work, but they do it under the radar–we take the titles as given, usually, without stopping to think about the assumptions which they are making. This can be a problem. As I explore in this post, the idea that Jesus “cleansed” the temple is found in John but not in Mark, so to read Mark’s story as the “cleansing” of the temple may be to contradict Mark’s point. Similarly, calling it “The Anointing at Bethany” instead of “The Anointing of Jesus” downplays the significance of the event. And, as I hope the list of possibilities above suggests, calling Luke 15:11-32 “the parable of the prodigal son” does an awful lot of interpretive work that might leave us blind to other important elements of the story, such as the role of the father or the prodigal-ness of the older son.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about teaching young men and young women; one of the challenges their teachers face is to grapple with their cynicism. We might sometimes be able to harness that cynicism and use it for good instead of evil; one way to do this would be to give them an appropriate target for cynicism. The titles we put on stories may work well here as a target for them to criticize and then offer alternatives.

 

 

 

 

 

7 comments for “New Testament Gospel Doctrine Lesson #18

  1. Great questions, Julie. I plan to share with my class the discussion of this story in Richards and O’Brien, Misreading Scripture with Western Eyes. They describe an experiment in which Americans and Russians were asked to read the passage and then recount it. Most of the Americans left the famine element out of their retellings, while most of the Russians included it, resulting in a flavor much more like “The Loving Father.”

  2. Amy-Jill Levine (Short Stories by Jesus [2014]), tongue somewhat in cheek, likes “The Absent Mother.” I prefer “The Dysfunctional Family.” I was moved by Elder Nielson’s conference talk earlier this month when he told the story of his sister, but I think this parable is at least as much about families than it is about a lost child returning home.

  3. Don’t forget Todd Compton’s article in Dialogue, “Heaven and Hell: The Parable of the Loving Father and the Judgmental Son”, pp. 31-44, Vol. 29, No. 4, Winter 1996. Slightly off point from what Julie describes above, but a great addition to any discussion of this parable.

  4. Great questions. I also like your idea about targeting cynicism in the way you mentioned. I am interested in any other thoughts you have as you ponder teaching the youth.

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