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The parable of Lazarus and the rich man The parable of Lazarus and the rich man is often presented as Bible "proof" that good people go to heaven and bad people go to a "hell" where they are tormented by fire. It is tempting to jump to this conclusion, but the parable actually has a different meaning or message altogether. First, here is the text of the parable, as found in Luke 16:19-31:
Note that nothing was said about Abraham being in heaven: people often just assume that Abraham is in heaven in the parable, but the parable does not say so. In fact Jesus said in John 3:13 that "no man hath ascended up to heaven, but he that came down from heaven, even the Son of man..." Actually all of the Old Testament faithful, including Abraham, Moses, David and the prophets are still in their graves. The apostle Peter mentioned this in regard to David, saying: "Men and brethren, let me freely speak unto you of the patriarch David, that he is both dead and buried, and his sepulchre is with us unto this day... For David is not ascended into the heavens..." (Acts 2:29 and 34). Other verses such as Daniel 12:2, Acts 13:36, Ecclesiastes 9:5,10 and Job 3:13-19 give further evidence that the Old Testament "saints" are not in heaven but remain in their graves, awaiting their resurrection. If we assume the parable shows that Abraham is in heaven, then the Bible would seem to be contradicting itself. On the other hand, if Abraham is still in his grave as the other scriptures indicate, then what is the parable about? Fortunately some of the details provided in the parable give clues to its true meaning. In the parable Abraham called the rich man his son, and the rich man had five brothers. Now these might seem to be meaningless details, but they are not: they help identify who the rich man represents in the parable. When Jesus gave the parable He was speaking to the Pharisees. The Pharisees were Jews, who were the descendants of Judah, one of the twelve sons of Jacob from whom issued the twelve tribes of Israel. Judah was descended from - therefore a son of - Abraham by Isaac and Jacob... and Judah had five brothers by Jacob's first wife Leah. Genesis 35:22-26 lists the five brothers, and the other six half-brothers:
So we see that the rich man could symbolize Judah - the Jews - in the parable. If that's the case, then do the other points in the parable make any sense? For example, why was the rich man rich? And who was Lazarus, and why was he in poverty outside the rich man's gates? And why did they change places? And what was the significance of Lazarus going to Abraham's bosom, while the rich man was in torments? And what was the message of the parable? Why was the rich man - symbolizing the Jews - rich? The Jews had something no other people had: a covenant with God, with the special promises - blessings - which that covenant provided. That covenant was originally made with all twelve tribes of Israel; in Jesus time only the Jews remained in the covenant. No other people had the covenant and blessings available to them. The original blessings are listed in Deuteronomy 28, which begins with the following description:
So we see that the Jews were "rich" because they had a covenant with God, with promised blessings. Who does Lazarus symbolize in the parable? Lazarus symbolizes the Gentiles, who were excluded from the covenant. The Gentiles were in poverty, relatively speaking, owing to the fact that God's covenant and blessings were not available to them... yet. They were outside the rich man's "gate," so to speak, "desiring to be fed with the crumbs which fell from the rich man’s table." The covenant and its blessings were only available to the "rich man" - the Jews - to whom Jesus addressed the parable. When Lazarus died in the parable, he next appeared at Abraham's bosom, meaning that he became a very close or special friend of Abraham. To lean on another's chest or bosom was, in their time, indicative of a close friendship. An example of this was the relationship between the apostle John and Jesus: John 13:23 recounts that "Now there was leaning on Jesus’ bosom one of his disciples, whom Jesus loved." Now, what was the significance of the death of Lazarus, and his appearance as a special friend of Abraham? Lazarus' death signified a change in the Gentiles' status with God: a covenant was made available to them, made possible by the sacrificial death and resurrection to eternal life of Jesus. The terms of the new covenant are summarized in John 3:16:
Why are the Gentiles (those who are true Christians) shown in the parable to be bosom friends of Abraham? Because they have the same belief or faith in God that Abraham had. Through faith the Gentiles can attain the righteousness of Abraham; they spiritually have bosom closeness with Abraham as indicated in the parable. The apostle Paul described Abraham's faith, and showed that Christians are righteous because they have faith like Abraham's:
We have seen that Lazarus' death symbolized a change in the Gentiles' relationship with God: a covenant was made available for them. The rich man's death also signified a change for the Jews: the parable showed that their covenant with God would be put aside, leaving them "in torments," seeing "Abraham afar off, and Lazarus in his bosom." The Jews would no longer be a special nation to God, "on high above all nations of the earth." The Gentiles who had faith would be God's people instead. In the parable Abraham reminded rich man saying "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." "Tormented" in this verse is translated from the Greek word odunao, which means mentally grieved or anguished: the opposite of "comforted." It does not mean physical pain, as many assume. The apostle Paul wrote about the Jews', and all Israel's, fall from their covenant with God: "I say then, Have they stumbled that they should fall? God forbid: but rather through their fall salvation is come unto the Gentiles, for to provoke them to jealousy" (Romans 11:11). The Jews "stumbled" owing to their disobedience and disbelief. That stumbling made way for a covenant to be established with the Gentiles; Paul wrote to the Romans: "For as ye in times past have not believed God, yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief" (Romans 11:30). What was the "great gulf" that was between Lazarus and the rich man - between the Gentiles and the Jews? Physically, one who was born a Jew could not become a Gentile, and vice versa. Spiritually, it is faith that separates the Jews from the believing Gentiles. Without faith the Jews could neither attain the righteousness of Abraham nor adhere to the covenant made available by Christ. Furthermore a spiritual "blindness" has fallen over the Jews until the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled. Paul commented on this several times. Here are examples:
The parable concludes with Abraham telling the rich man "If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead." Here Jesus was telling the Pharisees that their disbelief in the scriptures would not change even if they saw someone rise from the dead, as the scriptures promised would happen. Jesus was, of course, referring to His own promised resurrection: Psalm 16:10 prophesied that His soul - His body or self - would not be left in hell - the grave:
Jesus used the parable of Lazarus and the rich man to show that the Jews were about to lose their place as God's chosen people, and be replaced by those who had not been favored before: the Gentiles who believed. Unfortunately many have assumed the parable is a message about good people going to heaven and the wicked going to a hell where they are tormented by fire... even though heaven, good, evil and judgment are not even mentioned in the parable. The final setting for the rich man, in a hell where he was tormented by fire, was purposely taken from the popular and pagan beliefs of the time. Jesus knew the Pharisees would recognize this and then look for a deeper, symbolic meaning in the parable. Paradoxically, most professing Christians today do not recognize the setting as pagan because so many pagan beliefs have been assimilated into modern "Christian" doctrine. Jesus gave numerous other parables on the same theme, showing that the Jews were about to lose their place to the Gentiles who would believe. Here is one of the other parables:
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