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Was Christ being factual when he told the parable of the man who owed his master the equivalent of the national debt and yet refused to forgive one who owed him some pocket change ... or was he exaggerating the amount to make a point?
In fact, one could say that a parable, like all fiction, is a lie that tells the truth.![]()
So, when Paul told those in Corinth concerning those causing them trouble that he wishes he could be like them as they are "super apostles", he was lying?
A lie is deception with the intent to deceive. Exaggeration and hyperbole may or may not intend to deceive. That's why we have different words for it.
You are judging motives and assuming way too much, Jam. I can't speak for Faulty, but I am not trying to justify anything, I am simply stating the truth as I see it. And truth is more than just mere cold facts. Jesus exclusively (see Matt. 13.34) used fictional (i.e., non-factual) parables to convey the truth. Sometimes he used exaggeration / hyperbole / overstatement to convey the truth ... and Jesus was not a liar!! So, why would the Spirit "convict" me/us of that?*****
You and Jim seem to be trying too hard to justify something the Spirit is really convicting you on.
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You are judging motives and assuming way too much, Jam. I can't speak for Faulty, but I am not trying to justify anything, I am simply stating the truth as I see it. And truth is more than just mere cold facts. Jesus exclusively (see Matt. 13.34) used fictional (i.e., non-factual) parables to convey the truth. Sometimes he used exaggeration / hyperbole / overstatement to convey the truth ... and Jesus was not a liar!! So, why would the Spirit "convict" me/us of that?![]()
JimB said:I was told that I shouldn’t use exaggeration in my sermons and that I needed to be more exact in my statements. I told him I knew it and had cried barrels and barrels of tears over it.
JimB said:You are judging motives and assuming way too much, Jam. I can't speak for Faulty, but I am not trying to justify anything, I am simply stating the truth as I see it. And truth is more than just mere cold facts. Jesus exclusively (see Matt. 13.34) used fictional (i.e., non-factual) parables to convey the truth. Sometimes he used exaggeration / hyperbole / overstatement to convey the truth ... and Jesus was not a liar!! So, why would the Spirit "convict" me/us of that?![]()
You are judging motives and assuming way too much, Jam. I can't speak for Faulty, but I am not trying to justify anything, I am simply stating the truth as I see it. And truth is more than just mere cold facts. Jesus exclusively (see Matt. 13.34) used fictional (i.e., non-factual) parables to convey the truth. Sometimes he used exaggeration / hyperbole / overstatement to convey the truth ... and Jesus was not a liar!! So, why would the Spirit "convict" me/us of that?![]()
Do we really need to explain the difference between sarcasm and exaggeration? You and Jim seem to be trying too hard to justify something the Spirit is really convicting you on.
Exaggeration and hyperbole (same thing) is meant to impress and HYPE people or yourself when facts alone aren't enough. That's called manipulation an is akin to witchcraft.
When you exaggerate, you lose people's trust. Those closest to you, who know what really happened, first and foremost. When you're so comfortable telling lies to everyone from the pulpit, how will your wife believe you when you tell her you aren't having an affair?
Faulty said:I'm not justifying anything. I'm just recognizing differences in deliberate deception and figures of speech.
For example, for Jesus to say it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter heaven is an exaggeration. A camel has gone through the eye of a needle, ummm... never, but rich men have entered heaven. Jesus means its extremely difficult and that becomes understood through his exaggeration.
If I were rearranging my furniture an I told my wife, "wow, that couch weighs a ton", she's not stupid enough to think the couch actually weighs 2,000 pounds, but rather that I found the couch to be quite heavy.
toolmanjantzi said:But the "eye of the needle" was the name of the gate. That was very narrow. Maybe your both wrong when it comes to scripture, because I do not think God needs to exaggerate.
But the "eye of the needle" was the name of the gate. That was very narrow. Maybe your both wrong when it comes to scripture, because I do not think God needs to exaggerate.
Fiction is exaggeration, embellishment--heck, you could even call fiction a lie. My old university English lit professor used to say, "A novel is a lie that tells the truth." Jesus used fiction (some were exaggerated stories) when he used parables to tell the truth.Let's at least keep the dialogue to intellectual honesty. If you brought this issue up to discuss fiction, then no one would have challenged you on exaggeration, correct?
And I'm not sure what you are driving at, Eyesee.This is getting stranger by the moment.
Jim, what exactly is going on? Whatever you have been doing you've been crying "barrels of tears" over ...
So why don't you just clear this up for everyone like I asked you to do several posts back... PLEASE. We're obviously missing something; why don't YOU tell us what it is. You are sitting here watching us go back and forth with absolutely no effort on your part to clarify anything and I'm really starting to wonder why that is...
Isn't allegory fiction? I've never read a literal (i.e., factual) allegory and I've read Piers Plowman, The Chronicles of Narnia, Lord of the Rings, Pilgrim's Progress, and watched a lot of Disney DreamWorks projects. All of them were allegories, none of them were literal and I learned truth from each of them. They were parables. Truth is where you find, even in fiction.par·a·ble
/'par?b?l/
Noun
A simple story used to illustrate a moral or spiritual lesson, as told by Jesus in the Gospels.
Synonyms
parabola - allegory - simile
Can you explain How the scripture have said a parable was fictional? Especially when God said it?
JimB said:Isn't allegory fiction? I've never read a literal (i.e., factual) allegory and I've read Piers Plowman, The Chronicles of Narnia, Lord of the Rings, Pilgrim's Progress, and watched a lot of Disney DreamWorks projects. All of them were allegories, none of them were literal and I learned truth from each of them. They were parables. Truth is where you find, even in fiction.![]()
JimB said:Isn't allegory fiction? I've never read a literal (i.e., factual) allegory and I've read Piers Plowman, The Chronicles of Narnia, Lord of the Rings, Pilgrim's Progress, and watched a lot of Disney DreamWorks projects. All of them were allegories, none of them were literal and I learned truth from each of them. They were parables. Truth is where you find, even in fiction.![]()
If it were proven that parables are fictional; when would the insanity stop. Does the bible warm the reader every time of a parable? If not, then what part of John 3:16 is real? Is hell real?, is the bible all little stories to make man feel warm and fuzzy?