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Unparalleled Parables: Small Stories With Great MeaningSample

Unparalleled Parables: Small Stories With Great Meaning

DAY 16 OF 30

What do butter chicken and songwriting have in common?

I’ve learned a lot about music over the last nine years of being married to an artist. Still, there are moments when Cameron starts speaking in full-on audio engineer mode—and I’m completely lost.

That’s when he usually shifts to cooking analogies, because that’s language I can understand. 🤪

For example, the other day he tried to explain to me the importance of mixing and mastering. He goes, “You know how when you’re cooking butter chicken and you can’t really tell how it will taste until you put the chicken and the gravy together in the very end and garnish it? That’s the same with a song until it has been mixed and mastered.”

The point is that if you want to communicate something clearly, you have to know your audience and speak in a way they’ll understand.

To truly understand Jesus’ message in the parable of the Prodigal Son, we must examine the audience He was addressing.

At the start of chapter 15, Luke observes that:

The tax collectors and sinners were all gathering around to hear Jesus. But the Pharisees and the teachers of the law muttered, “This man welcomes sinners and eats with them.” – Luke 15:1-2 NIV

We can divide Jesus’ audience into two groups:

  1. Tax collectors and sinners=Outcasts
  2. Pharisees and teachers of the law=Religious Elite

The two main characters in Jesus’ story, the two brothers, correspond directly with the two groups in His audience.

The Outcasts relate to the younger brother. They don’t follow the rules and live “wild” lives, full of sin.

The older brother represents the Religious Elite; they lived by the book and worked hard to obey the law.

Just like the older brother in the story who was outraged when their father welcomed his rebellious younger sibling back, the Religious Elite also complain, “This man welcomes sinners and eats with them.”

Which group do you identify with the most?

Hey! You are a Chamatkar.

Jenny Mendes

Scripture

About this Plan

Unparalleled Parables: Small Stories With Great Meaning

Jesus often chose to teach through parables for a reason: these simple yet profound stories conveyed deep spiritual truths and timeless life lessons in a way that resonated deeply with His listeners. When we take the time to understand them within their historical and cultural context—hearing them as His original audience would have—we, too, can experience their transformative power.

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