In this follow-up to his well-known book Parables from the Back Side, author J. Ellsworth Kalas again presents new insight into twelve of Jesus’ parables by entering them through the “back side”: through a unique starting point, a creative retelling, a new “lens,” or the eyes of a minor character. Kalas’s creative approach both clarifies basic teachings and introduces new possibilities of meaning, even for those who are most familiar with the parables. Enriched with contemporary illustrations and personal experiences, this volume will provide new perspectives on these stories from Jesus.
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J. Ellsworth Kalas (1923-2015) was the author of over 35 books, including the popular Back Side series, A Faith of Her Own: Women of the Old Testament, Strong Was Her Faith: Women of the New Testament, I Bought a House on Gratitude Street, and the Christian Believer study, and was a presenter on DISCIPLE videos. He was part of the faculty of Asbury Theological Seminary since 1993, formerly serving as president and then as senior professor of homiletics. He was a United Methodist pastor for 38 years and also served five years in evangelism with the World Methodist Council.
INTRODUCTION,
CHAPTER 1: The Value of the House MATTHEW 7:24-27,
CHAPTER 2: The Man Who Talked with His Soul LUKE 12:13-21,
CHAPTER 3: What Chance Does an Average Sinner Have? LUKE 7:36-48,
CHAPTER 4: The Importance of Downward Mobility LUKE 14:7-14,
CHAPTER 5: The Danger of Being Good and Empty MATTHEW 12:43-45,
CHAPTER 6: Risky Business MATTHEW 13:45-46,
CHAPTER 7: Miracles Can Be Overrated LUKE 16:19-31,
CHAPTER 8: Second Chance for a Poor Manager LUKE 16:1-13,
CHAPTER 9: A Laugh and a Prayer LUKE 11:5-13; 18:1-8,
CHAPTER 10: It Happens While We Sleep MATTHEW 13:24-30; 36-43,
CHAPTER 11: The Importance of Being Dressed for the Party MATTHEW 22:1-14,
CHAPTER 12: The Genius of Effective Waiting LUKE 12:3240,
STUDY GUIDE by John D. Schroeder,
The Value of the House
MATTHEW 7:24-27: Everyone then who hears these words of mine and acts on them will be like a wise man who built his house on rock. The rain fell, the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house, but it did not fall, because it had been founded on rock. And everyone who hears these words of mine and does not act on them will be like a foolish man who built his house on sand. The rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell—and great was its fall!
A generation ago a television personality used to close his show by saying, "I'll see you again tomorrow, the Lord willing, and if the creek don't rise." I thought it was just a cute, colloquial saying until I lived for two years in the Kentucky mountains. There I discovered that the saying might be colloquial, but it comes from common sense based on experience. Kentucky has more miles of creek and river beds than any state except Alaska. In a matter of minutes, a hard rain can turn a lazy creek into a thundering wall of destruction. Roughly once a year the news media report a tragic story of someone who, driving home during a rainstorm, ventures across a familiar bridge, certain the water is manageable, only to be swept down the creek to death. A few days later, riding over the same creek, you can't imagine there could ever be danger in such a pretty little stream.
I suspect just such a creek bed could have been in view when Jesus told his story to a gathered crowd. In that part of the world such places are known as wadis—watercourses that are dry except in periods of substantial rainfall. I can imagine a boy looking at his father as Jesus tells the story, then shifting his feet uneasily as he looks at the wadi on which they're standing.
Like so many of Jesus' parables, the one in Matthew 7:24-27 is a very simple story. This is part of the wonder of the parables: The stories are so deceptively simple that one might rush through them without thinking, or one might say impatiently, "Of course! Everyone knows that." But there's the rub. If we don't "know" the message well enough to conduct our lives accordingly, then we don't really "know" it.
Jesus had just finished an extended period of teaching as he led into this parable. The response to his teaching was probably as it often is when someone challenges us with ideas that call us to change. No doubt the people were cautious about buying in with the teacher from Nazareth. His insights were intriguing, but it was clear that he was outside the establishment. Still more unsettling, his teaching was more demanding than that of the conventional rabbis. So at this moment when his listeners were weighing the message, Jesus threw down the gauntlet. Some people, Jesus said, would hear what he had said and would act upon it, while others would hear and do nothing. Jesus described these contrasting responses with strong language. The people who would act on his teachings were wise, while the others were foolish.
There's no genteel tentativeness here, no talk of "now we all have a right to our own point of view." Jesus may acknowledge that you have a right to your point of view, but he makes clear that your point of view may be wise or it may be foolish. Contrary to a currently popular sentiment, all points of view don't have the same value. Nor does Jesus commend the foolish ones for being "sincere" about what they believe, because sincerity doesn't help much when one is terribly wrong. Nor does Jesus suggest that there are multiple ways of looking at these matters; quite simply, there is a wise way and a foolish way, and that's it.
Some matters are like that, you know. The biggest issues of life are not like choosing between the several brands of cereal at the supermarket, nor even like choosing between several different colleges. The biggest issues of life are so vast in their reach and their consequences that those who choose rightly are wise, and those who are wrong are fools. This is hard language; but since we have only one life with which to cast our vote, someone had better spell out the matter clearly.
So Jesus resorts to a story that is just as clear as the identifying language he has chosen to use. Two men are building their homes. From what Jesus tells us, the homes are comparable in every way except one. Both, apparently, are well built. Both men care about the kind of house they build, because they're going to live there. The only difference is this: one house is built on rock and the other on sand. A city boy like me might not notice this difference. I know more about literature than I do about gravel and concrete, so if I were buying the house, I could be fooled.
But not the people to whom Jesus is talking. These are people who know land and property. They know where to build and where to avoid. If they choose a bad location, it isn't for lack of knowledge, but for some lapse of judgment. Rightly, then, Jesus describes these people as foolish. They have not erred for a shortage of information, but because of a deliberate choice. When Jesus says they are people who have "heard," we see them as informed and therefore equipped to "build"; but for some peculiar reason, the choice of the man who decides to build his house on sand contradicts reason and the very data of their lives. Please keep this clearly in mind: The difference between these two men is not a difference of ability, of knowledge, or of opportunity; it is a difference of choice. The one chooses wisely, the other foolishly.
At first there's no evidence of wisdom or foolishness. As I indicated a moment ago, both men are building good houses. As you walk through the area, you might admire them equally. But one day there's a storm. This is the surest thing I can tell you about this parable. In life, you can count on it that one day, somehow, some way, somewhere, there will be a storm. In a world where sickness exists, where accidents happen, where marriages are broken, where friendships are betrayed, and where the changing economy means jobs or businesses lost, everyone is compelled at some time to deal with a storm. Some people, Lord have mercy, live with storms most of their lives; my heart aches when I think of some such that I have known. Some seem to escape the storms for a long time; in such instances they often are particularly devastated when at last the storm comes their way. When I was a pastor, I was astonished by those persons who responded to the storm by complaining, "Why should this happen to me?" I found it hard not to...
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