Scot McKnight has altered me to an article Snodgras has on Preaching the Parables in Preaching the New Testament. Here are twelve points he offers.
1. Use concrete and
personal language. Abstractions are how we store ideas; concrete ideas are
where we live. Jesus points the way: as he told concrete stories so we need to
explain the parables in part by telling concrete stories. I heard this weekend
a sermon on the prodigal son that began with a breathtaking story that 100%
mirrored the prodigal son story. Brilliant embodiment of the parable and the
point Klyne is making. Anyone who preaches the parables by converting them into
abstract theology … I won’t go there.
2. Study the advantages of
indirect communication. The parables exemplify indirection. Children’s sermons
are memorable because they are concrete and at the same indirect (at least at
first as a story is told). Parables are like the Trojan Horse. Use your own
form of indirection, creating a parable that breaks numbness of the familiar,
and disorient folks by probing elements of the parable less familiar.
3. Commit to seeing both
the text and people. Bridge the two.
4. Keep the parables
as Jesus’ parables. Preach Jesus and the kingdom, not simply
the parabolized story. Cross check your reading of the parable with the
teachings of Jesus.
5. Observe literary
characteristics. Read the parable in context; read the parable itself as a
literary text.
6. Shun allegorizing and
the dogma that parables have only one point. Correspondences are not the issue
in reading parables. The concern is the analogy.
7. Study parables that have
the same form to see how various kinds of parables function. Klyne’s epochal
book, Stories with Intent, is the place to go to see the various
kinds of parables.
8. Focus on the theology of
the parables. “The parables are there to give us insight into God, the kingdom,
the mission of Jesus to Israel and the nature of discipleship.” [Focus on those
themes and you will be miles ahead.]
9. Focus on the identity
displayed or called for in the parable. Scripture tells us who we are, and
parables provide identity about God, kingdom and us.
10. Do not run from the
difficulties. Judgment, demand, etc… Jesus was not into making people
comfortable.
11. Let the Bible be an
ancient book.
12. Aim for response.
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