Why Did Jesus Preach in Parables?




Straight Truth Podcast show

Summary: Why did Jesus preach in parables? Why was the meaning of them only explained to His disciples and not the crowds more generally? This appears intentional as if Jesus didn’t want them to understand what He was saying, how could this be? This week on the Straight Truth Podcast, Dr. Richard Caldwell and host, Dr. Josh Philpot discuss these questions. They seek to help us understand why Jesus used parables to teach during His time here on earth and why they are helpful to believers. They also point out why we must take them seriously, and not just graze over them because we say we believe or already believe.<br>  <br> Dr. Caldwell says we, as believers tend to think of parables helping us get a hold of the truth. Often they involve stories that are illustrative using things we are very familiar with, therefore they do tend to be helpful. However, he explains that we have to put our feet in the shoes of those who would have first been hearing these parables. Those people would have been wondering: what does this mean and why would Jesus do this? Dr. Caldwell asks, “Why would Jesus teach in such a way that would cause people to not get the message and then go and explain it to His disciples so that they can get the message?” He points us to the Word of God and tells us that Jesus answers it. He turns to Matthew 13:10-15 for us to see what Jesus Himself has to say about it.<br> <br> What Christ Explains <br> <br> What Christ explains in these verses, is that this manner of teaching is a form of judgment. He has spoken to these people plainly and clearly. He says that what He has given them they haven’t received, their ears are dull and their hearts are hard. Christ has said that He was willing to heal and bless them, but they would not receive it. Therefore, when He teaches in a way that only His disciples have access to it, but the rest of the crowds do not, this is just. It’s a form of demonstrating God’s judgment against people who won’t listen. <br> <br> But for those who do believe, those whom the Lord has saved, these parables are helpful to us as they would have been to Jesus’ disciples. Just as Jesus explained, these things mean something, they express something that we need to take seriously. It’s a dangerous thing to hear the truth and not pay attention to it. God may justly take away from you what you have because you didn’t take hold of it, you weren’t willing to hear it.<br>  <br> Dr. Philpot says that he has heard people say that preachers today should be preaching as Jesus preached. Some say preachers ought to be using stories and parabolic teaching. He asks Dr. Caldwell, what could he say about this? Dr. Caldwell explains that if preachers today practiced in this way with parabolic stories, they would be practicing a method of preaching that was intended to express judgment. This isn’t what you see in the New Testament. <br> <br> The Normal Approach that you See In the New Testament<br> <br> The normal approach that you see in the New Testament is expository preaching. This begins with reading the text, then explaining the text, synthesizing or summarizing the text, applying the text, exhorting people, and calling people to obey by responding to it. This is expository preaching and it is the very method Peter used on the day of Pentecost when he preached his sermon. <br> <br> As the preacher faithfully preaches the Word of God, it is as God making His appeal through the preacher, as he both exhorts and begs people to be reconciled to Christ. Preachers in this way are acting as both evangelists and shepherds who are feeding the flock as they teach and preach. Many other examples of this method of preaching can be found throughout the New Testament. Preaching is to be done expositorily, rather than with any imaginative or creative alteration by way of parabolic stories.<br>  <br> Lastly, Dr. Philpot wonders who Jesus is speaking to specifically when He says,