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- The Life Of Jesus Christ In Its Historical Connexion
- Section 219. The Parable Of Dives And Lazarus. (Luke, Xvi., 19 31.)
Section 219. The Parable of Dives and Lazarus. (Luke, xvi., 19-31.)
The worldly spirit, suppressing all sense of higher interests, was the chief cause of the unbelief or inattention of the eye-witnesses of Christ's labours. In the parable of Dives and Lazarus Christ showed that no miracles or revelations could lead a thoroughly worldly mind to repentance and faith; that change of nature was indispensably necessary. Impressions made upon such minds from without could be but transient and superficial. The disposition with which a given grace is used is the one important element; and their bearing towards Christ's revelations ought to correspond to the regard which they professed to entertain for those of the Old Testament.
The prominent thought in the parable is this: "He that could not be awakened to repentance by Moses and the prophets could not be by the reappearance of the dead." [592] The subordinate point is the contrast between the rich man and Lazarus; the former, representing those who seek their highest good in the pleasures of the world, and are thereby excluded from the kingdom of God, forming the principal figure. Lazarus serves as a foil to the worldly rich man; but it must yet be remembered that the kingdom found the hearts of rich men far less accessible than those of the humbly poor like Lazarus; for the very reason that their feelings and dispositions were precisely those of the Dives of the parable. [593]