The Rich Man and Lazarus (Luke 16:19-31)

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Ronald David Bruno

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Life after Death

Before attempting any serious interpretation of this remarkable parable, it is essential to establish clearly that it does not present an actual depiction of life after death. Anyone reading this story literally, as a believer in the immortality of the soul, is likely to be led astray.

While Luke’s Gospel does not explicitly label it a parable, the same is true of the story of the unjust steward. Both begin with the words, “There was a certain rich man…” Yet who would insist that the unjust steward was a real person known to Jesus? Indeed, verse 15 requires interpretation in the context of the Pharisees.

Detail after detail in the story becomes absurd if taken literally: “In hell the rich man lifted up his eyes and saw Lazarus in Abraham’s bosom… Send Lazarus that he may dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue.” Do disembodied souls truly have eyes, fingers, tongues, or bosoms? And what use would one drop of water be in a place of unquenchable fire? :funlaugh2 Clearly, Jesus crafted these details to impress the audience with their impossibility.

Consider, too, the idea that part of the joy of the blessed hereafter would consist of constantly observing the damned in torment. What kind of everlasting happiness could this be? :IDK: Lazarus is described as resting in Abraham’s bosom, yet is this meant to be taken literally as the eternal state of all righteous people? The parable provides no indication that the rich man was wicked or Lazarus inherently virtuous. In fact, the rich man is shown as loving toward his brothers. Should we then conclude that wealth in this life leads automatically to hell, and misery guarantees eternal bliss? Such reasoning is absurd, Abraham himself enjoyed considerable wealth in life (Gen. 13:2, etc.).

Finally, the parable concludes with a strong emphasis on the teaching of Moses and the prophets. What do they say about the state of the dead? “Abraham… was gathered to his people” (Gen. 25:8), yet his people were idol-worshippers (Josh. 24:2). Regarding Joseph’s death, Jacob lamented: “I shall go down to the grave (Hades) unto my son mourning” (Gen. 37:35). Similarly, Jonah cried from the belly of the fish (Jonah 2:1-2), which he mistakenly believed to be a kind of hell. Hezekiah, facing death, acknowledged: “The grave (Hades) cannot praise thee, death cannot celebrate thee… the living, the living, he shall praise thee” (Isa. 38:10, 18-19).

Taken literally, the parable of the rich man and Lazarus is one of the most fragile foundations for belief in disembodied immortality.

So why, then, did Jesus frame his teaching around such an obviously false concept?
Luke 16:19-31
THIS IS NOT A PARABLE!
This is not symbolic language, and is to be taken literally. Why?
Parables DO NOT include specific names of real people, like Abraham, nor his spiritual location. It is also clear that the Rich man and Lazarus are real souls!
Prior to Christ's death and resurrection, Sheol was divided into two locations, one for the faithful to God and the other for the unfaithful, wicked reprobates.

The Rich man's location is therefore real.

>Why describe two separate and distinct locations that exist after death _ in detail _ to symbolize something else if they did not exist?
>What moral truth would be gained from something or some place that was not real?

Jesus' parables were always about common experiences that people could relate to and draw meaning out of. His parables did not use detailed descriptions of fictional, abstract territories!

The message to all is a stark warning. This Rich man died and went to a place of loneliness, fire and torment. This wasn't his grave or tomb. He didn't become extinct when he died nor was he asleep. He was conscious! He asks for water, a drop, because when Lazarus was alive, he begged for scraps of food. Notice how the Rich man's pride is no longer with him - he is humbled. I don't know, if it is real humility or just an act of manipulation? He was hoping for mercy, to receive more than a drop. When he realized there would be no relief for him, he asked Abraham to send Lazarus to his brothers ( who were also real people) to warn them of this place.
> Abraham also made it clear that these two locations were separated by a gulf (chasm) that no one from either location could pass over!

> The last line of the story points to another reality and parallel to this story, Jesus' death and resurrection.

This whole story alludes also to judgments throughout the Bible that speak of fire and torment that ultimately leads to destruction. There is no hope for that Rich man or anyone else who is cast there, no second chance, no Purgatory, no redemption. This is what death means without faith in God, which is the primary reason we have a Savior. But we must believe that He is our Savior.
 
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MatthewG

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Luke 16:19-31
THIS IS NOT A PARABLE!

You are lying to yourself.

The primary audience for the Parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus (Luke 16:19–31) is the Pharisees, specifically those who were lovers of money and resistant to Jesus’ teachings.

Here’s how we know:


  • Context from Luke 16: Just before the parable, in Luke 16:14, it says, “The Pharisees, who were lovers of money, heard all these things, and they ridiculed him.” Jesus then responds with a rebuke and follows it with this parable.
  • Themes of wealth and spiritual blindness: The parable contrasts the rich man’s earthly luxury with his eternal torment, while Lazarus, the poor man, receives comfort in the afterlife. This reversal directly challenges the Pharisees’ assumption that wealth signified divine favor.
  • Moral takeaway: Jesus ends the parable with a powerful statement: “If they do not hear Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone should rise from the dead.” This is a pointed critique of the Pharisees’ hardened hearts and their rejection of both Scripture and the coming resurrection.
 

MatthewG

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Matt just shattered the IRONY meter.
Hey man, I think it’s time to take this conversation elsewhere.
I’m just worn out from seeing people convince themselves of things that don’t hold up. You claim to speak truth, but it mostly boils down to “the Bible tells me so”—and then you drop a verse and walk out like that settles everything.
That’s not really walking by the Spirit. A lot of folks just repeat what they were taught without digging deeper.
I’ve got love for Shawn McCranney—he helped highlight what the Bible actually says, letting the text speak for itself.
But the truth is, not everyone reads well or thinks critically, and they need encouragement, not just declarations.
 

MatthewG

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Nah, I think I'll keep pointing out your Bible attacks.
It’s fine—just as long as you’re not asking people to believe you. Honestly, no one should blindly believe me either.
What gets me is the irony of someone claiming that the Rich Man and Lazarus isn’t a parable… when Jesus always spoke in parables to the crowds. The deeper stuff? That was reserved for his actual Apostles.
It’s bewildering, really. Funny, too. But I guess some folks don’t care about context or consistency. They just want what they want—and they’ll twist scripture to get it.


All you got to quote to me is the bible, some simple sentence structure or whatever. I don't care bout that, nor you supposed sayings I attack the bible. Cause I mean you are so light on the touch its barely noticable but flys are annoying. Just as much as a neighbor that gets shot up by a drive-by. It's sad but people love to do it... it's thrilling... I dont encourage going to shoot up your local neighborhood though as that is bad, and pretty much evil. In my own perspective.

I know how to read, so you can save it. I love the bible, and to say I attack is really extreme and retarded for anyone to consider that is something I do cause I definitely wouldn't even give God a day in my life or Jesus for that matter if I didn't have faith.

That faith was helped by reading the bible.
 

Jack

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It’s fine—just as long as you’re not asking people to believe you. Honestly, no one should blindly believe me either.
What gets me is the irony of someone claiming that the Rich Man and Lazarus isn’t a parable…
Parables NEVER use literal Biblical people, Moses, Abraham, ...
when Jesus always spoke in parables to the crowds. The deeper stuff? That was reserved for his actual Apostles.
It’s bewildering, really. Funny, too. But I guess some folks don’t care about context or consistency. They just want what they want—and they’ll twist scripture to get it.

All you got to quote to me is the bible, some simple sentence structure or whatever. I don't care bout that, nor you supposed sayings I attack the bible. Cause I mean you are so light on the touch its barely noticable but flys are annoying.
Bible attackers are ANNOYING to us Christians.

Pay attention Matt. I don't want you to continue on to Hell!

Matthew 25:41-46
41 Then He will also say to those on the left hand, 'Depart from Me, you cursed, into the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels:
46 And these will go away into everlasting punishment, but the righteous into eternal life."
 

Ronald David Bruno

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BILLIONS burning in Hell FOREVER will wish it was a parable!
Jack, don't be so sure of that. Remember, upon the Great White Throne Judgment, Death and Hades are cast into the Lake of Fire and destroyed along with the 1st Heavens AND 1ST Earth.
Anionios has variable meanings. When applied to OUR temporal realm, it means ages, lifetimes, generatiions, epoch. When applied to God and His domain, it means eternal, without end. Remember also, at the end of the Bible, there comes a time when "all former things have passed away".
"Destroy"
is another term that needs to be understood. You cannot destroy something continuously without end. That would equate to an I destructible destruction or imperishable perishing. It is not the meaning of the word. "To put an end to", is the meaning. Now the time frame may vary but an end to.its existence is what being destroyed means.
And how would God be glorified by creating an eternal torture chamber for some people who maybe only lived and sinned for 20 years? Hitler I'd say would deserve many lifetimes of punishment, but eventually, that too will pass away.
 

MatthewG

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Parables NEVER use literal Biblical people, Moses, Abraham, ...

Bible attackers are ANNOYING to us Christians.

Pay attention Matt. I don't want you to continue on to Hell!

Matthew 25:41-46
41 Then He will also say to those on the left hand, 'Depart from Me, you cursed, into the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels:
46 And these will go away into everlasting punishment, but the righteous into eternal life."


Yeah well that is an illogical argument. Jesus can say whatever he wants, in a parable.


You must be a Jesus dicator now. You dictacte how he speaks and what he means. Thats not going by the spirit. Thats all flesh.

So you wont fool me. IM TOO SMART FOR MY OWN GOOOOOOD.

Peace man I dont want to banter with you all day, and you can continue to stay on ignore.
 

Jack

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Yeah well that is an illogical argument. Jesus can say whatever he wants, in a parable.
Illogical in your anti Bible brain.
You must be a Jesus dicator now.
Rev 21 All LIARS will have their part in the Lake of Fire.
You dictacte how he speaks and what he means. Thats not going by the spirit. Thats all flesh.
Quoting Jesus is not "dictating" Jesus. I'll leave the Bible attacks for you Matt.
 

Jack

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Jack, don't be so sure of that. Remember, upon the Great White Throne Judgment, Death and Hades are cast into the Lake of Fire and destroyed along with the 1st Heavens AND 1ST Earth.
Matthew 25:41-46
41 Then He will also say to those on the left hand, 'Depart from Me, you cursed, into the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels:

46 And these will go away into everlasting punishment, but the righteous into eternal life."

Revelation 20:10
10 The devil, who deceived them, was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone where the beast and the false prophet are. And they will be tormented day and night forever and ever.

Luke 16 agrees.
Anionios has variable meanings. When applied to OUR temporal realm, it means ages, lifetimes, generatiions, epoch. When applied to God and His domain, it means eternal, without end. Remember also, at the end of the Bible, there comes a time when "all former things have passed away".
"Destroy"
is another term that needs to be understood. You cannot destroy something continuously without end. That would equate to an I destructible destruction or imperishable perishing. It is not the meaning of the word. "To put an end to", is the meaning. Now the time frame may vary but an end to.its existence is what being destroyed means.
And how would God be glorified by creating an eternal torture chamber for some people who maybe only lived and sinned for 20 years? Hitler I'd say would deserve many lifetimes of punishment, but eventually, that too will pass away.
 

MatthewG

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Illogical in your anti Bible brain.

Rev 21 All LIARS will have their part in the Lake of Fire.

Quoting Jesus is not "dictating" Jesus. I'll leave the Bible attacks for you Matt.
It sucks talking to you cause all you know how to do is just be this way you are, so like Idk where you come from, idk if Ive even talked to you personally but you reminded me of the people I chill with every day.... LOL. There one guy that all he has to say to me contantly is just insulting remarks, but i go back at him sometimes. This is no different and you could be that very same person who knows huh?

Thats why I dont care to hear you out or you repeated statements. I know and am aware that autism does exist out there, and you know there are mentally retarded people, not saying you are one of them, but they do exist and they are exteremly hard to bare! Love them though, love you though but meh... I love ignore, mute, hide, as well. Cause like to go back and forth this way is so stupid.

Good-bye. -waves hand-
 

Jack

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It sucks talking to you cause all you know how to do is just be this way you are, so like Idk where you come from, idk if Ive even talked to you personally but you reminded me of the people I chill with every day.... LOL. There one guy that all he has to say to me contantly is just insulting remarks, but i go back at him sometimes. This is no different and you could be that very same person who knows huh?

Thats why I dont care to hear you out or you repeated statements.
Yeah, the Bible!
I know and am aware that autism does exist out there, and you know there are mentally retarded people, not saying you are one of them, but they do exist and they are exteremly hard to bare! Love them though, love you though but meh... I love ignore, mute, hide, as well. Cause like to go back and forth this way is so stupid.
It "sucks" to you because I stick with the Bible and not your babblings.
 

MatthewG

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Yeah, the Bible!

It "sucks" to you because I stick with the Bible and not your babblings.
Right. Good for you man. Thank you so much! Love you and all the best. Thank you for what feels like wasting some of my time this morning, hopefully it was beneifical to others.
 
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Jack

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Right. Good for you man. Thank you so much! Love you and all the best. Thank you for what feels like wasting some of my time this morning, hopefully it was beneifical to others.
Throw all your anti Bible trash away. Read the Bible. Don't burn in Hell!
 

Ronald David Bruno

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You are lying to yourself.

The primary audience for the Parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus (Luke 16:19–31) is the Pharisees, specifically those who were lovers of money and resistant to Jesus’ teachings.

Here’s how we know:


  • Context from Luke 16: Just before the parable, in Luke 16:14, it says, “The Pharisees, who were lovers of money, heard all these things, and they ridiculed him.” Jesus then responds with a rebuke and follows it with this parable.
  • Themes of wealth and spiritual blindness: The parable contrasts the rich man’s earthly luxury with his eternal torment, while Lazarus, the poor man, receives comfort in the afterlife. This reversal directly challenges the Pharisees’ assumption that wealth signified divine favor.
  • Moral takeaway: Jesus ends the parable with a powerful statement: “If they do not hear Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone should rise from the dead.” This is a pointed critique of the Pharisees’ hardened hearts and their rejection of both Scripture and the coming resurrection.
Calling me a liar? If I claim to know the truth, believe it and I am wrong, it doesn't make me a liar. It just means I'm deceived. Sometimes I don't get scripture right, understand it fully.
Okay then, you want to get personal ... back at you.
I see you are still churning out your Universalism idea that "everyone will eventually be saved".
You spend a lot of time for a young guy spewing out false doctrines. Don't you have a job or are you just milking your parents like many other irresponsible youths and spending all this time thinking you are doing something productuve online? Set me straight on that ... I'd hate to think you were doing that!
Not to change the subject, but what is your interpretation of this scripture:
"But if anyone does not provide for his own, and especially for those of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever'. 1 Tim. 5:8
Is that a parable too ... does it apply to you? Do you think you'll get a "Well done good and faithful servant" from the Lord?
 

MatthewG

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Calling me a liar? If I claim to know the truth, believe it and I am wrong, it doesn't make me a liar. It just means I'm deceived. Sometimes I don't get scripture right, understand it fully.


I said you are lying to yourself. Jesus was speaking Pharisees... So like...

Idk what to tell you other than you guys who say "JEsus cant say a parable when he uses real names" is lying.


You guys become dictators of Jesus and his words, when you do that. Thats not good. And it's denying the context. I dont gotta share anything with you bible related. Im talking about a problem.

I did earlier share that Jesus was in front of Pharisees when he spoke his parable.


But you Jesus dictators got a problem.
 

Ronald David Bruno

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I said you are lying to yourself. Jesus was speaking Pharisees... So like...

Idk what to tell you other than you guys who say "JEsus cant say a parable when he uses real names" is lying.


You guys become dictators of Jesus and his words, when you do that. Thats not good. And it's denying the context. I dont gotta share anything with you bible related. Im talking about a problem.

I did earlier share that Jesus was in front of Pharisees when he spoke his parable.


But you Jesus dictators got a problem.
Okay and back at you ... Are you lying to yourself? You think you can interpret scripture correctly, then try this:
1 Tim 5:8 interpretation please?
 

MatthewG

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Okay and back at you ... Are you lying to yourself? You think you can interpret scripture correctly, then try this:
1 Tim 5:8 interpretation please?

Ronald thats not how conversations work. If you don't care to engage, just don't worry about it then.









You'll still be wrong concerning the Parable of Lazarus and Rich man. By saying it's not a Parable.



Jesus dictation is a problem.
 

Jack

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You'll still be wrong concerning the Parable of Lazarus and Rich man. By saying it's not a Parable.
Parables do not use literal Biblical people! This account totally agrees with Jesus' WARNINGS about burning FOREVER literally!