None of Jesus' parables mention people by name. But the Rich man and Lazarus does.
Does that automatically make it real scenario?
This is why the story is presented as a true story. The hell presented in the story is not the lake of fire mentioned in Revelation.
The “hell” mentioned in this parable was “hades” as it is the Greek equivalent to the Hebrew “Sheol” translated in the Jewish Tanakh as “the grave”.
The Jews were never taught about a hell of eternal conscious punishment.....that was a pagan Greek adoption....they were taught that “Gehenna” was a place of eternal death.
Also, the Rich man can see across where Lazarus is in Paradise. We know that Paradise is real because Jesus told the dying thief, "Today you will be with Me in Paradise."
Yes, the thief was promised “paradise” but not heaven. A last minute change of heart did not earn this man a place in heaven....as a king and priest (Rev 20:6)....those who merited that promise had to prove their faith under various trials before their choosing and sealing took place. This man was promised a resurrection along with all those whom Jesus will call from their graves to life restored on earth. (John 5:28-29)
So the Bible talks about two separate places where the spirits of dead people God. Unbelievers go to what is called "sheol" and believers go to Paradise.
That is not biblical at all, though it seems to be widely accepted by the majority.
The truth is that there are no “spirits of the dead” because the “soul” and the “spirit” are two entirely different things. Contrary to popular belief, the “soul” in the Bible is a living, breathing creature...it is what Adam “became” when God started him breathing. (Gen 2:7) “The breath of life” was actually the “spirit” or animating force that is given at birth, and ceases when we die. Animals in the Bible are called “souls” and they breathe the same way that we do and die the same death as we do. (Eccl 3:18-20)
We have to remember that Jesus and his apostles, and in fact all of the Bible writers were Jewish, and wrote with Jewish beliefs that came from their Hebrew Scriptures. There are no immortal souls in the Hebrew Scriptures because it was not taught in them, so Jesus would not have promoted something outside of the Scriptures he used. They were the only Scriptures in existence at the time.
The former to await the final Judgment, the latter to await the Rapture where they rise up to meet the Lord in the air. Believers in Christ will not be at the final Judgment, because they have been judged already by declaring that they are condemned sinners needing Jesus as Saviour.
This is another empty claim....we have yet to experience the “great tribulation” and whatever you consider the “rapture” to be, it is simply the final number of the elect who are still on earth when Christ returns as judge, who will be transformed to meet Christ, and be established in the Kingdom in which they were chosen to be “kings and priests” with Jesus. (Rev 20:6)
They are raised “first” because then the kingdom will be complete and ready to take over rulership of this earth...(foretold in Dan 2:44)...taking us back to God’s first purpose for the earth and the living creatures upon it....we were to be the caretakers here.....we alone, made in God’s image, so that we would represent his rulership on the earth as he would want it.
The end of this world and all its disobedient ones, has to take place before the Kingdom that Jesus taught us to pray for, can ”come” so that God’s will can “be done on earth as it is in heaven”.