“There was a certain rich man, which was clothed
in purple and fine
linen, and fared sumptuously
every day: and there was a certain
beggar named Lazarus, which
was laid at his gate, full of sores, and
desiring to be fed with the
crumbs which fell from the rich man’s
table: moreover the dogs
came and licked his sores. And it came to
pass, that the beggar died,
and was carried by the angels into
Abraham’s bosom:
the rich man also died and was buried; and in hell
he lift up his eyes, being
in torments, and seeth Abraham afar off,
and Lazarus in his bosom.
And he cried and said, Father Abraham,
have mercy on me, and send
Lazarus, that he may dip the tip of his
finger in water, and cool
my tongue; for I am tormented in this
flame. But Abraham said,
Son, remember that thou in thy lifetime
receivedst thy good things,
and likewise Lazarus evil things: but
now he is comforted, and thou
art tormented. And beside all this,
between us and you there is
a great gulf fixed: so that they which
would pass from hence to you
cannot; neither can they pass to us,
that would come from thence.
Then he said, I pray thee therefore,
father, that thou wouldest
send him to my father’s house: for I have
five brethren; that he may
testify unto them, lest they also come
into this place of torment.
Abraham saith unto him, They have Moses
and the prophets; let them
hear them. And he said, Nay, father
Abraham; but if one went unto
them from the dead, they will repent.
And he said unto him, If they
hear not Moses and the prophets,
neither will they be persuaded,
though one rose from the
dead.
The intervening portion of history,
contained in verses 14-18, should not be permitted
to conceal from us the intimate relation that subsists
between this and the preceding parable. The application
of the first for the reproof of covetousness, touched
a besetting sin of the Pharisees, and stung them to
the quick. Unable to bear in silence a rebuke
which their own consciences recognised as just, they
interrupted the preacher with rude derision.
They attempted to shield their own open sores from
painful probing by raising a laugh at the expense of
the reprover. I suspect they reckoned without
their host in this matter. This man spake with authority, and not as the
scribes; the common people heard him gladly. His speech was too divinely grave,
and too palpably true, to be turned aside by the clumsy wit of the men whom it
condemned. Intermitting for a moment the thread of his parabolic preaching, he
turned aside and addressed a few withering words directly to these uneasy
interrupters.
When this episode was over, the Lord
resumed his theme where it had been broken off.
I think it probable, both from the terms of the narrative,
and the nature of the case, that if these Pharisees
had not been present, or if they had held their peace
when the preaching galled them, the matter of verse
19th would have touched that of verse 13th the
parable of the rich man and Lazarus would have been
connected in place as well as in purport with that
of the prudent steward.
When he had followed up the first parable with a pungent application
regarding the abuse of riches, the Pharisees, also, who were covetous, heard
all these things, and they derided him. To them, in reply to their jesting, he
spoke the words verses 14-18, and then resumed, in verse 19th, There was a
certain rich man,
At the beginning of the chapter, addressing
his own disciples particularly, although some of the
Pharisees were present, he had taught them from the
case of the prudent steward to use the possessions
of this world with a view to their bearing on the
next; and now, to complete the lesson, he will teach
them, by a terrible example, the consequences of neglecting
that rule.
But before we proceed to examine the
parable in detail, it is important to determine generally
regarding its nature whether it is an allegory in
which spiritual things are represented by sensible
objects, or simply an instructive example, historic
or poetic, charged like other examples with moral
warning and reproof. The parable of the sower
is an allegory: the sower represents not a sower,
but a preacher; the seed represents not seed, but
the Gospel: whereas in the inner substance, as
well as the outward form of the lesson, the good Samaritan
is simply a good Samaritan, and the wounded traveller
is simply a wounded traveller. The parable of
the rich man and Lazarus is not allegory; it belongs
to the class of the Samaritan, and not to that of
the sower. It is not like a type, which a man cannot read until it is turned;
but like a manuscript, which delivers its sense directly and at first hand.
The description of the rich man is
short, but full. He “was clothed in purple
and fine linen, and fared sumptuously every day.”
He maintained a royal state and a prodigal expenditure.
This excess of luxury was not confined to great occasions;
it was the habit of every day.
Here, as in other cognate parables,
great wisdom is displayed in bringing the whole force
of the rebuke to bear on one point. It is not
intimated that this man made free with other people’s
money, or that he had gained his fortune in a dishonest
way. All other charges are removed, that the
weight lying all on one point may more effectually
imprint the intended lesson. To have represented
him as dishonest or drunken, would have blunted the
weapon’s edge. Here is an affluent citizen,
on whose fair fame the breath of scandal can affix
no blot. He had a large portion in this world,
and did not seek did not desire any other.
He spent his wealth in pleasing himself, and did not
lay it out in serving God or helping man. It
is not of essential importance whether such a man
miserably hoard his money, or voluptuously spend it
in feasts and fine clothing. Some men take more
pleasure in wealth accumulated, and others more in
wealth as the means of obtaining luxuries. These
are two branches from one root; the difference is
superficial and accidental: the essence of the
evil is the same in both a life of self-pleasing “without
God in the world.”
By a transition, purposely made very abrupt, we learn next that a beggar
named Lazarus
was laid at this rich man’s gate, full of sores.
Whether the position was chosen by the man himself,
or by his friends for him, the motive is obvious it
was expected that where so much was expended, perhaps
also wasted, some crumbs might come the beggar’s
way.
“The dogs came and licked his
sores;” perhaps the dogs, always plentiful in
eastern cities, that had no master; perhaps the dogs
that belonged to the rich man, and had turned aside
to lick the beggar’s sores when their master
rode past on the other side, and hid from the sight
of misery within the drapery of his stately mansion.
The act attributed to the dogs accords, as is well
known, with their instincts and habits. It is
soothing to the sufferer in the sensations of the moment,
and healthful in its effects. When the beggar’s
fortunate brother took no notice of his distress,
the dumb brutes did what they could to show their
sympathy. The stroke, though it wears all the
simplicity of nature, is in the parable due to consummate
art; the kindness of the brute brings out in deep
relief the inhumanity of man.
“And it came to pass that the
beggar died.” Towards this point the narrative
hastens. Here on the border is the hinge on which
the lesson turns. The whole parable is constructed
and spoken in order to show how this life bears on
eternity; and to make eternity, thus unveiled, bear
reciprocally on the present life. The death of
Lazarus happened in the ordinary course of things:
his sufferings came to an end. Not a word of
his dust, whether it was buried, or how. Of design,
and with deep meaning, the body is left unnoticed,
and the history of his soul is continued beyond the
boundary of life, as the real and uninterrupted history
of the man: in the same breath and in the same
sentence that intimates his death, we are informed
that he was carried by angels into Abraham’s
bosom. The dying and the entrance into the rest
that remaineth are expressed in one sentence, the
two clauses connected by a copulative conjunction:
the Lord means manifestly to teach us, as he afterwards
taught the repenting malefactor on the cross, that
there is no interval to his people between departing
from the body and being with Christ.
Nor did Jesus then reveal the immortality
of the soul: the doctrine was already accepted,
and he assumed it in his discourse as a truth known
and acknowledged. Even the resurrection of the
body was a commonplace among the immediate disciples
of Jesus during the period of his ministry: “Thy
brother shall rise again,” said the Lord to Martha.
“I know that he shall rise again,” she
replied, “in the resurrection at the last day:”
this was a belief that she previously possessed.
Abraham’s bosom, we may assume,
was already an expression employed by the Jews to
designate the place of the blessed beyond the grave.
It accords much better with the Lord’s purpose
and method to suppose that this phrase and the term
paradise, which he afterwards employed to express
the same idea, were adopted by him from the current
custom, than that they were then first introduced.
“The rich man also died and
was buried.” Here, for once, the rich and
the poor meet together: the beggar died, and the
rich man died too. The same event happened to
both, and in both cases the same terms are employed
to record the events; but very remarkable is the difference
introduced immediately after the article of death.
What came after death in the case of Lazarus?
He was carried by angels into Abraham’s bosom.
What came after death in the case of this rich man?
He was buried. Perhaps as much could not have
been said of Lazarus. The rich man was carried
from a sumptuous table to a sumptuous tomb; and the
poor man perhaps had not where to lay his head, when
its aching had ceased at length. It may be that
his body did not find a grave. His spirit found
happy rest and holy company; and we can afford therefore
to lose sight of the dissolving dust. First and
last the one had excellent earthly accommodation,
and the other had none; but conversely, he who had
neither a house when living nor a tomb when dead, walked
with God while the tabernacle stood, and went to God
when it fell; whereas he who made the earth his portion
got nothing for his portion but earth.
It would be a mischievous perversion
of the parable to suppose that because the one was
rich he was cast out, and because the other was poor
he was admitted into heaven: the true lesson is
in one aspect the reverse proposition: an ungodly
man is in the highest sense poor in spite of his wealth;
and a godly man is in the highest sense rich, in spite
of his poverty.
We enter now, or rather have already
entered, the region where the parable must needs glide,
not indeed from the literal into the metaphorical,
but from a foreground where every object is distinctly
seen to a background where the real objects cannot
be seen at all, and where, accordingly, only signals
are thrown up to tell what is their bulk and their
bearing. When the line of the instruction goes
through the separating veil and expatiates in the
unseen eternity, it must become dim and indistinct
to our vision. The moment that the parable in
its progress goes beyond the sphere of the present
life, our effort to follow it is like the struggle
of a living creature out of its element. Even
when the Lord of that unseen world is our instructor,
our conceptions regarding it are necessarily indirect,
second hand, and obscure. In this region the
capacity of the scholar is infantile, and, consequently,
the ability of the teacher cannot find scope.
While, therefore, those parts of the parable which
lay within our sphere were direct and literal, the
latter portion, lying beyond our sphere, is necessarily
indirect and expressed by signs: consequently,
though sufficiently precise in its larger leading
features, it is, in its minor details, indistinct,
inarticulate.
“The beggar died;” this
is sufficiently direct and literal: “and
was carried by angels into Abraham’s bosom,” there
we are already beyond our depth. The horizon
is dim now, by reason of distance and intervening
clouds. Equally obscure is the other line of information
when it has crossed the boundary of time. The
rich man died and was buried; this we clearly comprehend:
but “in hell he lifted up his eyes, being in
torment,” these are events of the
eternal world, shadowed forth in the language and
according to the conceptions of the present. We
perceive the direction in which they lie, and can
understand the moral lesson which they contain, but
the things themselves are shrouded from our intellectual
vision in impenetrable darkness. Not perhaps intentionally
in the structure of the parable, but necessarily, on
account of the place where its scene is latterly laid,
a veil thicker than that of allegory is wrapped around
it.
In accordance with the use of the
word in classic Greek, and of the corresponding term
in the Hebrew Scriptures, we might assume that “hell”
(Hades) only indicates generally the world of spirits,
as distinguished from this life in the body; while
the expression “being in torment,” serves
to determine the specific region or condition in that
world to which the rich man was consigned: the
term, however, wherever it occurs in the New Testament,
seems to be applied, in point of fact, to the place
of punishment, except in passages that are directly
quoted from the Old Testament. Both were now
in the world of spirits; but the beggar in that world
was in Abraham’s bosom, and the rich man in torment.
Both spirits near the same time passed from this world
by the same narrow passage; beyond the boundary their
paths diverged in opposite directions. Each went
to his own place as certainly and as necessarily as
vapour rises up, and water flows down. The ransomed
man entered the Father’s house and joined the
company of the holy; the ungodly gravitated, according
to his kind, into the place of woe.
Having lifted up his eyes, “he
seeth Abraham afar off and Lazarus in his bosom, and
he cried and said, Father Abraham, have mercy on me.”
Deeper and deeper into the mystery we are led at every
step. While the outline of the landscape is defined
sufficiently for the purpose or affording a landmark
to direct our course, all the lesser objects are entirely
concealed by the distance. We must beware lest,
in straining to get a glimpse of the invisible, we
should mistake the flitting shadows that the unnatural
effort sets afloat in the humours of our own eyes for
the veritable objects of the spiritual world.
Here I would fain arrest attention
on one guiding and dominating consideration, which
may become a thread to lead us safely through the
labyrinth, saving us the trouble of working out difficult
speculations, and averting from us the danger of injuring
ourselves by falls in the dark. The Lord delivered
and the evangelist recorded this parable for the purpose
of teaching, warning, directing, not spirits disembodied
in the other world, but men in the body here.
“All things are for your sakes;” the great
Teacher determined all his words and acts by a regard
to the benefit of his people. Even when Lazarus
died at Bethany, he said to his followers, “I
am glad for your sakes that I was not there, to the
intent that ye might believe;” his absence led
to the resurrection of Lazarus, and that event, he
foresaw, would confirm their faith. So here,
his aim is not to show how much he knows of the separate
state, or to astonish the world by the display of
its secrets; it is to give men while they are in the
body those views of the separate state which will
tell most effectually in leading the wicked to repentance,
and in establishing believers in the faith.
Taking the Teacher’s aim as
the determinating principle in the interpretation
of his discourse, I gather that the dialogue between
the rich man and Abraham does not describe absolutely
what is possible and actually takes place in the world
of spirits, as if it were addressed to an inhabitant
of that world, but gives such pictures of it, or signs
regarding it, as are intelligible to an inhabitant
of this world, and as will best bring the realities
of the future to bear with beneficial effect upon
the present character of men. By a system of coloured
lights we contrive to warn the conductors of engines
on our railways of danger to be avoided on the one
hand, and to intimate the line of safety on the other.
The things regarding which the engineers get instruction
are not within their view. A red or a white light
are not like the things in the distance that are to
be dreaded or desired; but a red or a white light
displayed serves the purpose when the things themselves
cannot be made known. There everything is determined
with a view to immediate practical benefit. I
think this helps me to grasp the difficult portions
of the parable. The purpose of the Lord was not
to display his own knowledge or gratify our curiosity.
He ever acted as the Saviour of the lost; he never
swerved from that aim. It was his meat to do the
Father’s will, and to finish his work.
In this particular case, accordingly, the object which
he kept in view was not to convey to men in the body
the absolute knowledge of a state, for knowing which
their faculties are unfit, but to convey to them in
time such shadows or signals of danger and safety
as the actual state of matters in the unseen world
truly suggested, and in such forms as that living
men, from their view-point, and with their mixed constitution,
could comprehend and appreciate.
When this principle is permitted to
dominate, the exposition of the dialogue becomes comparatively
both short and easy.
I do not know whether the saved are
within view of the lost in a future state, or whether
any communication can pass between them; I only know
that this parabolic picture, constructed as from a
view-point within the present world, is the exhibition
best fitted to make the diverse conditions of the
good and the evil beyond the grave effectual to warn
and instruct living men in the body. If any one
should curiously inquire about flame, what is its
nature, and how it can hurt a spirit, I can give no
information on the subject, and I can gather none from
the parable. One thing I know, that this representation
is a red light hung out before me, as I am rushing
forward on the line of life hung out to
warn me of danger, and hung out by the hand of him
who came to save the lost. I understand perfectly
what the beacon means to me: it is my part to
take the warning which it gives; and, as to the exact
state of events and capabilities in the world to come,
I shall learn all when I enter it. It may be
quite true that there is not a flame like that which
we are accustomed to see, and not a body, previous
to the resurrection, that may be burned in it.
But he who gave the word is my Friend; and he is true;
I shall trust him. He knows what I understand
by a flame; he knows how I am affected by the thought
of the pain which it inflicts. Knowing all these,
he has employed that word in order to apply the terrors
of the Lord for my warning; he has done all things
well. The minute features of the dialogue all
serve to give point to the main conception. The
request for a drop of water contributes to bring out
the intensity of the suffering; the answer of Abraham
shows that, beyond the boundary of this life, there
is no hope of relief. Jesus Christ came into
the world to save sinners it was to this
world he came; but no Saviour goes to that other world
to win back the lost who have permitted the day of
grace to run out. Christ is the way unto the
Father; but there is no way of passing from death unto
life, if the passage has not been made in this present
world.
Interpreting the rich man’s
intercession for his brothers on the same principle,
I do not know and cannot learn here, whether those
who have passed through death into the next world
unsaved, remember the character of the relatives whom
they left behind on earth, or whether, remembering
their condition, they will or can make intercession
in their behalf. All that I gather certainly
on the subject from this parable is, that although
a brother may permit his brother to abide in sin without
instruction or reproof, while all are living here and
walking by sight; yet, if the fate that awaits the
impenitent were adequately believed and realized,
he who believed and realized it, could not refrain
from effort to arouse the slumberers, and lead them
to repentance. Again, as in previous parts, I
am taught here not what I shall wish when I shall be
in the world of spirits, but what I should do now while
I am in the body and under grace. I should get
the message sent to every heedless brother who is
wasting his day of grace, while a messenger of flesh
and blood may be found, and there is a way by which
I may reach the objects of my solicitude.
By aid of the same machinery the
dialogue between the rich man and Abraham another
lesson is brought from the world of spirits to the
land of living men the lesson that those
who refuse to believe and obey under the means of
grace which God has appointed in the Church, would
not be more pliable if prodigies were shown to them
by way of overcoming their unbelief. The conception,
although conveyed by the lips of the rich man after
he had gone to his own place, that a miracle of power
would, if it were exhibited, bring alienated hearts
submissively back to God, springs native here in time.
It is the deceit with which many sing themselves to
sleep they would believe if one rose from
the dead. There are two answers to it: one
is, it would not be effectual although it were granted;
and the other is, even though it were fitted to accomplish
the object, it will not be given.
The conclusion of the whole matter
is, delays are dangerous; “Now is the accepted
time, now is the day of salvation.”
Some lessons still remain, that invite
our attention, and will repay it.
1. For mankind, after this life
is done, another world remains, consisting of two
opposite spheres or conditions, one of holiness and
happiness, the other of sin and misery. The Jewish
people and their rulers persistently demanded of Jesus
that he would show them a sign from heaven; and this
demand he as steadily refused to gratify. Unlike
all false prophets, the Lord Jesus maintained silence
in regard to the particular characteristics of the
unseen world; but one thing in compassionate love
he made known with abundant clearness, that there is
an absolute and permanent separation between good and
evil in the world to come, and that there are distinct
places of rewards and punishments.
Some people labour hard to shake from
their own minds the belief in a place and state of
retribution. To these I would affectionately suggest
that to disbelieve it will not destroy it. Even
in Scotland the narrow end of an island
nowhere very broad I have met with persons
well advanced in life, of good common education, and
good common sense, who had never seen the sea.
Suppose that these persons should have cause greatly
to dread the sea, and should therefore ardently desire
that there were no such thing in existence. Suppose
further, that, in the common way of the world, the
wish should become father to the thought, and that
they at last should firmly believe that there is not
a sea. Would their sentiment change the state
of the fact? Sinners, to whom the name and nature
of a place of punishment are disagreeable, have no
more power to annihilate the object of their aversion
than the shepherds of the Cheviots to wipe out the
sea by a wish. The sea is near those men though
they have never seen it; and, if they were cast into
it, they would perish, notwithstanding their opinion.
Ah! the thing which by God’s appointment is,
cannot by our arguments be blotted out of being.
2. There is a way from this present
life to the place of future misery, and also a way
to the place of future blessedness. The way from
this world to the place of woe was made by man’s
sin; the way from this world to the place of rest
was made by the incarnation, death, and resurrection
of Christ. By the one way you can glide easily
down; by the other you may climb toilsomely, but surely
up. The one goes with the corrupt affections;
the other against them. But let it be remembered
that the way of life, though hard, is not unhappy;
the struggle, when once fairly begun, is a grand,
gladsome thing. Forth from this world there are
only two paths; by one or other of these two all men
take their departure; on one or other of these two
paths we all are treading now. We owe it to Christ
that a way into safety has been opened for our sinful
world: “I am the way, ... no man cometh
unto the Father but by me.”
3. There is no way over from
one of these future states to the other. The
great gulf between them is fixed. This is the
main fact of the parable, and hereon its greatest
lesson grows. The great gulf is fixed, and after
death none can change his place. This fact we
now know without further revelation, and if we believe
it not on the testimony of Jesus, neither would we
believe it although one should rise from the dead to
declare it. This parable, in some of its minute
features, is to our vision necessarily obscure, because
the scene is laid in the life to come, but its main
outline is as clearly visible as any temporal object
could be. It teaches with great perspicuity that
when immortal spirits, at the dissolution of the body,
are thrown into the eternal world, it is no longer
possible that their place or their condition should
be changed: those who will not learn from this
word of Christ that the condition of the departed
is for ever fixed at death will not learn it in time
to profit by the lesson.
4. Our Lord has thus emphatically
taught us that there is no possibility of passing
from one state to another beyond the boundary of this
life in order that he may thereby constrain us to
make the needful transition now. The impassable
gulf between the saved and the outcast in eternity
is a dreadful sight; it was the compassionate Jesus
who drew aside the curtain and exposed it to view,
and it was his great love that moved him to make this
revelation. There is a line that crosses our path
a little way forward from the spot where we stand
to-day a line that divides our time from
our eternity invisible to our eyes, but
known unto God. We never know as we advance what
step of the journey will carry us over this line.
Christ has told us that if we pass it unsaved we cannot
obtain a change of condition beyond it; and he has
revealed to us this truth in order that we might be
induced now to make our calling and election sure.
These terrors of the Lord are displayed in order to
persuade men. There is no impassable gulf now
between a sinner and the Saviour; the way is open,
and the perennial invitation resounds from the Gospel,
“Come unto me;” but to those who pass from
this life without having obeyed that call, there remaineth
no more sacrifice for sin, no more a refuge from judgment.
This word of Christ is not of any
private interpretation; it may have pointed to Herod
or to the Pharisees in the first instance, but it was
of the nature of a seed, and its applications multiply
a hundred times a hundred fold down through the history
of the world. We may find the rich man in this
land to-day as certainly as in the circle that listened
that day to the preaching of Jesus. We find the
counterpart of this picture, not only in individuals,
but in associated churches; and if Christians, both
in their private and corporate capacities, are rich
both in temporal means and spiritual privileges, they
need not go far to seek for the Lazarus who is laid
at their gate. Lazarus lies in the streets and
lanes of our opulent cities; and, oh, he is full of
sores! For his sake, for Christ’s sake,
for our own sake, we must go out and show him kindness.
Dives lost his opportunity, lost it for
ever: we must “haste to the rescue”
lest we lose ours too. If we love the Lord, our
love will stir and burst out and overflow in life.
The life that will exercise itself in Christ-like
charity must begin now; and if a new life in the Lord
begin, it will reveal itself in love’s labour.
If we are bought with a price and quickened by the
Spirit, the beggar at our gate will soon discover
the change. He will not be left longer to the
mere promptings of natural instinct among his neighbours
for the soothing of his sorrows; the warm skilful
hand of intelligent and affectionate brotherhood will
raise him up and minister to his wants. Lazarus,
instead of having only a dog to lick his sores, will
be compassed about with human affections, and all
his wants supplied. As a diseased, miserable,
neglected lazar world felt the coming of Christ,
the poor and destitute of the world’s inhabitants
will know when a loving, hopeful Christian comes within
reach. Who touched me? might the huge world have
said, if it had possessed intelligence, when God became
man and dwelt among us. Who touched me? will
the outcasts on the earth begin to cry as they awaken
to consciousness, when a revived Church has visited
them in their prison, and brought to them the bread
of life.