Luke 16
IllustNTLuke 16:1
Verse 1
Steward; a person intrusted with the care and management of property.
Luke 16:2
Verse 2
Give an account; prepare the accounts for settlement.
Luke 16:6
Verse 6
Oil; from the olive, used extensively by the Jews for food and for various other purposes.
Luke 16:7
Verse 7
Wheat. Such debts as this and that of the oil often arose as rents for land; rents being, in former times, often paid in kind.–Fourscore; eighty.
Luke 16:8
Verse 8
Because he had done wisely; that is, shrewdly, though dishonestly. It was his shrewdness only, in thus employing his power, while it lasted, to secure favors for himself when it should be gone, that the Lord praised.
Luke 16:9
Verse 9
The mammon of unrighteousness; wealth. The meaning is, that wealth will soon be taken away from its possessors, and that, while it remains in their power, they ought so to use it as to make friends who will receive them when it shall be forever gone.
Luke 16:11
Verse 11
In the unrighteous mammon; that is, in the care of money.
Luke 16:15
Verse 15
Is abomination; that is, is often abomination.
Luke 16:16-18. The connection between these remarks and those which precede is not obvious. Matthew records them as having been spoken on different occasions, (Matthew 11:12; Matthew 5:18,19:9.) where their meaning and connection are obvious.
Luke 16:18
Verse 18
Putteth away his wife; that is, for ordinary causes. (Matthew 19:9.)
Luke 16:19
Verse 19
Purple; worn only by persons of very high rank.
Luke 16:20,21. A very graphic description of extreme helplessness and misery.
Luke 16:22
Verse 22
Abraham’s bosom; into his presence and society.
Luke 16:31
Verse 31
The meaning is, that the change necessary to prepare the soul for heaven is a change in the affections and feelings of the heart; and any extraordinary revelations from heaven, or marvels of any kind, though they might produce wonder or alarm, would have no tendency to awaken love.–We must not allow the material images, which our Savior uses in this parable, to fix themselves permanently in our minds, and give form to our conceptions of the world of spirits. In this our present state of being, we can form no correct ideas of that world. The Savior teaches, in this parable, only certain spiritual truths, employing very striking imagery to give vividness and emphasis to the expression of them. These truths are, 1. That the conditions of men in this life do not correspond with their characters, and will often be reversed in the world to come, 2. That the ruin in which the sinner will then find himself involved is a permanent ruin, admitting of no restoration or remedy; and, 3. That the change necessary to prepare the impenitent for heaven, is a moral change, which can be produced only by moral influences.
