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The View from the Ditch — and Other Angles: Interpreting the Parable of the Good Samaritan1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2009

J. I. H. McDonald
Affiliation:
23 Ravelston House Road Edinburgh EH4 3LP

Extract

It has long been recognised that there are significant parallels between the folk tale and the parable. The folk tale presents a single perspective. Only the necessary persons appear; only two persons speak or act at any one time. Contrasts are developed; inessentials avoided. Even feelings or motives are not mentioned unless they shed light on the plot. Repetition is part of the technique — for example, three characters come down the same road and meet the same woman begging by the roadside. Structuralists such as Propp and Lévi-Strauss look for the deep structures underlying all such stories and evident in the function of actants or characters and the resolution of oppositions.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Scottish Journal of Theology Ltd 1996

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References

2 Cf. Bultmann, R., The History of the Synoptic Tradition, Eng.tr. Oxford, 1968, pp. 188192, 204Google Scholar. cf. Wilder, A. N., ‘Story and Story-World’, in The Bible and the Literary Critic Minneapolis 1991, pp. 132148Google Scholar.

3 Cf. Stibbe, M. W. G., ‘Structuralism’, in A Dictionary of Biblical Interpretation (ed. Houlden, Cogginsand), London and Philadelphia 1990, pp. 650655Google Scholar.

4 Cf. Gadamer, Habermas and Levinas, who as modern philosophers give tradition a central place.

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6 Cf. Goulder, M., Midrash and Lection in Matthew, London 1974, pp. 4769Google Scholar.

7 Cf. Judges 9.7–15; 2 Sam. 12.1–4; 2 Kings 14.9; Is. 5.1–6; 28.23–29; Ezek. 17.3–10; 34 passim.

8 Westermann, G., The Parables of Jesus in the Light of the Old Testament, Eng. tr. Edinburgh 1990Google Scholar.

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10 Westermann, pp. 2, 151.

11 Cf. Westermann, pp. 168–69.

12 Conversely, various types of indicative parable which use comparison to disclose some aspect of God's activity, are also implicitly imperatival: cf. Luke 7.41–43, 11.5–8 and 18.1–8.

13 Cf. Gerhardsson, B., The Good Samaritan – The Good Shepherd, Lund, Copenhagen 1958, pp. 1122Google Scholar. The Fathers consistently followed the indicative motif in their interpretation of the parable.

14 MCf. Jūlicher, A., Die Gleichnisreden Jesu I–II, Tübingen 18881910Google Scholar; and see Westermann's discussion of Eicholz, G., Gleichnisse der Evangelien, 19711979, in The Parables of Jems, pp. 160161Google Scholar.

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30 cf. the Mishna, ‘He that eats the bread of Samaritans is like one that eats the flesh of swine.’

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41 This theme is currently being examined by Graham Blount, parish minister and research student at Edinburgh, to whom I express my indebtedness.

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