Alastair's Adversaria - The Parable of Eliezer's Test
Episode Date: May 25, 2026This reflection on the Parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus was first published on the Anchored Argosy: https://argosy.substack.com/i/197935620/the-parable-of-eliezers-test Within it I reference the f...ollowing articles, book, and podcast: Alastair Roberts, 'Good Samaritan Politics': https://argosy.substack.com/i/139859823/good-samaritan-politics Alastair Roberts, 'Why Mordecai Did Not Bow': https://argosy.substack.com/i/142855877/why-mordecai-did-not-bow Peter Williams, 'The Surprising Genius of Jesus': https://amzn.to/4nLyPbG Theopolis Podcast on Malachi 2:17—3:5: https://soundcloud.com/user-812874628/episode-878-refiner-of-the Keith Yoder, 'In The Bosom of Abraham': https://www.jstor.org/stable/26871774 Follow my Substack, the Anchored Argosy at https://argosy.substack.com/. See my latest podcasts at https://adversariapodcast.com/. If you have enjoyed my videos and podcasts, please tell your friends. If you are interested in supporting my videos and podcasts and my research more generally, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://www.paypal.com/donate/?business=4WX77P4F8S7WL), or by buying books for my research on Amazon (www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/3…3O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following reflection is entitled The Parable of Eliezer's Test.
It was first published on the Anchored Argosy.
As James Jordan likes to observe, the Holy Spirit does not waste his breath.
We should pay attention to the details of Holy Scripture,
especially the surprising and unexpected ones,
as they can often be the stepping stones to hidden insights.
We should remember this principle when hearing the parables of Jesus,
which often contain details and expressions that seem unnecessarily
specific or elusive, introducing seemingly extraneous elements or evoking other seemingly unrelated texts.
In the past, I have discussed the parable of the Good Samaritan along such lines,
observing the way in which many of the details of that narrative, such as the Samaritan,
the road from Jerusalem to Jericho, and the specific form of the act of mercy, are integral to
the deeper meaning of the parable. To those inclined to read or to misread the parables as
illustrative stories or fables, their meaning might be presumed to be almost exhausted with a
simple key, such as Jesus gives to the parable of the soa in Luke chapter 8, verses 9 to 15.
However, parables are not mere illustrative stories, and even when Jesus gives us the key to the
parable, a great deal remains to be explored within them, especially when you consider the Old
Testament scriptures upon which Jesus was drawing. For instance, in the parable of the soa,
one could consider the image of God as a sower,
sowing the land with his restored people in Jeremiah chapter 31, verses 27 and 28.
Earlier in the book of Jeremiah, God had charged the people to
break up your fallow ground and sow not among thorns,
Jeremiah chapter 4 verse 3, referring to their hearts, as is apparent from the verse that follows.
In Ezekiel chapter 11, verse 19, the people are described as having a stony heart.
In Jeremiah chapter 31, verse 31 to 34, directly after the image of God's sewing, we read of God placing his law within people's hearts, where Ezekiel chapter 11 verse 19 speaks of God giving them a heart of flesh in place of their heart of stone.
Putting these images together with Jesus' key to the parable of the sower, we have a much richer picture than a simple illustrative story about different responses to Jesus' message.
The image of sowing the word in receptive hearts is one that evokes new covenant themes.
See also Isaiah chapter 55 verses 10 to 13, another new covenant image of God as Sower.
As Entie Wright has recognised, the parable of the Sower evokes Israel's larger story,
along with its climax, in ways that exceed the sorts of readings of the parable
one might consider as a child in Sunday school.
It is a parable of the kingdom, describing God.
bringing of his promised restoration in the fullness of the times,
not merely an illustrative story about perennial differences in people's responses to God's word.
One parable that has always somewhat perplexed me is the parable of the rich man in Lazarus
in Luke chapter 16 versus 19 to 31. There was a rich man who was clothed in purple and fine linen
and who feasted sumptuously every day and at his gate was laid a poor man named
Lazarus, covered with sores, who desired to be fed with what fell from the rich man's table.
Moreover, even the dogs came and licked his sores.
The poor man died and was carried by the angels to Abraham's side.
The rich man also died and was buried, and in Hades being in torment,
he lifted up his eyes and saw Abraham far off and Lazarus at his side.
And he called out, Father Abraham, have mercy on me, and send Lazarus to dip the end of his
finger in water and cool my tongue, for I am in anguish in this flame. But Abraham said,
Child, remember that you in your lifetime received your good things, and Lazarus in like manner
bad things, but now he is comforted here, and you are in anguish. And besides all this, between us
and you a great chasm has been fixed, in order that those who had passed from here to you may not
be able, and none may cross from there to us. And he said,
Then I beg you, Father, to send him to my father's house, for I have five brothers, so that he may warn them, lest they also come into this place of torment.
But Abraham said, they have Moses and the prophets, let them hear them.
And he said, No, Father Abraham, but if someone goes to them from the dead, they will repent.
He said to him, if they do not hear Moses and the prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone should rise from the dead.
reading this parable several details of nagnomy over the years,
among them the named character of Lazarus,
the focus upon the figure of Abraham,
the portrayal of the post-mortem state, and the five brothers.
Besides these details, one might also wonder about the rich man's clothes,
the dogs, and about the rich man's request that Lazarus be sent to his brothers.
While some of these more specific details might be brushed off,
the combination of them all suggests that,
more is going on in the parable that we might at first suspect. In particular, the named character
of Lazarus sticks out. Few parables have named characters within them, and none that could really
be compared with Lazarus here. There is no other Lazarus in Luke's Gospel. Lazarus, the
brother of Mary and Martha, is, of course, an important figure in John's Gospel, where Jesus raises him
back to life. We might speculate upon the possibility of a relationship between these two Lazarus's.
However, there really does not seem to be much to fill out the supposed association.
An important breakthrough is recognising that Lazarus is a form of the Old Testament name, Elyza.
Elyza was a son of Aaron who replaced him as high priest.
However, the more important figure for our purposes is Elyzer, the chief servant of Abraham,
to whom we were introduced in Genesis chapter 15, verses 2 and 3.
There, prior to the births of Ishmael and Isaac, Eliezer of Damascus is Abraham's heir.
Later, Abraham entrusts his chief servant, the oldest of his household, who had charge of all that he had,
with the task of finding a bride for his son Isaac, Genesis 24 verse 2.
While the servant of Genesis chapter 24 is not explicitly identified as Eliezer,
seems reasonable to do so, and the tradition routinely makes this identification.
The identification of Lazarus with Abraham's chief servant makes sense of the association between the two figures.
Lazarus going to Abraham's side suggests a uniquely close relationship between them,
something beyond the post-mortem state common to all the Old Covenant righteous.
Further, when we consider it, it starts to make more sense of why the rich man will treat Lazarus as Abraham's servant,
twice requesting that Abraham sent Lazarus to do something on his behalf,
verse 24 and then again in verses 27 and 28.
The rich man is also described with a bit more specificity than we might expect for a figure in a parable.
He was clothed in purple and fine linen in verse 19 and had five brothers in verse 28.
Clothes of purple and fine linen are royal raiment,
or might suggest the garments of the high priest that we see in extest.
Esther's chapter 28. Mordecai was dressed in purple and fine linen in Esther chapter 8, verse 15,
indicating the royal authority which King Ahazueras had entrusted him with. The rich man then seems to be a
king, ruler, dignitary or high official of some kind. The parable of the rich man of Lazarus
occurs in the context of a sequence of parables directed against the scribes, Pharisees and religious
leaders, the parable of the lost sheep, lost coin and lost son, and the parable of the unjust steward.
In the context, an identification of the rich man with the high priest makes a lot of sense.
It also helps us to understand the five brothers.
Caiaphas, the son-in-law of Anas, was high priest and had five brothers-in-law,
who would be high priests themselves in the decades leading up to the destruction of Jerusalem.
The veiled description of the high priest Caiaphas as the rich man would make sense of what we know of him,
In John, Caiaphas appears after the raising of Lazarus, disbelieving Jesus,
resisting the sign of the raising of Lazarus, and leading the plot to put Jesus to death,
in John chapter 11, verses 45 to 53.
Jesus was later tried before Caiaphas.
Caiaphas also persecuted the early church, as we see in Acts chapter 5 verse 17.
And as a sadducee, he opposed the message of the resurrection.
The gate of the temple, as the house of the high priest, was also a place where poor men,
and beggars were found, as we see in Acts chapter 3 verse 2.
I had gone this far back in 2020 when I produced my biblical reflections on the passage.
Yet although these identifications made a lot of sense,
dimensions of how they served the larger picture were yet unclear to me.
There were several dots that had not yet been joined up for me.
There are other Old Testament resonances we might hear in this passage.
The story of the rich man and the man at the gate might recall the story.
story of Haman and Mordecai in Esther.
Mordecai's refusal to bow to Haman with the rest of the king's servants at the gate,
I've discussed this story elsewhere, provokes Haman to plot the destruction of the Jews.
Peter Williams comments on these allusions in his superb little book,
The Surprising Genius of Jesus.
Noting the presence of the fine linen and purple in that narrative, Esther chapter 8, verse 15,
we might remember that Haman desired to dress himself up in kingly garments,
and receive royal honours, as we see in Esther chapter 6, verses 6 to 9.
The story of Haman and Mordecai, as I have argued elsewhere,
alludes to the story of Joseph in the House of Potipha,
and is a story of an unfaithful steward.
This is a piece of the picture to be kept in mind,
I will return to it later.
As Peter Williams also suggests,
we might further hear echoes of the story of Job
in the depiction of Lazarus as the man covered with sores
and sitting in the ashes, Job chapter 2, verse 7 and 8.
Job, formerly the wealthiest in his society, was reduced to the state of Lazarus,
before being vindicated by God and raised up.
The radical reversal and divine vindication in the elevation of the sore-covered sufferer to great riches
recalls that earlier story.
Connections with the stories of Abraham and Job are strengthened with the verbal association
between Luke chapter 16 verse 23, Genesis chapter 22 verse 4, and Job chapter 2 verse 12.
We should also consider the broader themes that the parable shares with the neighbouring parables and teaching,
and some of the interplays between them. Peter Williams observes the interplay between the depiction of Lazarus
and the youngest son in the parable of the lost son. And he was longing to be fed with the pods that the pigs ate,
and no one gave him anything, Luke chapter 15 verse 16.
And then in Luke chapter 16 verse 21,
who desired to be fed with what fell from the rich man's table.
Moreover, even the dogs came and licked his sores.
Pigs and dogs are associated unclean animals,
as we see in Matthew chapter 7 verse 6,
and the scraps from the table are dogs' food,
Mark chapter 7 versus 27 and 28.
Both Lazarus and the lost son are connected with the unclean animals
and both wish to eat the food of the unclean animals.
These are powerful and related images of persons who are despised, destitute and excluded.
Williams further observes the continued presence of themes of fatherhood
and failed recognition of brotherhood.
The rich man addresses Abraham's father but treats even the exalted Lazarus,
the favoured heir of the one he claims as his father,
merely as a servant and messenger boy. These themes are important in the parable of the last son.
There is another theme that surfaces in surprising ways. The immediately preceding parable is the
parable is the parable of the unjust steward, of an unfaithful steward about to be removed from his position,
with a short window of time to cushion his fall. That parable relates to the religious leaders
who would be removed from their positions of authority within a few decades. If the rich man is the high priest,
then he is the principal steward.
The unjust steward knew about the shortness of the time remaining to him.
However, the rich man was oblivious to the radical reversal of his fortunes that was about to occur.
Jesus' teaching at this point resonates with earlier passages in Luke,
such as chapter 12 verses 35 to 48.
There Jesus gave three related illustrations,
the first concerning servants who need to be prepared for their master's unannounced return,
the second concerning a master of a house who needs to be prepared for the thieves coming.
The master of the house here may perhaps be another description for the chief steward rather than the owner,
and the third of a manager set over the household who will need to give an account of himself upon his master's return.
In the third of these illustrations, Jesus depicts an unfaithful manager starting to act as if he were a master,
mistreating the servants under him and eating and drinking and getting.
If we consider that the high priest is the appointed manager of the Lord's house, to which the Lord has yet to return,
I discussed this theme recently in our latest Theopolis podcast on Malachi,
then the identification of the high priest with the rich man of the parable adds extra levels of irony,
suggesting that the rich man's supposed wealth is not really his own, but belongs to a master that he does not acknowledge.
The allusions to the garments of purple and fine linen in the Book of Esther
connect him with Haman, another unfaithful steward who liked to act as if he were the king,
lauding it over the other servants before he received his comeuppance.
Having identified Lazarus with Abraham's servant, things open up even more.
Lazarus was the faithful steward of Abraham's house,
the oldest of his household who had charge of all that he had,
as we read it in Genesis chapter 24 verse 2.
The rich man turns out to be an unfaithful steward, a chief steward of the Lord's house, acting as if he were a king,
while Lazarus is the original and archetypal faithful steward of Abraham's house.
They are each other's opposite number, and while the man who fancies himself the owner of his father's house is cast out,
the rejected and suffering faithful servant becomes heir of all.
The foreign-born servant inheriting, while the supposed sons are cast out,
is very much in keeping with Jesus' teaching about the reversals of the kingdom of God.
See, for instance, Luke chapter 13, verses 28 to 30.
The rich man's request to Abraham is that he send Lazarus to cool his tongue with a drop of water,
in verse 24.
In Exodus chapter 24, Eliezer or Lazarus was sent by his master Abraham on a mission to find a wife,
for Isaac, Abraham's son. He devised a test, through which he would find the appointed woman.
And he said, O Lord, God of my master Abraham, please grant me success today and show steadfast love to my
master Abraham. Behold, I am standing by the spring of water, and the daughters of the men of the city
are coming out to draw water. Let the young woman, to whom I shall say, please let down your jar that I may
drink, and who shall say, drink and I will water your camels. Let her be the one whom you have
appointed for your servant Isaac. By this I shall know that you have shown steadfast love to my master.
Genesis chapter 24 verses 12 to 14. This was a test of hospitality. Notably, Elyzer did not lead with a declaration
of his master's immense wealth, as he would later do with the mercenary Laban in verse 35, or by disclosed
the many valuable gifts he had with him.
The test was whether, before she knew any of these things,
there was a woman who had showed kindness significantly over and above what was requested.
The rich man's request to Abraham ironically recalls the test of Eliezer or Lazarus in Genesis chapter 24,
alerting the reader to the fact that with Lazarus in need at his gate,
the rich man faced the same test of hospitality as Rebecca had received in Genesis'
chapter 24, it was through the test of hospitality presented by Abraham's servant that Rebecca was
included in Abraham's family and became the mistress of all his house. I was thirsty and you gave me
drink, Matthew chapter 25, verse 35. Having failed to give a cup of cold water, Matthew chapter 10
versus 40 to 42, the rich man is now left with no one to quench his own thirst. The parable of the rich
Manor Lazarus then, involves a series of subtle intertextual illusions, both within its
immediate context and in the wider scripture. These illusions disclose the surprising identities
of its characters and manifest some devastating reversals. As in the parable of the lost
sun, those presumed to be in find themselves outside, while those who might consider themselves
excluded and mere servants are welcomed and given the privileges of beloved son.
What is the larger message of the parable? How do the pieces fit together?
Lazarus, it seems to me, is not merely a generic poor person, but especially represents the suffering
and impoverished messengers of the kingdom, rejected and despised by the religious leaders of the day.
Jesus and his disciples are coming in the spirit of faithful Eliezer, Abraham's servant,
presenting people with a test of hospitality, much as Eliezer once did.
for Rebecca. Jesus and his disciples went from town to town and village to village in each place
testing what sort of reception they would receive, Luke chapter 9 versus 1 to 6 and 10 versus 1 to 16.
This test would ultimately be faced by the high priest and the leaders in Jerusalem and they would
crucify him. The time would then come when the tables would be turned. Lazarus would be vindicated,
while those who had failed to show him hospitality would be excluded.
Like the rich man of the parable, they would be caught unawares.
They did not know the hour of their visitation.
After having developed this reading,
I came across an article by Keith Yoda,
which independently makes several similar points.
It's always encouraging to find someone who recognises the same connections
and can serve as some degree of confirmation
that what I am seeing here is not just in my imagination.
If you'd like to support this and other reflections and things like it,
please consider supporting me on Patreon or PayPal.
The links are below.
God bless and thank you for listening.
