Jumping Jehosphat
3 And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?
4 Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye?
Matthew 7:3-4
Try something with me now if you will. If you won't, well, I'd rather wish that you had have.
the centurion's servant or the nobleman's son
Nobody's laughing yet? Why not, whatever has happened? Let's keep it going of course. Sum sounds awful like a son at first does it not.
the terrible steward or the widow's last mite
Then becomes
the unforgiven debtor of course mixed in with the prodigal back home with the Father
and we're there once again. I can keep on guessing around if you like, though I'm sure you're not much in the habit of remembering these stories as visually told. Jesus would but of course, cause they're of his own back at home. Speaking of which, that's the
king leaving his throne just in time for the banquet much later
cause the story's not stopping not even then, not for nothing just yet till it's all been, happened, and then.
The servants though were angry along with much of the men
Which became the guests standing in for the wedding as though nothing had happened. One in particular though was missing his clothes which somehow ties in with the missing lost lamb, and the oil which ran away from the lamps and everything that's lost in the house being found once again. Though it's not entirely said over and done yet is it then? You've still got to stand and answer the Lord about what's become of his clothes.
Yeah, no, I'm sorry I haven't a clue as to what just happened. I'm the last person who should be saying any of this I guess cause it's not my place once before. It's his though and that's what ultimately matters. How's that for being appropriately planted and then? I take it's not a question easily answered which is why the Lord'll have a few last minutes to work it all out feverishly in a flurry of counting and sorting.
Somebody send help then I guess, oh, but just wait. He did once before, from there and back already again, just in the distance it takes from one nail scarred hand to the next. Perhaps some water would desperately help with the dryness that's been found in the text, though, I doubt much really it would actually help. See, the problem as with Lazarus all hung up and dried is his not coming forth from the tomb with the slightest breath of the Lord.