Re-imagining the parables
Young Chang
You think you know what the parable of the prodigal son is about,
but if you read it the way Dom Garino does, you might realize there’s
more to know.
Same with the Bible parable of the good Samaritan and the one
about the laborers in the vineyard.
Garino, a Bible study leader at St. Mark Presbyterian Church in
Newport Beach, teaches an ongoing course every Monday titled
“Re-Imagine the World -- An Introduction to the Parables of Jesus.â€
The class’ name actually derives from Bernard Brandon Scott’s book
of the same title. Scott, a well-respected biblical scholar, analyzes
and interprets the parables in the Bible using literary, structural
and historical criticism. Garino has studied with Scott.
Garino said Scott tries to help get his readers into the shoes of
Jesus’ original audience.
“Remember, we’re hearing this with our western ears in 2002,â€
Garino said of the parables. “What Brandon Scott helps people do is
look at what was the parable about at the time and how radical was
it?â€
Take the story of the prodigal son. It’s about a father with two
sons -- one’s a wastrel, the other isn’t. The bad one basically runs
away and then returns. The father welcomes him with open arms and
throws a party to celebrate. The righteous older brother gets
resentful, wondering why his sibling got a party instead of
punishment.
Through his course, Garino points out that there are three ways to
identify with this story. The reader could relate to the father, the
younger son or the jealous brother.
If you step into the father’s shoes, Garino will tell you that men
in biblical times, especially older men, didn’t run. To do so would
have required hiking up the robe a bit, to not trip over it. To show
legs and run was considered a shameful thing.
“Knowing some of the history of this helps you appreciate the
depth of compassion,†Garino said.
He also brings in other art forms that are relevant to the parable
being studied. Last week, Garino used Rembrandt’s oil painting “The
Return of the Prodigal Son.â€
“It expands our understanding into experiencing Scripture as well
and [Garino] leads us so we can identify with the good, the bad and
the ugly, ‘cause we’re all each some of that in varying degrees,â€
said St. Mark member Wendy Depko.
The class started two weeks ago and will continue indefinitely
depending on student response. With 40 parables in the Bible, it’s
unlikely they’ll run out of ground to cover.
About eight to 10 people attend each class. Often they’re not the
same batch. Lois Butler, a member of St. Mark who has participated in
Garino’s course, says she appreciates learning even what a shekel
might have been worth back then. That sort of context helps her
better understand the messages of each parable.
“I’ve seen depths in it that I have not seen before,†Butler said.
Garino noted that people who study the parables find the
interpretations challenging and different from the what they learned
as kids.
“I’m 58-years-old,†he said. “I’ve been knocked about by life with
different things, and I certainly look at the [parables] differently
now than when I read them when I was 10.â€
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.