It is longer and more detailed than it is similar. It happened once in real life, it was fictitious, but it was not imagined. There is a figurative metaphor in the Gospel than any other type of metaphor. Our parable is not actually a metaphor on kingdoms or mercy, but it belongs to the third category: a metaphor on judgment. When Jesus preached in Galilee, when Jesus told the end of the story and the end of Matthew, they told parables of a ruthless servant.
Read Matthew's parable stories together (or show the video "7" forgiving 70) with Matthew 18: 23-35 and calculate the debt of the saint's servant and his colleagues Please help to compare What did the young people learn from this metaphor about forgiveness? Find and share other clauses and encourage them to teach the importance of forgiveness (such as those mentioned in this outline). An example of another person's scripture Example of Joseph of Egypt (see Genesis 45: 1-7), Nirvana and his brothers (see Nirvana 7: 21), an example of Jesus Christ on the cross (see Luca) Show one of the videos suggested in the syllabus and ask the young people to share their thoughts.
Each metaphor has points. What does Jesus mean about faithful my metaphor? What we usually see in the metaphor is that the main point is expressed at the beginning and the end of the metaphor. Jesus describes this principle and then uses a metaphor to explain this principle. Then he will re-express the sentence at the end of the metaphor. That basically says: "The moral of the story is ... ..." Matthew 25.13: Now, at this point, we are at the end of the second metaphor. I found this sentence. Tell it after a parable of a faithful servant. This is a fable teaching the same information. The second metaphor adds the first metaphor. At the end of these two complementary metaphor, Jesus said, "Let's be careful because you do not know the age of a human child."