In Jesus' life, he taught one of them in various ways to convey the allegory. A fable is a story of the earth with the meaning of heaven. This means that we are talking about Jesus having a real person who is doing something common at that time. Sometimes he uses valuable material or spiritual values in the past. So he is making everything to make the story more realistic. However, with the closure of poor men and women, there is always more complexity for closing animals and subjects about his father, himself, and those who do not obey God.
In Luke 15, we are teaching to us three metaphors, not to eliminate outsiders, but welcome. All three were answers to Physics and Scribe complaints, and Jesus ate with tax collectors and sinners. Here Jesus fulfilled the theme of Isaiah that the Holy One of Israel is not a separatist but a Savior. A lost coin represents a woman as a metaphor of God. When she noticed, she was very happy. The metaphor of the lost (prodigal son) son urged his brother to be happy for the return of the brothers lost to his brother so as not to be disgusted by his brothers. In fact, Luke 15: 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 22-24, and 32 have joy and joy. Jesus called for peace with outsiders, lost people, and heathen settlements. Likewise, the parable of his compassionate summary (Luke 10: 25-37) urges peace and other people to inconvenience.
Jesus accepts sinners and sometimes eats with sinners (not to mention tax collectors). In Luke 15, Jesus used three metaphors to answer their criticism: a lost sheep, a lost coin, and a prodigal (lost) son. These metaphor implies comparing and attention to sinners. The righteous people that Jesus implies does not reject sinners and attempts to bring them back to grace. Most parable stories of the Gospel are a bit abstract. They are short and allegorical and they explain their morals through exemplary but intentional general roles and actions. However, the character in the "fable of my son's prodigal son" feels like an individual. We experience their motivation, emotions, and ideas. The reader experienced basic emotions at hand: father's happiness, elder brother's ruthless heart, and younger brother's humiliation. The metaphor reads like a short story