Excellent
In this volume, Metropolitan Hilarion examines the parables of Jesus, arguably the most difficult and challenging form of his teaching. Even the disciples in Matthew’s Gospel, who are portrayed as exemplary students, require explanations from Jesus. If the dominant form of interpretation throughout most of history has been to allegorize the parables, the approach of modern scholars, beginning in the twentieth century with C. H. Dodd and Joachim Jeremias, has been to treat the parables as extended similes and metaphors. Metropolitan Hilarion’s contribution will likely be that he adeptly holds together modern and patristic interpretations, introducing those who are familiar only with critical scholarship to the tradition of the Church, while those who have been trained to read parables allegorically should welcome his engagement with modern criticism.