ParablePattern

Last edit August 28, 2004
Inspired by KoansMetaphorsAndParables

Some aspects of the parable form that might make a pattern...

  • Are typically oral stories
  • Are good stories that draw the hearer in
  • invitational, not prescriptive - invites the listener to see things a they might not otherwise see, suggest more than they say, and invite a transformation of perception.
  • "arresting crystallizations of insight that invite further insight"
  • do not invoke external authority- are authoritative in themselves
  • are about seeing for oneself, not about hearing what to believe
  • Said singly, presented in a context appropriate to the insight.
  • Said many times, not always the same way, but with differing emphasis and elaboration.
  • Not presented as speeches, but in the context of a dialog with the hearer.
  • Often appear as simple truisms, but the hearer is expected to see them in metaphor, and observe what lesson there might be beyond the surface meaning.
--StevenNewton

Parables on Wiki

SharpenTheSaw probably counts as a parable.