Shameless Audacity: The Parable of the Friend at Midnight
And suppose the one inside answers, ‘Don’t bother me. The door is already locked, and my children and I are in bed. I can’t get up and give you anything.’
I tell you, even though he will not get up and give you the bread because of friendship, yet because of your shameless audacity he will surely get up and give you as much as you need. - Luke 11:5–8
They usually reflect lifelike situations in early first-century Israel, even when certain practices seem strange to us.
But at least once in almost every parable, something pushes the bounds of realism and forms a key to the symbolic level of meaning in the story.
The parable of the friend at midnight (Luke 11:5–8) affords an excellent example.
Few would have raised eyebrows about a friend arriving at midnight unannounced in a world without modern forms of communication or the ability to estimate the length of travel accurately.
During hot times of year, a person might deliberately travel in the cool of the evening.
Poor families may not have had leftovers, but neighbors regularly shared with each other, so the new host’s request even at midnight is not unusual.
Nor is the neighbor’s reluctance to get up.
He and his whole family may have slept in one bedroom, a level above the area where the family’s cow, sheep or goat might have spent the night indoors next to a door locked with a heavy metal bolt and padlock.
The three loaves requested were probably fist-sized loaves, so hardly extravagant.
What is striking is that the man will help his neighbor in response to his “shameless audacity” (verse 8).
Translations of the Greek anaideia here are often too weak.
The word means more than just persistence or boldness but importunity or impudence — chutzpah or moxie.
As the NIV text note indicates, some take the term to refer to the sleeping man’s desire not to lose face, though this seems a little less likely grammatically.
We do not have to approach him in one certain mood, style of speech or form of address.
Personal Reflection
Is there something you want to ask of God?
Do not be ashamed to ask.
Drawn from a study feature in the NIV Study Bible, Fully Revised Edition.
NIV Study Bible
thenivbible.com
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