Parable of the Hidden Treasure
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Cite This SourceThe Parable of the Hidden Treasure was given by Jesus in the New Testament (Matthew). It only consists of a single sentence, and it directly precedes the Parable of the Pearl.
From Like the Parable of the Pearl, the intent of this parable is to convey that some rewards are great enough to be worth great sacrifices: the man may have to sell all that he had in order to be able to buy the field, but when he buys the field, he gains the treasure in it, which is worth more than all that he sold. Jesus told this parable to express the idea that even if living according to God's commandments was a difficult thing to do and demanded great sacrifices, they would result in the reward of the Kingdom of Heaven. An alternate interpretation is that Jesus is the man who buys the field, paying for it with His blood to attain the hidden treasure, i.e. Israel or the Church.
A similar parable appears in the apocryphal Gospel of Thomas (Patterson-Meyer Translation):
- Note - The Pearl of Great Price is found in the Gospel of Thomas as well, but does not follow this parable as in the Gospel of Matthew. Instead, it is 33 verses before (verse 76)
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Last updated on Wednesday December 05, 2007 at 07:29:49 PST (GMT -0800)
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