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Luke 15:14 — King James Version← Study notes

And when he had spent all, there arose a mighty famine in that land; and he began to be in want.


Luke 15:14Greek Interlinear

Greek · Luke 15:1415 words
GreekMeaning
δαπανήσαντοςdapanēsantos
When was spendingverbG1159
δὲde
howeverwordG1161
αὐτοῦautou
hepronounG846
πάνταpanta
everythingadjectiveG3956
ἐγένετοegeneto
there aroseverbG1096
λιμὸςlimos
a faminenounG3042
ἰσχυρὰischyra
boisterous, mighty(-ier), powerfuladjectiveG2478
κατὰkata
throughoutprepositionG2596
τὴνtēn
thearticleG3588
χώρανchōran
countrynounG5561
ἐκείνηνekeinēn
thatdemonstrativeG1565
καὶkai
andwordG2532
αὐτὸςautos
he himselfpronounG846
ἤρξατοērxato
beganverbG757
ὑστερεῖσθαιhystereisthai
to be in needverbG5302
Greek text from the SBL Greek New Testament (SBLGNT). Transliteration follows SBL Academic conventions.

Church Fathers on Luke 15:14

St. Luke has given three parables successively; the sheep which was lost and found, the piece of silver which was lost and found, the son who was dead and came to life again, in order that invited by a threefold remedy, we might heal our wounds. Christ as the Shepherd bears you on His own body, the Church as the woman seeks for thee, God as the Father receives you, the first, pity, the second, intercession, the third, reconciliation.

Ambrose · 4th century

There is also in the above-mentioned parable a rule of distinction with reference to the characters or dispositions of the sinners. The father receives his penitent son, exercising the freedom of his will, so as to know from whence he had fallen; and the shepherd seeks for the sheep that wanders and knows not how to return, and carries it on his shoulders, comparing to an irrational animal the foolish man, who, taken by another’s guile, had wandered like a sheep. This parable…

Chrysostom · 4th century

But some say that by the elder son is signified Israel according to the flesh, but by the other who left his father, the multitude of the Gentiles.

Cyril of Alexandria · 5th century
Read all 26 entries in the readerCatena Aurea · St. Thomas Aquinas, tr. J. H. Newman · public domain
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