Dark shadow

 Dark shadow

A dark shadow is attached to the parable of Christ. It is an interpretation later added by Matthew and Luke about the word of the Lord in Mark's Gospel (Mark 4: 11-12). If only Mark's talk, it is not too dark. But the explanation given by Matthew and Luke is tough. The disciples ask the Lord why they speak with a parable.
On the other hand, "You are allowed to know the mystery of the kingdom of God, but it will not be seen by other people, nor will it be understood by listening, so I will speak in the parable. The answer is. (Mark 8: 10, Matthew 13: 10-17)

Naturally, one doubt comes out here. Did Christ go out of his way to speak with a parable so that only one person could understand it and others would not understand it? I don't think so. However, "It speaks by the parable because it is not understood even if it sees, and it hears" is fairly clear. Speaking in parables so as not to understand, I think it's ill-natured. If this is bad, it becomes a fate planning theory.
It is a very dark shadow. God has decided from the beginning who wants to know his story and who he doesn't want to understand, and on the other hand, he says, "I'm not sure, i'm not sure about it." Is this true?

However, the parable of Jesuit Christ has a clear, easy shape that everyone can understand. Some are confusing. However, it is not the one like the mystery that only a part of person understands on purpose. It's not that some people understand it.

Perhaps, it couldn't figure out what the parable is going to say because of the difference of the life at that time and present whether the easiness of the difference was lost while it is told and told. Therefore, it did not become a story so that christ did not understand to some undesirable person who was on purpose. There is no basis for such an interpretation.