Ten Virgins? Hmmmm…
The parable of the ten Virgins is often cited as a warning to all to be ready, ready for the Day our Lord returns to collect His church. And in this parable such a message is possible. However, ten virgins are a bit of overkill to make the aforementioned point. Why are ten Virgins cited in this parable? Why not cite twelve or just six or four or, more simply, just two? Two would have made the point quite nicely — if the point was simply to warn about being prepared. However, I believe the parable was meant to teach us more than most typically believe.
To be sure, the parable speaks of ten virgins, but I would suggest that the focus is actually on two groups of five virgins. Assuredly, it is not the virgins who are the sole focus of the parable. However, they do represent something, especially as they are cast into two separate groups of five. The lamps they carry represent something greater, however, something central to the people of Israel from Mt Sinai right up to this day.
And all of the virgins sleeping as they wait for the bridegroom, the shout in the night announcing His arrival and the whole parable cast in the light of an ancient Jewish wedding symbolically teaches more than simply “being prepared’.
I strongly suspect Christ depicted ten Virgins in His parable as two groups of five — with each group, with their five lamps, as metaphors for the five books of the Torah (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy) and the Torah represented in two different ways. One way, the Torah being kept “by the letter” only, and the other, the Torah being kept by the letter and “in the spirit”. Undoubtedly, the oil in the lamps represents that spirit, the Holy Spirit.
A 1st century Jew would be predisposed to readily understand Christ’s symbolism of the lamps the virgins carried.
Thy word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path. (Psalm 119:105)
And…
For the commandment is a lamp and the teaching a light, and the reproofs of discipline are the way of life, (Proverbs 6:23)
Both the verses above likens the Word of God to a lamp. To a 1st century Jew that was understood as the Torah itself, and in particular, to the Ten commandments revealed therein. And, of course, it would be self-evident to the hearers of Christ’s parable that a lamp without oil would be useless for its intended purpose, just as the Torah and the Ten Commandments without the Holy Spirit would be just poetic words inked onto parchment, without power and fruitless in their intended purpose.
It is interesting to note that both groups of virgins slept while waiting for the arrival of the bridegroom, and that both groups were in fact looking forward to His arrival. But does that sleep represent something? And the shout in the night? the shout that announces the bridegroom’s arrival and awakens the virgins from their sleep, that must certainly have a symbolic meaning, too. All of Jesus’ parables are steeped in symbolism. That is the function of a parable — to say something indirectly, veiled in metaphor, and doing so for this purpose:
“This is why I speak to them in parables, because seeing they do not see, and hearing they do not hear, nor do they understand.” (Matthew 13:13; Mark 4:11-12 RSV)
So, let us consider what symbols are used in this parable and just what message is Jesus conveying.
Firstly, as already mentioned the ten lamps of the ten virgins represent the Word/Law of God — but in two different conditions. And as likewise already mentioned, to a 1st century Jew five lamps (two instantances of five) would be identified as the five books of the Torah, thus two groups of five lamps. As I see it Jesus depicted ten virgins with ten lamps to allude to two differing states of the law. And, of course, the oil of the lamps represents the Holy Spirit, the very element that is the illuminating power of the lamps — just as the Holy Spirit is the illuminating Power of the Word of God. The two states of the Word/Law represented by the two groups of five virgins with their symbolic lamps is beautifully depicted by the prophet Jeremiah:
Behold, the days are coming, says the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah, not like the covenant which I made with their fathers when I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt, my covenant which they broke, though I was their husband, says the Lord. But this is the covenant which I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the Lord: I will put my law within them, and I will write it upon their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. And no longer shall each man teach his neighbor and each his brother, saying, ‘Know the Lord,’ for they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, says the Lord; for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.” (Jeremiah 31:31-34)
Jeremiah clearly speaks of the “New Covenant” and the covenant made with Israel previously, the “Old Covenant”. That Old Covenant which Israel agreed to in the wilderness, at Mt. Sinai, was the Ten Commandments spoken to Israel face-to-face by God (not through an intermediary) and written in stone by God with His very own finger. (Exodus 20, 31:18)
Now Jeremiah tells us the Old Covenant, the one written in stone by God and broken within days by Israel was God’s law, the Ten Commandments. Jeremiah goes on to say that God would in the future from Jeremiah’s time going to make a new covenant with unfaithful Israel. However, with the new covenant God would again write His law, the very same Ten Commandments, not in stone as the first time, but the second time in the hearts of His people.
So, it would appear the lamps in their two groups of five represent the two covenants of God’s law. The lamps with little oil, symbolizing the lack of the Holy Spirit, representing the Old Covenant written in stone. The five lamps with abundant oil representing the New Covenant written on hearts.
It is obvious that both groups of virgins are looking forward to the arrival of the Bridegroom. And, that, of course, being the arrival of the Messiah. Both groups of virgins sleep as they wait His arrival. However, it is not a sleep they experience. It is quite apparent that sleep here is a metaphor for death. The virgins represent to groups of people who look forward to the arrival of the Messiah and also, while waiting, realize death. We can be assured that their sleep is the sleep of death. Jesus uses the death metaphor more that once in his miracles. Raising His friend Lazarus is an excellent example of His doing so. (John 11:1-44)
When Jesus was told of Lazarus’ illness, Jesus deliberately delayed going to him. Once Lazarus was dead, Jesus then embarked for Bethany. When He determined to make the trip, His disciples were dismayed, questioning Jesus why he would go to Bethany, it being so close to Jerusalem and the ones who wished to kill Him. Jesus told them that their friend Lazarus was sleeping and that He was going to Bethany to wake him. The disciples didn’t have a clue. They said that if Lazarus was sleeping then he would recover. Jesus had to tell them plainly and bluntly that Lazarus was dead, not sleeping, but dead. It is the same with the virgins in both groups, they do not go to sleep waiting for the Bridegroom, they die, and they sleep the sleep of death as the world awaits the return of the bridegroom, Jesus.
But of course, at the arrival of the Bridegroom there is a shout in the night and all the virgins are awakened! This certainly alludes to Paul’s description of the return of Christ and the 1st resurrection at the beginning of the Millennium where the dead (and living) in Christ rise and meet Christ in the air. It is then later at the end of the Millennium when Christ and His Bride, the Church, return to earth for the marriage feast after those one thousand years in Heaven, and the rest of the dead rise in the 2nd resurrection to judgement and rejection by Christ. (1 Thessalonians 4:16-17, Revelation 20)
So, to conclude, the following is how I interpret the parable of the Ten Virgins:
As already stated, the Ten Virgins represent two groups — two groups of believers — or at least, two groups of those professing belief.
The five lamps of each group represent the five books of the Torah. The Torah because to 1st century Jews the Torah would be the embodiment of God’s Word, His instruction, His law, His way.
The oil for the lamps represents the Spirit of God, the Holy Spirit, the very element that gives life to the law, the Torah. Just as oil when present in a lamp gives the lamp power to illuminate and reveal. It is the Holy Spirit that empowers the Word of God, to illuminate and guide one with truth though darkness.
As Jeremiah pointed out, the Law written on stone was cold, lifeless and ultimately ineffective in binding man to God. However, the Law written on hearts of flesh by God would give eternal life and an eternal relationship with God.
The virgins with insufficient oil can be likened to those who rely on ritualistic worksto bind God to themselves. (Please note that I said – bind God to themselves – an impossible feat for a sinner.) They represent the Old Covenant, a covenant carved in lifeless, cold stone. And when they finally stumble along in the dark without the light of their lamps to guide them to the wedding feast too late to enter, they would also be unable to illuminate their own faces when the doorman at the feast would try to identify them in the dark outside the door. And so it would be said, “I do not know you”!
The five virgins with abundant oil for their lamps can be likened to those of the New Covenant, dressed properly for the marriage feast, with the blood of Christ, filled with the Holy Spirit, and God’s law written on their hearts of flesh. With their lamps of the New Covenant the “Way” to the bridegroom and marriage feast is illuminated and clear, and they arrive precisely on time to enter the marriage feast. Moreover, the doorman, by the light of their lamps, can see clearly the faces of the virgins, recognizing them for who they are permitting them entrance.
Yes, the parable of the Ten Virgins is somewhat about being prepared for the return of Christ. But, I hope I have shed at least a little light on the deeper significance of the story. It is not just looking forward to the return of Christ that is important, it is one’s spiritual “orientation” that Jesus focuses on. To be “prepared”, by placing one’s trust in God alone, in God’s New Covenant of promise, Faith and Holy Spirit; and not simply attemping to “buy” entrance into the marriage feast relying soley one’s good, but insufficient, good works.
Marcus
