Abstract:
Many scholars have regarded the parable of the shrewd manager (Lk 16:1–8) as the most
puzzling of all parables as Jesus seems to use the unrighteous actions of a dishonest (worldly)
manager as a model for emulation by others. The unease associated with this understanding
was managed in part by focusing almost exclusively on the ‘shrewdness’ of the dishonest
manager. In this interpretation, it is not his unjust behaviour that is to be imitated but his wise
and intelligent actions. This interpretation has led to a divergence of applications regarding
the ‘property’ that was entrusted to him. The author, however, argues that, in the context
of the historical Jesus, the entrusted property in the parable references first and foremost
the Torah entrusted to God’s people and that the manager mirrors the life of Jesus, who was
‘accused’ by the religious leaders of being unjust. Despite being threatened, he continued
unabatedly to scatter God’s mercy, epitomised by the reduction of debt and symbolising the
dawning of God’s Kingdom. The manager is therefore not a negative figure but a positive
(diaphorical) example of what it means to be a faithful manager of God in the light of adversary
and opposition.