Rosenritter
New member
Yes, he was dead. The Bible says so: “This son of mine was dead and is alive again” (Luke 15:24).
Here is an example when you do not agree with the Bible.
When God speaks in plain language directly, we know this is true. When God speaks by his prophets and inspired writers in plain language directly, we know this is true. Yet inspired writers can even use metaphor, and parable, and story, and some of the characters that are quoted in the Bible do not speak with authority, or actually lie (such as the serpent in the garden, "Ye shall not surely die.")
What you reference is a fictional character that only exists within a parable, and even then he is obviously speaking in metaphor because the factual elements of the parable say the son was alive. Is that seriously your charge that Timotheos "does not believe the Bible?"