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0:20 Alright, welcome back, guys. 0:21 This week on The Daily Blade, I'm using Cormac McCarthy's 2006 novel, The Road, and its 2009 film adaptation as the framework for exploring the biblical themes and parallels woven throughout the story. 0:33 And specifically, we'll be covering the Heavenly Father and Earthly Father parallels that we see. 0:38 So, in all this narrative of the road, there are a lot of disturbing and crushing moments. 0:44 But this one that I'm about to describe is especially brutal. 0:47 So in their travels, the father and son have been trying to, you know, scrounge for food and find useful supplies while outsmarting and outrunning a gang of cannibals. 0:56 And on their journey, they come to a house that they decide to search for food materials. 1:01 They think it's safe enough. 1:02 And as they are slowly searching for anything useful inside the house, the father realizes something absolutely heartstopping. 1:09 The gang of cannibals that they have been trying to avoid this entire time have actually taken up residence in that house. 1:16 And when the father looks outside, he actually sees many of the gang members coming back from one of their trips. 1:22 And so the father hurries the boy to an upstairs bathroom and closes the door with both of them inside. 1:27 But the father soon surmises and realizes that they will not be able to conceal themselves for very much longer. 1:33 So actually, earlier in the film, the father and son have a single revolver with two rounds. 1:39 And the dad was explaining to the son how he could use the firearm on himself in the event that things got, you know, too dire, right? 1:47 However, at this point of their journey, they only have one remaining round. 1:50 So just a single bullet. 1:52 And in the panic of the situation in that upstairs bathroom, the father realizes that in order to save his son from a gruesome and torturous and grisly death, that he would actually need to kill his own son. 2:05 So he points the revolver at his son's head. 2:08 And even in the drama of the situation, this the boy, he's able to ask one question. 2:15 When will I see you again? 2:18 I mean, even just thinking through that as a father, it's just so brutal. 2:22 And now in the film, miraculously, the father and son are actually able to escape without being detected. 2:27 So the father was not forced to do the unthinkable. 2:30 But the memory of that interaction between he and his son will certainly endure. 2:35 So, as many of you can likely predict, this story certainly has shades of what we see with Abraham and Isaac as described in the book of Genesis. 2:42 And with that biblical event, God tests Abraham by commanding him to take Isaac, his only son, the son of promise, that he waited so long for to Mount Moriah and to sacrifice him there. 2:52 So Abraham obeyed, and he is and his son Isaac climbed the mountain together, with Isaac carrying the wood for the burnt offering without realizing that he was actually going to be the offering. 3:02 And when they reached the designated place, Abraham built the altar, arranged the wood that Isaac had carried, and then he put his son Isaac on that altar and was preparing to slaughter him. 3:14 But at the critical moment when all seemed lost and the outcome inevitable, an angel of the Lord called out from heaven and commanded Abraham not to harm his son. 3:23 So Abraham had proven that he had feared God and he would withhold nothing from God, including his own son. 3:29 And God provided a ram whose horns were stuck in a thicket, and that is what they use for the sacrifice. 3:35 Now I've talked about this in other daily blades, and I don't have time to go into it fully here, but just look at the symbolism. 3:40 What is a ram? 3:41 It's an adult male lamb. 3:43 And then what is a thicket? 3:45 You know, it's a group of plants that are filled with thorns, right? 3:49 And this ram, this adult male lamb, was stuck by its horns in the thorns. 3:56 So you might even say that the lamb provided by God was wearing a crown of thorns before he was sacrificed. 4:03 I mean, come on, guys. 4:04 Bible's awesome. 4:05 You gotta give it your attention. 4:07 So let's go back to the story from the road and let's look at the heavenly father parallel. 4:11 So we obviously have the cross in plain view. 4:14 You know, our heavenly father gave his son over to suffering. 4:17 In Romans 8 32, it says, He who did not spare his own son but gave him up for us all. 4:22 And then Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane essentially asks, Is there any other way, God, other than what I'm about to have to walk through? 4:28 And then we see that in Matthew 26, 39. 4:31 But the reality is there wasn't. 4:33 This was God's plan from the beginning. 4:35 And the answer on Calvary's death becomes the answer to when will I see you again? 4:41 The answer was three days. 4:43 When Jesus died, all of his followers and all of his enemies thought that that was the end of the story. 4:48 But three days later, he resurrected from the grave. 4:50 So God's answer to the when will I see you again question was soon, very soon. 4:55 And Christianity transforms death from annihilation into separation with future reunion. 5:02 And the son in the road instinctively asks the deepest human question you can ask, which is, Will death end us? 5:09 And now the earthly father parallel. 5:12 Every father will die before his son, that that's usually the way it goes. 5:16 And there will be a last conversation. 5:18 And the boy's question, when will I see you again? 5:21 is the question sons ask at gravesites typically. 5:25 Christian fathers, you can actually answer that question now, though, while they're alive. 5:30 Like, hey, if I die, I'll see you in glory. 5:33 That's why I'm raising you to know Christ. 5:35 That's what you can tell your sons. 5:36 That's the greatest inheritance a father can give. 5:40 And so as a father, you must cut through all the cultural and artistic answers to the question of when will I see you again? 5:45 There are a lot of people that think we die and become angels, or they think as long as you live a pretty good life and never kill anyone, you get to go to heaven. 5:51 And even then, they think heaven is just a place where a bunch of fat baby angels are flying around playing harps. 5:56 It is your job to guide your sons. 5:59 It's your job to teach them while you are still here. 6:02 And I'm just telling you, please do not wait until you're dying in some hospital bed someday to have an answer to that question of when will I see you again? 6:13 So it's a question that is written on every little boy's heart, and none of us are guaranteed a long life that ends with an extended hospital stay before we cross over to begin with. 6:21 And if you don't treat the moments with your sons as if they're fleeting, you could potentially miss out on doing your duty to train them up in the way they should go. 6:29 Please don't miss out on your opportunity.