You're talking over my head. If you want me to understand what you are saying you need to keep it simple. I'm not well educated.
Ah well I doubt very much that I talk over your head and I doubt you are not well educated.
But I can be hard to understand. I may be a little less logical than some.
But I may make up for that a little maybe by thinking kinda quickly sometimes in pictures. And I stress "sometimes."
I also can't type very well.
Now what is so great about you bringing this up again is something came to me about "allegory" - the Greek idea was because of politics.
Yep, if I remember correctly what my teacher said, they would talk their political schemes and plans and such in their assembly without letting rivals and opponents know their stuff.
Also back to parabolic - if one say a parable is parabolic - please remember that parabolic is much younger than the word parable.
So it's like saying your great grand kid is like you. (duh)
But if anybody decided they really wanted to know something about this and looked it up I gotta tell you the internet is either rich or rife or both with information. I love it. But we gotta be shrewd, yeah?
So yes parable did come from to "throw down along side"
Like sidewalk means the place you walk along side a road.
Like broadcast means to throw out in a wide fashion.
Yes?
They say "devil" shares a part of that.
Ok but right now may I say something about rupture?
It meant to break violently.
So we have interrupt which carries the "suddenly" part of "violently breaking."
But "corrupt"?
It meant to break violently along side. Someone who corrupts another is being next to them and is "breaking" (ruining) them. One guy wrote (long ago) that it was like holding a clock in your hand and throwing it down violently beside you.
So the "throw down (bole)along side(para)" of parable does not mean to break anything. Sorry to be a bore but I do love this stuff.
Now back to coining or creating words it says in Acts 11:26 that the word "Christians" for the disciples started being used at a certain time in a certain place. Which is cool, yes?
But I do not know if Paul coined any words himself. He may have, I just don't know.