How do you rate yourself there, what are you going to do as you look to eternity. Are you going to say to yourself, ‘I will take the highest place; God will be pleased with me. I am not a bad person; I am all right. I proceed towards the end of life, confident that, through my superior life, I am ready to take up my place in heaven.’ That is the kind of point he is getting across: that there is a great day of division coming, a division of society into two classes. It comes either on the day of our death or on the great final day of judgment, whichever happens first for us. There will be those who will be abased, and those who will be exalted; those who will be everlastingly rejected by God, and those who will be taken with him into eternal glory. This parable pictures the eternal destiny of men and women – accepted or rejected. The two great classes. It's a parable about how we view ourselves.