Prosopopoeia as talking with someone's other voice is a compelling interpretation for
Christ appearance: the Incarnation, teaching, and Passover. Judgment Scene and the
identification of Jesus with the persecuted Church in the scene of the conversion of St. Paul is
an example of the presence of the talking with other's voice in the Bible. However, the
otherness is resistant to our inner (Levinas) and can not be reduced. I speak on behalf of the
Other will always be myself, and so every time I am myself a focalizor of the narration in
which enclose the Other. The parable of the merciful Samaritan through the interchangeability
of a Christian with the suffering and with the helper points to the possibility of understanding
the Prosopopoeia as a participant in the logic of the Incarnation and gives the theological
premise of adopting a strategy of being directed at expressing the inexpressible experience of
the Other