To read the texts click on the texts: Mic 7:14-15, 18-20; Lk 15; 1-3, 11-32
The setting for the Parable
of the Prodigal son (more correctly called “The Prodigal father”) is the same
as at the beginning of Chapter 15 and concerns the murmuring of the Pharisees
and scribes because Jesus eats with “tax collectors and sinners.”
Direct taxes (poll tax, land
tax) were collected by tax collectors employed by the Romans, while tolls,
tariffs, and customs fees were collected at toll houses by toll collectors, the
group that appears frequently in the Gospels and is not entirely accurately identified
as “tax collectors.” Toll collectors paid in advance for the right to collect
tolls, so the system was open to abuse and corruption. The toll collectors were
often not natives of the area where they worked, and their wealth and collusion
with the Roman oppressors made them targets of scorn.
Those designated as
“sinners” by the Pharisees would have included not only persons who broke the
moral laws but also those who did not maintain the ritual purity practiced by
the Pharisees. The scandal was that Jesus received such outcasts, shared table
fellowship with them, and even played host to them.
The beginning of the Parable
which speaks of “two sons”
indicates that the focus is on their relationship
to the Father and not to each
other as “brothers”. The demand of the younger son is disrespectful and
irregular. There is no rationale here. He was breaking family ties and treating
his father as if he were already dead. The father divides his life among them. As soon as the
younger son receives his share, there is a progressive estrangement. He goes
into a far away country which indicates gentile land and mismanages the money
given to him. He spends it all on loose living. His descent into poverty and
deprivation is swift. He descends as low as to agree to work for a gentile and
in a gentile land. Swine were an abomination to Jews, and they were prohibited
from raising swine anywhere. The man who would dare to breed swine was
considered cursed. Human beings even ate
carob pods, which were used as animal fodder, in times of famine. This is an
indication of the complete destitution of the younger son. He comes to his
senses when he is at the depth of his degradation and in the midst of mire and
filth.
There are four parts to the speech that the younger
son prepares
1. An address – “Father”
2. A confession – “I have sinned”
3. Contrition – “I am no longer worthy”
4. A Petition – “treat me as one of your hired servants.
The journey begins with coming to himself and ends
with his going to his Father. It means learning to say ABBA again, putting
one’s whole trust in the heavenly Father, returning to the Father’s house and
the Father’s arms. That the younger son is serious about his return is shown in
his action. He gets up from the mire and begins the return to his father.
The father’s response is mind boggling. While the son
is still a long way off, he runs to meet him. In the first century it was
considered undignified for grown men to run. The father sets aside respect and
dignity. His only focus is his son. The son begins his speech but is not
allowed to complete it. The father interrupts his son even before he can
finish. He gives instructions to his servants for a robe, ring and sandals all
of which indicate that the son is given back his original place as son. The
call to kill the fatted calf is a sign that the return of the son is to be
regarded as a time of celebration. The dead son has come alive, the lost son
has been found.
Even as the celebration is on, the elder son is
introduced. When he is informed about the reason for the celebration, he sulks
and refuses to enter the house. Like in the case of his younger son, the father
goes to meet his elder son. However, while he does not have to plead with the
younger son, he does so with the elder son. The elder son does not address his
father as “Father”, nor does he refer to his brother as “brother”. His argues
his case on the grounds of merit and what he thinks he rightfully deserves.
Even as he does this, he points to the failings of the younger son. What then is
the point of being good?
In his response to the elder son, the father first
addresses his son as “Son” though he was not addressed as “Father” and also
reminds him that the younger son is also his brother. Reconciliation for the
younger son meant reconciliation with his father, but for the elder son it
means reconciliation with his brother. There is thus both the vertical
dimension and the horizontal dimension of reconciliation.
Much of the fascination of
this parable lies in its ability to resonate with our life experiences:
adolescent rebellion; alienation from family; the appeal of the new and
foreign; the consequences of foolish living; the warmth of home remembered; the
experience of self-encounter, awakening, and repentance; the joy of reunion; the
power of forgiveness; the dynamics of “brotherly love” that leads to one
brother’s departure and the other’s indignation; and the contrast between
relationships based on merit and relationships based on faithful love.
Unfortunately, we usually
learn to demand our rights before we learn to value our relationships. The
younger son was acting within his rights, but he was destroying his closest
relationships in the process. How many times a week will a parent hear one child
say to another, “This is mine. Give it to me”? Children quickly learn to demand
their rights, but it often takes much longer for them to learn how to maintain
relationships. Governments and law courts defend our civil rights, but how do
we learn to defend our civil and familial relationships?
From a distance, the “far
country” can be very appealing. Young people leave home for fast living.
Spouses move out to form liaisons with exciting new partners. The glow that
surrounds the far country is a mirage, however. Home never looks as good as when
it is remembered from the far country.
The journey home begins with
coming to oneself. That means that the most difficult step is the first one.
The younger son had to face himself in the swine pen of his own making before
he faced his father on the road. Pride can keep us from admitting our mistakes;
self-esteem may require us to take decisive action to set right the things we
have done wrong.
Although the opportunity to
restore relationships and remedy wrongs begins with coming to oneself, it
requires more. We must go to the person we have wronged. Was the younger son
just seeking to improve his situation, or was he seeking reconciliation with
his father? The direct confession in his interior monologue confirms the
sincerity of his intent. Neither the younger son’s pride nor his shame mattered
as much as his need to restore his relationship to his father. He did not ask
for his filial privileges to be restored. He did not even ask for forgiveness.
He merely stated his confession. When the prodigal son came to himself, he came
to his father. . . .
The temptation a parent
faces is to allow the child’s separation to become reciprocal. If the child
separates from the parent, the parent may be tempted to respond in kind. The
parable’s model of parental love insists, however, that no matter what the son/daughter
has done he/she is still son/daughter. When no one else would even give the
prodigal something to eat, the father runs to him and accepts him back. Love
requires no confession and no restitution. The joyful celebration begins as
soon as the father recognized the son’s profile on the horizon.
Insofar as we may see God’s
love reflected in the response of the waiting father, the parable reassures all
who would confess, “Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you.” The
father runs to meet his son even before the son can voice his confession, and
the father’s response is far more receptive than the son had dared even to
imagine. The father’s celebration conveys the joy in heaven. The picture is one
of sheer grace. No penance is required; it is enough that the son has come
home.
If this is the picture of
God’s joy in receiving a sinner coming home, then it can also give assurance of
God’s love to those who face death wondering how God will receive them. In the
end we all return home as sinners, so Jesus’ parable invites us to trust that
God’s goodness and mercy will be at least as great as that of a loving human
father.
The elder brother represents
all of us who think we can make it on our own, all of us who might be proud of
the kind of lives we live. Here is the contrast between those who want to live
by justice and merit and those who must ask for grace. The parable shows that
those who would live by merit can never know the joy of grace. We cannot share
in the Father’s grace if we demand that he deal with us according to what we
deserve. Sharing in God’s grace requires that we join in the celebration when
others are recipients of that grace also. Part of the fellowship with Christ is
receiving and rejoicing with others who do not deserve our forgiveness or God’s
grace. Each person is of such value to God, however, that none is excluded from
God’s grace. Neither should we withhold our forgiveness.
The parable leaves us with
the question of whether the elder brother joined the celebration. Did he go in
and welcome his brother home, or did he stay outside pouting and feeling
wronged? The parable ends there because that is the decision each of us must
make. If we go in, we accept grace as the Father’s rule for life in the family.
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