Arise to go to the Heavenly
Father
Jos 5:9a.10-12; 2 Cor 5:17-21; Lk 15:1-3.11-32 (Lent 4 / C)
“Come and hear, all who fear God. I will tell what he did for my soul” (Divine Office)
Today, on this “Laetare” (Rejoice) Sunday, we hear the story of the Prodigal Son. There
are two more parables in today’s Gospel. These three parables are to be known
as parables of the lost. The first parable of the lost sheep depicts the
pitiable folly. The second parable of the lost coin portrays wretched
self-degradation, and the third is about ingratitude.
In the parable of the Prodigal
son, there are three characters. First, the elder brother. He was sorry that
his brother had come home. He stands for the self-righteous Pharisees who would
rather see a sinner destroyed than saved. His attitude shows that his years of
obedience to his father had been years of grim duty and not of loving service. He
lacks sympathy. He referred to the prodigal not as ‘his brother’ but as ‘your
son’. He was the kind of self-righteous character who would cheerfully have
kicked a man farther into the gutter when he was already down. He suspected his brother of the sins he would
have liked to commit.
Secondly, the father. He was moved
by the return of the son ruined by sin. He is indeed an icon of our Heavenly
Father reflected in the face of Christ: “While he was still a long way off, his
father caught sight of him and was filled with compassion. He ran to his son,
embraced him and kissed him” (Lk 15:20). Jesus makes us feel that any man, even
the worst sinner, is so very important to God that he does not want to lose him
in any way. He is with ineffable joy, always willing to grant us forgiveness even
to the point of not sparing his Son’s life.
Thirdly, the self-seeking younger.
From the root of self-seeking grow the sins of sensuality and pride. It is a
state of perpetual dissatisfaction, departure, and distance from God. It is a
vile, servile state. The soul that is made a drudge, either to the world or to
the flesh, wastes its substance and lives riotously (Eccl. 9:18). It is a lost
soul like a traveler out of the way. The Prodigal son considered how bad his
condition was. He perished with hunger. He is determined to say, “I will arise
and go to my father”. True repentance is arising and coming back to God. The confession
of sin is a necessary condition of peace and pardon. True penitents have a high
value for God’s house and its privileges (Ps 84: 4,10).
Sinners will not come to the
service of Christ till they are brought to see themselves just ready to perish
in the service of sin. We are not debtors to the flesh. The conversion of a
soul from sin to God is the raising of our soul from death to life. It is finding
the lost. It is a great, wonderful, and happy change. Because the lost is
found, the dead is made alive, and the unprofitable became profitable.
“Your word is a lamp for my steps, and a light for my
path” (Divine Office)