| I
wish to speak to you today of the parable of the prodigal son,
or, as it is becoming very common to call it, perhaps with greater
exactness, the parable of the lost son. I shall not read it
to you again. It has already been read in the lesson for the
day. And in any event it is too familiar to require that you
should be reminded even of the minuter details of the narrative.
Probably no passage of the Scriptures is more widely known or
more universally admired. The conversation and literature of
devotion are full of allusions to it. And in the conversation
and literature of the world it has far from an unhonoured place.
It
owes the high appreciation it has won, no doubt, in large
part to the exquisiteness of its literary form. From this
point of view it fully deserves not only the, measured praise
of a Grotius, but the enthusiastic exclamations of a Trench.
It is "the finest of Christ's parables, filled with true feeling,
and painted in the most beautiful colors." It is "the pearl
and crown of all the parables of Scripture." Nothing could
exceed the chaste perfection of the narrative, the picturesque
truth of its portraiture, the psychological delicacy of its
analysis. Here is a gem of storytelling, which must be pronounced
nothing less than artistically perfect, whether viewed in
its general impression, or in the elaboration of its details.
We must add to its literary beauty, however, the preciousness
of the lesson it conveys before we account for the place it
has won for itself in the hearts of men. In this setting of
fretted gold, a marvel of the artificer, there lies a priceless
jewel; and this jewel is displayed to such advantage by its
setting that men cannot choose but see and admire.
Indeed,
we may even say that the universal admiration the parable
commands has finished by becoming in some quarters a little
excessive. The message which the parable brings us is certainly
a great one. To lost sinners like you and me, assuredly few
messages could appeal with more overwhelming force. Our hearts
are wrung within us as we are made to realize that our Father
in heaven will receive our wandering souls back with the joy
with which this father in the parable received back his errant
son. But it is an exaggeration to represent this message as
all the Gospel, or even as the core of the Gospel; and to
speak of this parable therefore, as it has become widely common
to speak of it, as "the Gospel in the Gospel," or even as
the summation of the Gospel. It is not that. There are many
truths which it has no power to teach us that are essential
to the integrity of the Gospel: nay, the very heart of the
Gospel is not in it. And, therefore, precious as this parable
is to us, and priceless as is its message, there are many
other passages of Scripture more precious still, because their
message enters more deeply into the substance of the Gospel.
Take this passage for example: "For God so loved the world,
that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth
on Him should not perish, but have ever lasting life." Or
this passage: "God, being rich in mercy, for His great love
wherewith He loved us, even when we were dead through our
trespasses, quickened us together with Christ (by grace have
ye been saved), and raised us up with Him and made us sit
with Him in the heavenly places with Christ Jesus." Or even
this short passage: "For the Son of Man came to seek and to
save that which was lost." All these are more precious passages
than the parable of the lost son, not merely because they
tell us more fully what is contained in the Gospel, but because
they uncover to us, as it does not, what lies at the heart
of the Gospel.
It
is important that we should recognize this. For the exaggerated
estimate which has been put upon this parable has borne bitter
fruit in the world. Beginning with an effort to read into
it all the Gospel, or at least the essence of the Gospel,
it has ended by reading out of the Gospel all that is not
in the parable. And thus this parable, the vehicle of a priceless
message, has been transformed into the instrument of a great
wrong. The worst things are often the corruption of the best:
and the attempt to make the parable of the lost son the norm
of the Gospel has resulted, I will not say merely in the curtailment
of the Gospel, - I will say rather in the evisceration of
the Gospel. On this platform there take their stand today
a growing multitude the entire tendency and effect of all
of whose efforts it is to eliminate from Christianity all
that gives it value in the world, all that makes it that religion
which has saved the world, and to- reduce it to the level
of a merely natural religion. "The Christianity of the prodigal
son is enough for us," they declare: and they declare this
with gusto because, to put it briefly, they do not like the
Christianity of the Bible or the Christianity of Christ, and
are happy not to find them in the parable of the lost son.
Now,
let us recognize frankly at the outset, that the reason why
these new teachers of an unchristian Christianity do not find
Christianity in the parable of the lost son is, briefly, because
this parable does not set forth Christianity, but only a small
fragment of Christian teaching. The turn they have given to
affairs is therefore merely the nemesis that treads on the
heels of the mistaken attempts to read a full Christianity
into this parable. The parable was not given to teach us Christianity,
in its essence or its sum. It was given to teach us one single
truth: a truth of the utmost value, not only full of emotional
power, but, when placed in its relation to other truths, of
the highest doctrinal significance; but not in itself sufficient
to constitute Christianity, or even to embody its essence.
How little what this parable teaches us can be conceived as
of itself Christianity may easily be made plain by simply
enumerating some of the fundamental elements of Christianity
which receive no expression in it: and this negative task
seems to be made incumbent on us at the outset of any study
of the parable by the circumstance of its perversion to the
uses of the propaganda of unbelief.
We
observe, then, in the first place, that there is no atonement
in this parable. And indeed it is precisely because there
is no atonement in this parable that it has been seized upon
by the modern tendency to which we have alluded, as the norm
of the only Christianity it will profess. For nothing is more
characteristic of this new type of Christianity than that
it knows and will know nothing of an atonement. The old Socinians
were quick to perceive this feature of the parable, and to
make use of it in their assault upon the doctrine of Christ's
satisfaction for sin. See, they cried, the father in the parable
asks no satisfaction before he will receive back his son:
he rather sees him afar off and runs to meet him and gives
him a free and royal welcome. The response is no doubt just
that other Scriptures clearly teach the atonement of which
no hint is given here; and that we have no "right to expect
that every passage in Scripture, and least of all these parables,
which exist under necessary limitations in their power of
setting forth the truth, shall contain the whole circle of
Christian doctrine." This answer is sufficient against the
Socinian who appealed to Scripture as a whole and required
to be reminded that we "must consider not what one Scripture
says, but what all." But it scarcely avails against our modern
enthusiast who either professedly or practically would fain
make this parable the embodiment of all the Christianity he
will profess. For him, Christianity must do without an atonement,
because it is quite obvious that there is no atonement in
this parable.
Nor
is that more than the beginning of the matter. It must do
without a Christ as well. For, we must observe, the parable
has as little of Christ in it as it has of an atonement. The
Socinians neglected to take note of this. In their zeal to
point out that there is no trace in the parable of a satisfaction
offered to the Father by which alone He might be enabled to
receive back the sinner, they failed to note that neither
is there trace in it of any mission of a Son at all-even merely
to plead with the wanderer, make known the Father's continued
love to him, and win him back to his right relation to the
Father. That much of a mission of Christ they themselves confessed.
But it is as absent from the parable as is the expiating Christ
of the Evangelicals. In truth, there is in the parable no
trace whatsoever of a Christ, in any form of mission. From
all that appears from the narrative, the errant son was left
absolutely alone in his sin, until, wholly of his own motion,
he conceived the idea of returning to the Father. If its teaching
is to be the one exclusive source of our Christianity we must
content ourselves therefore with a Christianity without Christ.
Nor
is even this by any means all. For, as has no doubt been noted
already, there is as little trace of the saving work of the
Holy Spirit in the parable as of that of Christ. The old Pelagians
were as quick to see this as were the Socinians later to observe
the absence of any hint of a sacrificial atonement. See, they
said, the prodigal moves wholly of his own power: there is
no efficient grace here, no effectual calling, no regeneration
of the Spirit. And there is not. If this parable is to constitute
our Christianity, then our Christianity must do without these
things.
And
doing without these things, it must do without a Holy Spirit
altogether. For there is not the slightest hint of a Holy
Spirit in any conceivable activity he may be thought to employ
in the whole parable. Reduce the mode and effect of His operation
to the most attenuated possible. Allow Him merely to plead
with men from without the penetralium of their personality,
to exercise influences upon them only of the nature of persuasion,
such as men can exercise upon one another-still there is no
hint of such influences here. From all that appears, the prodigal
suo motu turned to the Father and owed to no one so much as
a suggestion, much less assistance, in his resolve or its
execution. If our Christianity is to be derived from this
parable only, we shall have to get along without any Holy
Spirit.
And
even this is only the beginning. We shall have to get along
also without any God the Father. What you say, - the whole
parable concerns the father But what a father is this? It
is certainly not the Father of the Christian revelation and
not the Father of the Christian heart. He permits his son
to depart from him without apparent emotion; and so far as
appears he endures the absence of his son without a pang,
- making not the slightest endeavor to establish or maintain
communication with him or to recover him either to good or
to himself. If he manifests joy at the happy return of the
son after so many days, there is not the least evidence that
in all the intervening time he had expended upon him so much
as a single message, much less brought to bear upon him the
smallest inducement to return. In other words, what we know
as the "seeking love of God" is absolutely absent from the
dealing of the father with the son as here depicted: that
is, the love of God which most nearly concerns you and me
as sinners is conspicuous only by its absence. In this respect
the parable stands in its suggestions below the companion
parables of the lost sheep and the lost coin. When the shepherd
lost his sheep, he left the ninety and nine in the wilderness
and went after the lost one until he found it. When the woman
lost her coin, she lit a candle and swept the house and sought
diligently until she found it. But in the parable of the lost
son, the father is not pictured as doing anything of the sort.
The son leaves him and the son returns to him; and meanwhile
the father, so far as appears, goes about his own affairs
and leaves the son to go about his. So clear is it that this
parable was not intended to embody the whole Gospel and does
not contain even its essence. For what is the essence of the
Gospel if it is not the seeking love of God?
The
commentators, of course, have not left it so. Determined to
get the Gospel out of the parable, they diligently go to work
first to put it in. Thus one, in depicting the father's state
of mind, grows eloquent in his description of his yearning
love. "He has not forgotten his son, though he has forgotten
him. He has been thinking of him during the long period of
his absence. Probably he often cast glances along the road
to see if perchance the erring one was returning, thinking
he saw him in every stranger who made his appearance. He has
continued looking, longing, till hope deferred has made the
heart sick and weary to despair." Now no doubt the father
felt all this.
Only
the parable does not tell us so. And it would not have omitted
to tell us so, if this state of mind on the father's part
entered into the essence of its teaching. The fact is that
this commentator is rewriting the parable. He is not expounding
the parable we have, but composing another parable, a different
parable with different lessons. Our Lord, with His exquisitely
nice adjustment of every detail of this parable to His purpose,
we may be sure, has omitted nothing needed for the most poignant
conveyance of the meaning He intended it to convey. That the
expositor feels it necessary to insert all this merely proves
that he is bent on making the parable teach something foreign
to it as it stands. What he has especially in mind to make
it teach proves, as we read on, to be the autonomy of the
human will. The lost thing, in the case of this parable, is
a man: and because he is a man, and no lifeless thing nor
an unthinking beast, we are told, he cannot, like the coin
and the sheep, be sought. He must be left alone, to return,
if return he ever does, wholly of his own motion and accord.
Therefore, for sooth, the father's solicitude can only take
the form of a waiting! Seeking love can be expended on a coin
or a sheep, but not, it seems, on a man. In the case of a
man, waiting love is all that is in place, or is possible.
Is this the Gospel? Is this the Gospel even of these three
parables? When we were told of the shepherd seeking his sheep,
of the woman searching for her coin, was it of sheep and coins
that the Master would have His hearers think? Does God care
for oxen, or was it not altogether for our sakes that these
parables too were spoken?
Into
such self-contradict ions, to say nothing of oppositions to
the very coy cordis of the Gospel, do we fall when we refuse
to be led by the text and begin to twist -it like a nose of
wax to the teaching of our own lessons. The fact is, the parable
teaches us none of these things and we must not bend or break
it in a vain effort to make it teach them. Even when another
commentator more modestly tells us that the two earlier parables-those
of the lost sheep and the lost coin-set forth mainly the seeking
love of God; while the third-that of the lost son-" describes
rather the rise and growth, responsive to that love, of repentance
in - the heart of man."; he has gone far beyond his warrant.
Why say this parable teaches the rise and growth of repentance"
responsive to the seeking love of God"? There is no seeking
love of God in the parable's picture of the relation of the
father to the lost son, as indeed had just been allowed, in
the assignment of the teaching as to that to the preceding
parables. But why say even that it describes "the rise and
growth of repentance"? It does of course describe the path
which one repentant sinner's feet trod as he returned to his
father: and so far as the case of one may be the case of all,
we may therefore be said to have here, so far as the narrative
goes, a typical instance. But there is no evidence that this
description was intended as normative, and certainly no ground
for finding in this the purpose of the parable. That purpose
the text itself places elsewhere; and our wisdom certainly
lies in refusing to turn the parable into allegory, reading
into it all sorts of lessons which we fancy we may see lurking
in its language here and there. We are safest in strictly
confining ourselves to reading out of it the lesson it was
designed to teach. This lesson was certainly not "the growth
and course of sin" and "the growth and course of repentance";
but simply that "there is joy in heaven over one sinner that
repenteth." The exquisite surety of our Lord's touch as He
paints the career of the unhappy man whose fortunes He employs
to point His moral may tempt us to look upon the vivid picture
He draws as the normative instance of sin and repentance:
and surely there is no reason why we should not recognize
that the picture thus brought before us corresponds with remarkable
closeness to the great drama of human sin and repentance.
But one must be on his guard against being led astray here.
After all, the descriptions and analyses in the parable are
determined directly by the requirements of the story, not
by those of the history of the sinful soul over against its
God; and we must beware of treating the parable as if its
details belonged less to the picture than to something else
which it seems to us adapted to illustrate. The only safe
course is strictly to confine ourselves to the lesson the
parable was framed to teach.
This
is not to say, however, that this lesson is so single and
simple that we can derive no teaching from the parable beyond
what is compressible into a single proposition. It undoubtedly
has its main lesson; but it could not well teach that lesson
without teaching along with it certain subsidiary ones, closely
connected with it as corollaries and supports, or at least
implicated in the manner in which it is taught. Only, we must
be very wary that we do not either on the one hand confuse
these subsidiary things with the main lesson of the parable,
or on the other read into it lessons of our own, fancifully
derived from its mere forms of expression. We may perhaps
illustrate what we mean and at the same time gather the teaching
we may legitimately derive from the parable by asking ourselves
now seriously what we do really learn from it.
And
here, beginning at the extreme circumference of what we may
really affirm we learn from this parable, I think we may say
that we may derive from it, in the first place, - in its context,
in the way it is introduced and in its relation to the fellow-parables
coupled with it - one of those subtle, evidences of the deity
of our Lord which are strewn through the Synoptic Gospels.
Although it leads us away from our main course, it behoves
us to pause and take note of this, in view of the tendency
lingering in some quarters to deny to the Synoptic Gospels
a doctrine of the deity of Christ, and especially to the Jesus
of the Synoptics any real divine consciousness. It would seem
impossible for the unprejudiced reader to glance over these
parables in their setting without feeling that both the evangelist
and the Master as reported by him speak here out of an underlying
consciousness of His divine claims and estate. For, note the
occasion out of which these parables arose and the immediate
end to which they are directed. The publicans and sinners
were flocking to the gracious preaching of Jesus, and Jesus
was so far from repelling them, that He welcomed them to Him
and mixed in intimate intercourse with them. This the Pharisees
and Scribes made the subject of unpleasant remark among themselves.
And our Lord spoke these parables in defense of Himself against
their attack. But now note how He defends Himself. By parables
of a good shepherd seeking his lost sheep; of a distressed
woman seeking her lost coin; of a deserted father receiving
back his wayward child. We surely do not need to argue that
the good shepherd, the distressed woman, the deserted father
stands in each instance for God. Jesus Himself tells us this
in His application: "I say unto you" (and we must not miss
here the slight but majestic intimation of the dignity of
His person) "that there shall be joy in heaven"; "Likewise,
I say unto you there is joy before the angels of God." Yet
these parables are spoken to vindicate not God's, but Jesus'
reception of sinners. The underlying assumption that Jesus'
action and God's action are one and the same thing is unmistakable:
and no reader fails tacitly to recognize Jesus Himself under
the good shepherd and the distressed woman and the deserted
father. In Him and His action men may see how things are looked
upon in heaven. The lost, when they come to Him, are received
because this is heaven's way; and since this is heaven's way,
how could He do otherwise? This is not a mere appeal, as some
have supposed, to the sympathy of heaven: as if He would say
to the objector, "I have not your sympathy in this, but heaven
is on my side!" Nor is it a mere appeal to a future vindication:
as if He would say, "Now you condemn, but you will see it
differently after a while." It is a defense of His conduct
by reference of it to its true category. These publicans and
sinners-why, they are His lost ones: and does not in every
sphere of life he who loses what he values welcome its recovery
with joy? Throughout the whole discussion there throbs thus
the open implication that He bears the same relation to these
sinners that the shepherd does to the sheep lost from the
flock, the woman does to a coin lost from her store, the father
does to a wandering child. And what is this but an equally
open implication that He is in some mysterious way that Divine
Being against whom all sin is committed, away from whose smile
all sinners have turned, and back to whom they come when,
repenting of their sin, they are recovered to good and to
God?
In
these parables, then, we see Jesus teaching with authority.
And His. Divine voice is heard in them also rebuking sin.
For the next thing, perhaps, which it behoves us to take notice
of is the rebuke that sounds in them of the sin of spiritual
pride and jealousy. This rebuke of course culminates in the
portrait of the elder son and his unsympathetic attitude towards
the rejoicing over his brother's return home, which occupies
the latter part of the parable of the lost son. This episode
has given the expositors much trouble; but this has been occasioned
solely by their failure to apprehend aright the purpose of
the parable. It is in truth an integral part of the parable,
without which the parable would be incomplete.
In
the former two parables-those of the lost sheep and the lost
coin-Jesus was directly justifying Himself for "receiving
sinners and eating with them." His justification is, shortly,
that it is precisely the lost who require His attention: He
came to seek and to save the lost. But these parables run
up into a higher declaration: the declaration that there is
joy in heaven over one sinner that repents rather than over
ninety and nine just persons who need no repentance. This
high note then becomes the dominant note of the discourse:
and it is to illustrate it and to give it vividness and force
in the consciousness of His hearers that the, third parable-that
of the lost son-is spoken. This third parable has not precisely
the same direct apologetic purpose, therefore, which dominates
the other two. It becomes more didactic and as such more of
a mirror to reflect the entire situation and to carry home
to the questioners the whole involved truth. Its incidents
are drawn from a higher plane of experience and the action
becomes more complex, by which a more varied play of emotion
is allowed and a more complicated series of lessons is suggested.
It is, therefore, not content, like the former parables, merely
to illustrate the bare fact that joy accompanies the finding
of the lost, with the implication that as sinners are what
is lost to God, it is their recovery which causes Him joy.
It undertakes to take up this fact, already established by
the preceding parables, and to fix it in the heart as well
as in the mind by summoning to its support the deepest emotions
of the human soul, relieving at the same time the free play
of these emotions from all interference from the side of a
scrupulous sense of justice.
It
is this latter function which the episode of the elder brother
subserves; and it appears therefore not as an excrescence
upon the parable, but as an essential element in it. Its object
is to hold up the mirror of fact to the Pharisaic objectors
that they may see their conduct and attitude of mind in their
true light. Their moving principle was not, as they fancied,
a zeal for righteousness which would not have sin condoned,
but just a mean- spirited jealousy which was incapable of
the natural response of the human spirit in the presence of
a great blessing. They are like some crusty elder brother,
says our Lord, who, when the long-lost wanderer comes contritely
home, is filled with bitter jealousy of the joyful reception
he receives rather than with the generous delight that moves
all human hearts at the recovery of the lost.
The
effect, you see, is to place the Pharisaic objectors themselves
in the category of sinners, side by side with the outcasts
they had despised ; to probe their hard hearts until they
recognized their lost estate also; and so to bring them as
themselves prodigals back in repentance to the Father's house.
That they came back the parable does not say. It leaves them
in the midst of bitter controversy with the Father because
He is good. And here emerges a wonderful thing. That "seeking
love" which is not signalized in the parable with reference
to the lost - the confessedly lost - son, is brought before
us in all its beautiful appeal with reference to these yet
unrepentant elder brothers. For, you will observe, the father
does not wait for the elder brother to come into the house
to him; he goes out to him. He speaks soothing words to him
in response to his outpouring of bitterness and disrespect.
When, in outrageous words, this son celebrates his own righteousness
and accuses the father of hardness and neglect, refusing indeed
in his wrath to recognize his relationship either with him
or his: the father responds with mild entreaties, addressing
him tenderly as "' child," proffering unbroken intercourse
with him, endowing him with all his possessions, - in a word,
pleading with him as only a loving father can. Did the elder
son hearken to these soft reproofs and yield to this endearing
appeal? It was for the Pharisees to answer that question.
Our Lord leaves it there. And the effect of the whole is to
show them that, contrary to their assumption, the Father in
heaven has no righteous children on earth; that His grace
is needed for all, and most of all for those who dream they
have no need of it. By thus skillfully dissecting, under the
cover of the sour elder brother, the state of mind of the
Pharisaic objectors, our Lord breaks down the artificial distinction
by which they had separated themselves from their sinful brethren,
and in doing so breaks down also the barriers which held their
sympathies back and opens the way to full appreciation by
them of the joy He would have them feel in the recovery of
the lost. Was there one among them with heart yet open to
the appeal of the seeking God, surely he smote his breast
as he heard these poignant closing words of the parable and
cried, no longer in the voice of a Pharisee, but in the voice
of the publican, "God be merciful to me a sinner!" Surely,
like one of their own number only a few years later, the scales
fell from his eyes and he confessed himself not only a sinner,
but even the chief of sinners.
It
would not be quite exact perhaps to say that the Parable rebukes
spiritual pride and jealousy as well as proclaims the joy
in heaven over the recovery of the lost. Its lesson is one;
and its one lesson is only thrown into a clearer light by
the revelation of the dreadfulness of its contrast in jealousy
of the good fortune of the saved. Men all are in equal need
of salvation, where is there room for censorious complaint
of the goodness of God? This leveling effect of the parable
raises the question whether there is not contained in it some
hint of the universalism of the Gospel. Surely through and
through its structure sounds the note of, "For there is no
difference!" No difference between the publicans and sinners
on the one side, and the Pharisees and the Scribes on the
other. The Pharisees themselves being judges, this were equivalent
to no difference between Jew and Gentile. Were not the publicans
to them as heathen men? And was not "sinners" just the name
by which they designated the Gentiles? If their scrupulous
attention to the law did not raise them above all commerce
or comparison with sinners, what profit was there in being
a Jew? We certainly do not purpose to say with some that Jesus
was teaching a universal religion without knowing it: and
we certainly do not discover here the germ of a universal
religion in this-that Jesus meant to teach that nothing lies
between the sinner and his recovery to God but an act of the
sinner's own will, an act to which every sinner is ever competent,
at all times and in all circumstances. And yet it seems not
improper to perceive in the leveling effect of the implied
inclusion of the Pharisees themselves - in the one great class
of sinners a hint of that universalism which Jesus gave His
Gospel when He proclaimed Himself the Savior of all who believe
on Him.
But,
however this may be, we approach nearer to the great lesson
of the parable when we note that there is certainly imbedded
in its teaching that great and inexpressibly moving truth
that there is no depth of degradation, return from which will
not be welcomed by God. A sinner may be too vile for any and
every thing else; but he cannot be too vile for salvation.
We observe at any rate that our Lord does not hold His hand
when He comes to paint the degradation of sinners, through
His picture of the degradation into which the lost son had
sunk. No depths are left beneath the depths which He here
portrays for us. This man had dealt with his inheritance with
the utmost recklessness. He had wasted the whole of it until
he was left stripped bare of all that he had brought from
his father's house. Nor was there anything to take its place.
The country in which he had elected to dwell was smitten,
throughout its whole extent, with a biting famine. In all
its length and breadth there was nothing on which a man might
live. The prodigal was reduced to "bend and pray and fawn
at the feet of a certain citizen of that dread land and was
sent by him out into the barren fields - to feed swine! To
a Jew, degradation could not be more poignantly depicted.
Yes, it could: there was one stage worse and that stage was
reached. The lost son not only herded the swine; he herded
with them. "He was fain to fill his belly from the husks that
the swine did eat." Not with the same quality of food, observe,
but from the swine's own store - for" no man gave unto him."
In this terrible description of extreme degradation there
may be a side glance at the actual state of the publicans,
our Lord's reception of and association with whom was such
an offense to the Jewish consciousness. For did not they not
merely serve against their own people those swines of Gentiles
but actually feed themselves at their trough? But however
this may be, it is clear that our Lord means to paint degradation
in its depths. He does not spare the sinners with whom He
consorted. His defense for receiving them does not turn upon
any failure to recognize or feel their true quality; any representation
of them as not so bad after all; as if they had been painted
blacker than they were, and were nice enough people to associate
with if only we were not so fastidious. He says rather that
they are bad past expression and past belief. His defense
is that they can be saved; and that He is here to save them.
Lost? Yes, they are lost; and there is no reason why we should
not take the word at the top - or rather at the bottom-of
its meaning: this is the parable of the lost son. But Jesus
is the Savior of the lost; and there is none so lost that
he may not be found by Him, and, being found by Him, be also
found in Him. Oh, no! Jesus does not rejoice in sinners: it
is not sin He loves nor sinners as sinners. What He rejoices
in is the rescue of sinners from their sin. And the deeper
the sin the greater the rescue and the greater the joy. "I
say unto you, there is joy before the angels of God over one
sinner that repenteth." "I say unto you, there shall be joy
in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, rather than over
ninety and nine just persons, such as have no need of repentance."
It
is in this great declaration that the real purport of the
parable is expressed. This parable was spoken to teach us,
to put it briefly, that God in heaven rejoices over the repentance
of every sinner that repents. It is a commentary therefore
on those great passages which tell us that God would have
no man perish, but all to come to Him and live; and it is
more than a commentary on these passages, inasmuch as it throws
the emphasis upon the positive side and tells us of the joy
that God feels at the repentance of every sinner who repents.
To the carrying of this great message home to our hearts all
the art of the parable is directed, and it is our wisdom to
read it simply to this end. We need not puzzle ourselves over
the significance, then, of this detail or that, as if we were
bound or indeed permitted to discover, allegorically, some
spiritual meaning in each turn of the story. The most of these
find their account in the demands of the story itself and
enter into its lesson only as contributory details, adding
vividness and truth to the illustration.
Thus,
for instance, if we ask why there are only two sons in the
parable, while there were ten pieces of silver in the preceding
one, and a hundred sheep in the first one; the answer is that
just two sons were needed to serve Jesus' purpose of illustrating
the contrast between the Pharisees and Scribes on the one
side and the publicans and sinners on the other; his purpose
not being at all to indicate proportion of numbers, but difference
in status and conduct. In the former parables the suggestion
of comparative insignificance was requisite to bring out the
full lesson; in this, the contrast of character serves His
purpose. If again it is asked why it is the younger son who
becomes a prodigal, the answer is that the propriety of the
story demands it. It would be inconceivable that the older
son, who according to custom was the CO-possessor and heir
of the fundamental estate, should have asked or received an
inheritance apart from it. But the thing was not unnatural,
and doubtless not unusual, in a younger son, who was to be
portioned off in any event in the end, and was only asking
that he might not wait on his father's death, but might be
permitted to "set up for himself" at once. We cannot therefore
with confidence discover the beginnings of the prodigal's
downfall in his request that his inheritance might be told
off to him, or wonder overmuch why the father so readily granted
this request. It is tempting, no doubt, to see in the wish
of the son to "set up for himself" a hint of a heart already
little at one with the law and custom of the father's house.
But such allegorizing is dangerous, especially when not suggested
by any hint in the language of the narrative or necessarily
contained in the situation depicted. It is customary to speak
of the younger son as a young man. It may be so. But the narrative
does not say so. He may have been in middle life; and it may
well have seemed to all concerned that a desire on his part
to begin to build up his own house was altogether right and
fitting. The separation of his goods from his father's at
all events appears in the parable only as the precedent condition
of his spending them, not as the beginning of his downfall.
We
need not go further, however, into detail. Enough that the
story has a single point. And that point is the joy of the
father at the return of the son, a joy which is the expression,
not of the natural love of the father for a son, but of the
overwhelming emotion of mingled relief and thankfulness and
over mastering rapture which fills the heart of a father on
the recovery of a lost son. The point of the narrative is
not, then, that this prodigal is a son, though that underlies
and gives its verisimilitude to the picture. The point is
that this son is a prodigal. It is because he has been lost
and is now found that the joy of the father is so great. The
elder son is a son too; and the father loves him also. Let
him who doubts it read again the exquisite narrative of the
father's tender and patient dealings with him. There is not
in all literature a more beautiful picture of parental affection
pleading with unfilial passion. This father knew perfectly
how to fulfill the injunction later laid down by the apostle
Paul: "And ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath;
but nurture them in the chastening and admonition of the Lord."
From this point of view that soothing admonition, "Child,
thou" (the emphasis on the "thou" must not be neglected) "art
always with me; and all that is mine is thine; but it was
meet to make merry and be glad, because this thy brother was
dead and is alive, and was lost and is found" - is simply
perfect. So clear is it that the lesson of the parable does
not turn on the prodigal's being a son, but on this son being
a prodigal.
In
other words, its lesson is not that God loves His children,
but that God loves sinners. And thus this parable is seen
ranging with the preceding ones. The lost sheep, the lost
coin, the lost son, have only this one thing in common, that
they are lost ; and the three parables unite in commending
the one common lesson to us, that as men rejoice in the recovery
of what is lost, so God rejoices in the recovery of sinners
since sinners are the things that to Him are lost. We must
not, then, use this parable to prove that God is a father,
or draw inferences from it as if that were its fundamental
teaching. It does not teach that. What it teaches is that
God will receive the returning sinner with the same joy that
the father in the parable received the returning prodigal;
because as this son was to that father's heart above all other
things that he had lost, his lost one, and his return was
therefore above all other things that might have been returned
to him his recovery ; so sinners are above all else that God
has lost in the world His lost ones, and their return to Him
above all other restorations that may be made to Him His recovery.
The vivid picture of the father not staying to receive the
returning son, but, moved with compassion as he spied him
yet a great way off, running out to meet him and falling on
his neck and kissing him in his ecstasy again and again; cutting
short his words of confession with the command that the best
robe be brought to clothe him, and shoes for his blistered
feet, and a ring for his finger, and the order that the fatted
calf be killed and the feast be spread, and the music and
the dance be prepared because, as he says, "This my son was
dead and is alive, was lost and is found " - all this in the
picture is meant to quicken our hearts to some apprehension
of the joy that fills God's heart at the return of sinners
to Him.
O
brethren, our minds are dulled with much repetition, and refuse
to take the impression our Lord would make on them. But even
we-can we fail to be moved with wonder today at this great
message, that God in heaven rejoices - exults in joy like
this human father receiving back his son-when sinners repent
and turn to Him? On less assurance than that of Jesus Christ
Himself the thing were perhaps incredible. But on that assurance
shall we not take its comfort to our hearts? We are sinners.
And our only hope is in one who loves sinners; and has come
into the world to die for sinners. Marvel, marvel beyond our
conception; but, blessed be God, as true as marvelous. And
when we know Him better, perhaps it may more and more cease
to be a marvel. At least, one of those who have known Him
best and served Him most richly in our generation, has taught
us to sing thus of His wondrous death for us:
-
That
He should leave His place on high,
-
And
come for sinful man to die,
-
You
count it strange ?-so do not I,
-
Since
I have known my Savior
-
-
Nay,
had there been in all this wide
-
Wide
world no other soul beside
-
But
only mine, then He had died
-
That
He might be its Savior;
-
-
Then
had He left His Father's throne,
-
The
joy untold, the love unknown,
-
And
for that soul had given His own,
-
That
He might be its Savior!
Is
that too high a flight for us-that passion of appropriation
by which the love of Jesus for me-my own personal soul-is
appreciated so fully that it seems natural to us that He,
moved by that great love that was in Him for me - even me
- should leave His throne that He might die for me, - just
me, - even were there none else beside? At least we may assent
to the dispassionate recognition that in the depths of our
parable is hidden the revelation of that fundamental characteristic
of Jesus Christ by virtue of which He did become the Savior
at least of sinners. And seeing this and knowing ourselves
to be sinners, we may acknowledge Him afresh today as our
Savior, and at least gratefully join in our passionate sinner's
prayer:
-
And
oh! that He fulfilled may see
-
The
travail of His soul in me,
-
And
with His work contented be,
-
As
I am with my Savior!
-
-
Yea,
living, dying, let me bring
-
My
strength, my solace from this spring,
-
That
He who lives to be my King,
-
Once
died to be my Savior!
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