2-5 The Elder Brother
In the same way as the Jews refused to appreciate the spirit in which
Christ was feasting with the repentant sinners who responded to his message
(Lk.15:2), so the elder brother refused to attend the celebrations. Thus
he is set up as representative of hard hearted Israel; and all those in
the new Israel who share his characteristics proclaim themselves to be
aligned with the legalistic Pharisaism which failed to discern the real
spirit of Christ when he was among them. A calf, dancing and music recall
the scene on Moses' return from the mount (Ex.32:17-19); the elder brother's
response as he returned from the field and beheld this sight may well
have been rooted in his attempt to place himself in Moses' place. He zealously
protested at what he liked to see as rank apostasy when it was actually
the display of the real spirit of Christ, in receiving back a lost soul.
For all this, the lesson is never learned. Schism after schism have been
experienced over this very issue of having repentant brethren take their
place at the memorial feast. The bad grace and bitterness of the elder
brother as he stormed away from the happy feast is seen all too often
amongst us.
The elder brother coming in from the field must be related to the parable
about the servant coming home from the field in Lk.17:7-10. The servant
should then have prepared the meal, on the master's command, and then
admitted that despite having been perfectly obedient, he was still unprofitable.
The prodigal parable points the great contrast. God, while having
every right to order the servant/ elder brother to prepare the meal, is
the one who has actually prepared it. God asks the elder son
to come and eat immediately after returning from the field, rather than
ordering him to prepare the meal, as He could so justly have done. Yet
despite God's boundless love, the elder son refused to act and think in
the spirit of the Father's love.
The corrective to the elder brothers' attitude is provided by the following
parable of the unjust steward which comes straight afterwards in Lk.16.
The steward was accused of 'wasting' his master's goods (Lk.16:1), using
the same Greek word translated " substance" in Lk.15:13, concerning
how the son wasted his father's substance. The steward forgave others,
and therefore ultimately found a way of escape from his dilemma. The implication
is that it was on account of the prodigal being willing to do this, not
daring to point the finger at others in the Father's household because
of his awareness of his own sins, that he was eventually saved. We can
also infer that the elder brother walked out of the Father's fellowship
because of his refusal to do this. Again we see how God works through
our sins. Because of the prodigal's experience of sin and forgiveness,
he was better able to show that vital love and tolerance towards others,
without which we cannot receive God's ultimate acceptance. In a sense,
it was much more difficult for the elder brother.
Our Elder Brother...
Which leads us to one final thought. It was so much harder for Christ
to be as patient with sinners as he was, seeing that he himself never
sinned and experienced God's forgiveness. There is good reason to think
that Jesus was speaking about the elder brother partly to warn himself.
He was the favoured son, having the right of the firstborn. He alone could
say to God " neither transgressed I at any time thy commandment"
(Lk.15:29). The Father's comment " All that I have is thine"
(Lk.15:31) connects with the references to God giving all things
into the hands of the Son. His constant abiding in the Father's house
echoes Jn.8:35: " The servant abideth not in the house for ever:
but the Son abideth ever" . Our Lord seems to have been indirectly
exhorting himself not to be like the elder brother, thereby setting us
the example of framing necessary warning and rebuke of others in terms
which are relevant to ourselves. If our perfect Master was so sensitive
to his own possibility of failure, how much more should we be, ever analyzing
our attitudes to our brethren, " considering (ourselves) lest we
also be tempted" .
SUMMARY: The Unreality In Luke
15
The three parables of
the lost which climax in the parable of the lost son all exemplify the
principles we have spoken about throughout these studies. They all depend
for their power upon the many elements of unreality found within them; and
the lost son parable requires us to fill in many details, try to finish the
story, and to take due note of the crescendo of ‘end stress’ which there is.
To appreciate the full power and import of these parables, we need to try to
read them through the eyes of the Palestinian peasants who first heard them.
Correct understanding of Scripture requires us to read it and feel it within
the context in which it was first given. Bombarded as we are by billions of
pieces of information each day, especially from the internet, we only cope
with it all by letting it all fit into the worldviews and assumptions which
we’ve adopted. Words and information and ideas tend to only fit in to what
we’ve already prepared to house them, rather than us seeing God’s
word as something radically different, and allowing it to totally upset and
change our cherished worldviews, constructs and approaches to life. God’s
word is still words- although they are inspired words. The problem with
words is that we read or hear them, and interpret them within our frames of
reference and culture. Take an example: “She’s mad about her flat!”. An
American takes this to mean that she’s angry and frustrated about the
puncture / ‘flat tire’ which she has on her car. But in British English, the
phrase would mean: ‘She’s really happy and enthusiastic about her
apartment’. To understand what the speaker or writer means by those words,
we have to understand their cultural background. And so it is with the
Lord’s teaching, aimed as it was to first century peasants.
The Thankless Sons
For those Palestinian
peasants, politeness and respect to your father was paramount. Even if you
didn’t obey your father, you had to be polite to him. Rudeness to your
father or public disobedience to him was the worst thing you could do, and
you shamed yourself. The Lord turned that understanding on its head in His
parable of the two sons in Mt. 21:28-32. He taught that the better
son was the one who rudely refused to do what his father asked, but later
relented and did it. The Lord saw this son as better than the one who
politely agreed, and yet never fulfilled his promise. Perhaps that parable
needs reflection upon today, where ‘nicespeak’ has become paramount- so long
as you say something nicely, what you actually are saying and what you do
isn’t so important. How we speak is of course important; but
it can be exalted to the point where words rather than real action become
paramount. But that aside, the point is that both the sons were extremely
rude to their Father. And he was the most loving, self-sacrificial dad that
two kids ever could’ve had. We feel hurt for the lovely old boy. And we
sense something of his hurt, our heart starts to bleed for him, and we think
of our Heavenly Father’s hurt. And then the penny drops- those two
boys are us.
The younger son was more
than rude in demanding his actual share of the inheritance immediately.
He was effectively wishing that his father was dead. He had the
neck to treat his lovely father as if he were already dead. There
arose in Europe after the second world war the ‘Death of God’ philosophy
and theology. We may distance ourselves from it in disgust, finding
even the words grating and inappropriate, but let’s remember that
the younger son ends up the son who is found in the end abiding
in the Father’s house and joyful fellowship. This is how we
have treated our wonderful Father. We know from the examples of
Abraham (Gen. 25:5-8) and Jacob (Gen. 48-49) that the actual division
of the inheritance was made by the father as his death approached.
For the son to take the initiative was disgusting. Although the
sons could have some legal right to what their father gave them
before his death, they were strictly denied the right of actually
having it in possession [i.e. the right of disposition](1).
This awful son was therefore each of us. And the father responds
with an unreal grace. He agrees. He did what he surely knew was
not really for the spiritual good of the son. And according to Dt.
21:7, the younger son’s share was one third. But the father gives
him half. The younger son turns it all into cash within a
few days [the Greek for “gathered all” definitely means ‘to turn
into cash’]. This would’ve meant selling the fields and property
quickly- and the father would’ve had to give agreement for this
and have been involved in the contracts. Buying and selling takes
a long time in peasant culture- selling quickly would’ve meant selling
very cheaply. It would’ve been the laughing stock of the whole area.
The way the son sells the inheritance would've been a more awful
and unreal thing in the ears of the Lord's first hearers than it
is to us. Naboth would rather have died than sell his inheritance-
even to the King (1 Kings 21:3). The lifetime’s hard work of the
father and family was wasted. And the father went along with it
all. This was more than unusual; it would’ve been outrageous in
the ears of the Lord’s hearers. But this is the outrageous nature
of God’s grace. He must be so torn by our prayers- as a loving Father,
wanting to give us what we ask for materially, whilst knowing it’s
not for our good… and sometimes doing so. The father made himself
look a fool because of his enormous love for this obnoxious son
who wished him dead, this young man who clearly thought solely in
terms of ‘Gimme the money and I’m outta here for good’. And he thought
this with no thought to the huge damage he was bringing upon the
rest of the family. For they would’ve lost so much through losing
half the property. We sense the pain of the father, of the family,
and the selfishness of the son. And time and again we are breathless
at the love and grace of the father.
Significantly, the son
asked for his share of the property- not his inheritance. To receive
inheritance carried with it responsibility, of building the house of your
father, upholding the family name etc. But this son didn’t want that. And
the father could quite rightly have said ‘No, you get the inheritance when
you take the responsibilities that come with it’. But no, this son wants to
quit with his lovely father and the whole family name. In that culture, to
cut your ties with your home family, your inheritance, your land… was almost
unheard of. It was almost impossible to do. But that’s what this angry young
man wanted. The incredible thing is, the father allowed him to do this! That
element of unreality signposts the extent to which God allows us freewill,
genuine freedom of determination- and how much it costs Him emotionally and
as a person to do so. This is the frightening thing about freewill- how much
it hurts and costs God to give it to us. This insight alone should lead to a
far more careful and responsible use of our freewill. William Temple said
somewhere, something to the effect that God gives us freedom even to reject
His love. It’s no good reflecting on the younger son and thinking ‘But I’m
not that kinda guy’. The whole point of the parable is that yes, we are.
That’s us. We’re either like that son, or the self-righteous son who is left
standing outside of the father’s fellowship. Clearly enough, the God whom
Jesus was revealing was not based upon some village patriarch. Freud
rightly observed that many people’s image of God is based upon their
experience of human father figures. For the true believer however, the Lord
Jesus is revealing a Father-figure radically different to anything they’ve
ever met.
Our Desperation
We don’t like to think
of ourselves as that thankless young man; but even more do we revolt at the
idea that we were and are at times out there feeding pigs. Anyone who’s
travelled in the Middle East will know the annoyance of a beggar attaching
themselves to you and just refusing to leave you. But watch how the locals
deal with those types. They don’t shout at them, or chase them. They will
ask them to do something which is beneath even their dignity as a beggar to
do. And they walk away shamefaced. I knew a brother who was a schoolteacher.
The boss wanted to fire him because of his Christianity. The boss didn’t say
‘You’re fired! Clear off!’. He simply transferred him to a remote village in
the middle of nowhere. And so the brother did the only reasonable thing- he
resigned. The young man ‘joining’ or ‘gluing’ himself to the rich Gentile
citizen was like the beggar who glues himself to you, and you don’t know how
to shake him off. The pig owner told him to go and feed his pigs- thinking
that this would surely be beneath this once-wealthy Jew who was hassling
him. But so desperate was the young man, that he had to swallow every drop
of pride, national and personal- and go do it. And he felt like a pig- he
was willing to eat what they ate. This is the picture of our
desperation at every sin- but we need to feel it, if we are to experience
the path back to the Father. In an age when sin is often more about the
words you type on your keyboard than actual physical debauchery, this
parable hits home hard. Of course it was pride which was in the way for the
son, and it is swallowing pride which is the essence of repentance. And
again, it was fear of shame that delayed the young man’s return- fear of
having to go through the kezazah ceremony of being officially
disowned, fear of how the mob of young kids which roam every village street
would whistle and shout and sing insults at him. And we need to pause and
reflect whether we contribute to this significant barrier which surely
hinders so many from returning to the Father’s house.
But the young man
hadn’t quite learnt the lesson when he decided to return home. He decided to
return and ask to be made “as one of your skilled craftsmen” (Lk. 15:19 Gk.-
he uses misthios rather than doulos, the usual word for
‘slave’). Presumably he figured that he could work and pay off what he had
wasted. His plan was to use the phrase “I have sinned against heaven and
against you” (Lk. 15:18)- but this is almost quoting verbatim from Pharaoh’s
words of insincere repentance in Ex. 10:16! He still failed to grasp that he
was his father’s son- he didn’t ‘get it’, that this would be
the basis of his salvation, rather than a master-servant relationship with
his father based on hard work. It was the father’s amazing grace which swept
him off his feet just along the street from his father’s home; it was the
father’s unconditional acceptance of him which made him realize what sonship
and repentance was really all about.
The Older Son
To refuse a father’s
invitation to a family celebration was seen as totally unacceptable, rude,
and a rejection of one’s father. Hence the rudeness of the guests refusing
the King’s invitations. The older brother would usually have played a
prominent role in such feasts. But this son refuses to attend. This would’ve
struck the Lord’s initial audience as incredibly rude. Remember how Vashti’s
refusal to attend her husband’s feast resulted in her being rejected (Esther
1). What the older son did would’ve been seen as an insult to all the
guests; and many fathers would simply have rejected and disowned their son
for this, or at least, expressed significant disapproval. Indeed, this was
expected of him by society and the other guests. But yet again, the father
humiliates himself and breaks all Jewish norms and expectations of
correctness and decency. He leaves the feast! For the host to walk out was
yet again seen as totally rude to the other guests- it of course echoes the
shepherd leaving the 99 sheep and going off after the one lost sheep. The
father doesn’t go out and giving the arrogant, unloving, disobedient son a
good talking to, as the audience would expect. Again, as so often, the
Lord’s parables set up an expectation- and then dash it. The father goes out
into the darkness of the courtyard, and “entreats” his son (Lk. 15:28). The
Greek parakaleo means literally to come alongside, as if the father
is inviting the son to stand alongside him in his extension of grace.
Perhaps Paul is making one of his many allusions to the Lord’s parables when
he uses the same word to speak of how he ‘beseeches’ his legalistic brethren
(2 Cor. 5:20).
But all this grace is
ignored by the elder son. He insults his father. It may not be so apparent
to us, but it would’ve been picked up by the Lord’s first hearers. A son
should always address his father in this context with the term “O Father”.
But he doesn’t. He speaks of his brother as “Your son” rather than his
brother. He speaks of how the prodigal “devoured your living”. And he
speaks of how he has faithfully served his father as a servant- like
his younger brother, he failed to perceive the wonder of sonship. His
awful outburst is doing in essence what his younger brother had done some
time before. He was saying that he didn’t want a part in his father’s
family. The “living” or wealth of the family was no longer his. He
wasn’t going to respect his father as his father any more. He didn’t want to
be in the family, so he wouldn’t go to the family reunion. That poor, dear
father. And what is the father’s response? He calls him his teknon,
his dearly loved son. Notice how the more common huios is used for
“son” throughout the story (Lk. 15:11,13,19,21,24,25,30). In the face of
such awful rejection, he shows his special love. It’s like the Lord giving
“the sop”, the sign of special love and favouritism, to Judas- as he betrays
Him. There’s a powerful lesson here for those of us who find ourselves irked
and angered by legalistic, arrogant brethren who refuse to fellowship with
the rest of us. There was no anger and irksomeness in the father’s attitude.
He was only deeply sorry, hurt, cut up… but he so loved that arrogant
elder brother. He goes on to say that he gives that son all that he has. But
he could only actually do that through being dead! The father is willing to
die for that arrogant older brother, whose pride and anger stops him wanting
anything to do with his father, whom he has just openly shamed and rejected.
And the father wants to die for him. This is to be our attitude to the
self-righteous, the divisive, those who reject their brethren.
But of course, there’s
a real and obvious warning not to be like the older brother. It worries me,
it turns me, right in my very gut, when I see so many of our community
refusing to fellowship with their brethren because ‘He’s in that ecclesia…
they’ve had her back… she’s divorced and remarried… he’s never said sorry,
his motives aren’t right, she only said those words…’. And those attitudes
are made out to be expressions of righteousness. It is not for me to judge
anyone; I seek to love those who act like this with the love and grief of
the father for the elder son. But they must be gently warned as to the
implications of their position. By refusing to fellowship with the rest of
the family, by making such a fuss about the return of the prodigals, they
fail to realize that they are in essence doing what the prodigals have done;
and they are de facto signing themselves out of the Father’s family. The
issues are that serious. The parable isn’t just a story with a possible
interpretation which we can shrug our shoulders at and get on with life. The
Lord’s teaching, His ‘doctrine’, was and is in these parables.
The lost son story
finishes, as do the other stories, with a banquet of rejoicing- rejoicing in
the father’s love. But it’s no accident that Luke 15 is preceded by the
parable of Lk. 14:15-24, where we have another great banquet- symbolic of
our communion in the future Kingdom of God. The connection is clear. We will
“eat bread in the Kingdom of God” if we eat bread with the Lord in the
banquets of this life. And yet so, so often it is said amongst us: ‘I
won’t break bread there. They have X or Z… who is divorced… who’s not
repentant… they have Q from that fellowship attending there… I’m not going
in there’. It is not for us to judge. And I do not do so in what I write
here. But it is the fairly obvious teaching of the Lord here that if we
won’t eat bread with Him in joy now, if we won’t celebrate His grace and
love for the lost in this life, then we will not in the future banquet. His
grace is likely large enough to cover even the self-righteous; but we need
to realize the eternal gravity of our decisions and feelings about our
brethren in this life. Especially must we come to see ourselves as the
prodigal. If we plan on being in the Kingdom, we must identify ourselves
with the prodigal, and not with the self-righteous elder son who is left
outside of the Father’s fellowship, because he placed himself there.
An Unreal Father
The father whom we meet
in the lost son parable is prefigured by the shepherd and woman of the
earlier parables. The three parables are described as one singular parable
(Lk. 15:3).
Personal Passion
The man who owned
100 sheep was rich. Shepherds were the lowest of the low. If you
owned 100 sheep, you employed a shepherd to look after them and
take responsibility for chasing the lost. But there’s something
unreal- the owner of the sheep is the one who is the shepherd. This
actually is the point of the Ezekiel 34 passage upon which the Lord
built the parable- having fired the unworthy shepherds of Israel,
“Thus saith the Lord God: Behold, I myself, even I, will
search for my sheep, and will seek them out. As a shepherd seeketh
out his flock in the day that he is among his sheep that are scattered
abroad, so will I seek out my sheep; and I will deliver them … I
will bring them … I will feed them … I myself will be the shepherd
of my sheep” (Ez. 34:11-15). The remarkable thing is that the owner
of the sheep decides to become the personal shepherd, feeding, seeking,
delivering, bringing the sheep himself personally. A Palestinian
wealthy enough to own a whole flock of sheep simply wouldn’t do
this. He always hired someone else to do this- because being
a shepherd was so despised. Behold the humility of God. But see
too His personal passion for us. Hence the Lord’s question: Which
one of you would act like this? The Father and His Son take
such passionate personal responsibility for us, that God was willing
in Christ to shame and humiliate Himself in order to get us back
into the fold.
Personal Responsibility
There’s also something
odd about the way the Lord speaks of the shepherd: “He has lost one
of them”. Translations of the Bible into semitic languages, especially
Arabic, tend to read: “If one of them is lost” (passive). In the language
and concepts of the Middle East, a speaker never blames himself. As in
Spanish, they would not say “I lost my book”- rather, “the book went from
me”. Likewise “I missed the train” is expressed as “the train left me”. And
I would even speculate that preaching Christ in Arabic and even Hispanic
cultures comes up against the problem of people strongly disliking taking
ultimate responsibility, or to own up to the personal guilt of sin; the
shifting of blame away from oneself is reflected even in their languages.
And so when the Lord puts words in the shepherd’s mouth whereby he takes
direct responsibility for the loss of the sheep, this would’ve sounded
strange even grammatically. Apparently to this day, it’s hard to translate
that actual phrase into Arabic. Likewise with the idea of the woman saying
that she had found the coin which she had lost. The Lord is labouring how
God, and God in Christ, feel an extraordinary personal responsibility for
the lost.
If we imagine the woman
who lost the coin, we sense something of her remorse and desperation as she
searches the cracks in the floor for it. It could’ve been part of her dowry-
all that she owned for herself, all that was her very own. Not even her body
was hers- it was her husband’s, to do what he wished with. But the dowry
coins were hers- her very own. If the allusion were to one of these coins,
it would speak of how much we mean to the Lord… that I, one of 6 billion,
actually mean everything to Him, for whom I am His very own. But the
allusion may also be to coins which the peasant women would keep bound up in
a rag, close to their body. With this money, the woman would’ve had to feed
the family for the next week or so. But… she’d let the rag come loose, and a
coin had slipped out. In either case, we are to imagine the woman searching
for it with a sense of remorse, taking responsibility that she was
accountable for the loss. And this, we are invited to understand, is how the
Lord feels for those who are lost. Notice how the woman searches in the
house- presumably, she’d not been out of the house since she last had
the coin. By filling out this little detail, we perhaps have a picture of
how the Lord took responsibility, or felt responsible, for the loss of those
‘within the house’ of Israel.
The Joy Of The Lord
Hence the joy of the
shepherd when the sheep is found- he lays it on his shoulders rejoicing.
To carry a sheep on your shoulders, fighting and struggling with you, as you
climb down a mountainside in the dark… isn’t something which is usually done
rejoicing. But this is the unusual, humanly inexplicable, joy
which there is in the Father and Son when day by day they ‘find’ us
and bring us back. And where would a shepherd usually take such a lost
animal? Back to the flock, whom he’s left in the wilderness. But then comes
another unreal element. The shepherd takes the sheep home to his very own
house. This sheep had such extraordinary value to this wealthy man. He
came back dirty and exhausted- he humiliated himself and made himself a fool
in the eyes of the world, all because of this humanly senseless love and joy
which he had over this lost sheep. And we have to fill in the details,
answering the unasked but implied questions- what about the 99 left out in
the wilderness? The story ends with them out of the house- paving the way
for how the elder son is left standing outside of the house. Note how Lk.
15:3 speaks of the three parables as one, in the singular, “parable”.
The Lord’s Grace
The shepherd-owner
calls his “friends” together. This surely refers to the clubs the Pharisees
formed in villages, called the Khaburim [‘friends’]. They ought to
have rejoiced to be eating with sinners, as the Lord was- but they wouldn’t.
The whole context of the three parables is the Lord justifying why he ate at
home with sinners, thereby showing that He considered them as somehow ‘in
fellowship’ with Him. The Pharisees wouldn’t do this unless those people
repented and learnt Torah in great depth. But the Lord is surely saying that
He sees those men who ate with Him as the sheep which has already been
brought home. He reflected the gracious outlook with which He saw people;
and His hopefulness that by treating a person as if they had ‘come home’,
then they would indeed do so. Probing this line further, the Lord Jesus
speaks of the found sheep as being symbolic of the repentant. But the sheep
did nothing- it was simply acceptant of having been found. To accept being
found is, therefore, seen by the Lord as what He calls ‘repentance’. Now
surely that’s grace- salvation without works.
Radical Acceptance
There was a Jewish
custom called Kezazah, ‘the cutting off’. If a Jew lost the family
fortune amongst Gentiles, he would be greeted at home by the whole family,
who would break a pot and scream ‘XYZ is cut off from his people’(2).
The family and community would have no more fellowship with the person(3).
Moulton and Milligan describe the record of a public notice by which parents
declare their dissociation from their son who had wasted their wealth(4).
This is what the Lord’s Jewish audience would’ve expected to come next in
the story, when the son returns. But no! There is the very opposite. Law and
traditional expectation and even human perception of justice is thrown away,
as the father races along the street towards his son and accepts him. For an
elderly man to run publicly was yet again an unreal element in the story-
mature men always walk, at a slow and dignified pace. Not gather up their
robes and run, let alone publicly. Actually the Greek word translated “run”
in Lk. 15:20 is that used about sprinting (1 Cor. 9:24,26; Gal. 2:2; 5:7; 2
Thess. 3:1; Heb. 12:1). Here again we see the self-humiliation of the father
before men, as he expressed a radical acceptance. Even we from our distance
expect there to be a ‘telling off’, a facing of the issues. But there isn’t.
The grace of God which meets the returning sinner leads him to repentance.
It of itself, by its sheer magnitude, elicits the state of contrition which
is indeed vital; but this is inspired by the huge initiative of the Father
and Son.
The father’s radical
acceptance is the very basis of our salvation. It is challenging, supremely
so. Perhaps we handle ‘classic’ repentance easier- someone does wrong, goes
off for a long time, is out of sight and out of mind, comes back, asks for
our forgiveness with tears and humility. It’s actually psychologically hard
to say ‘No’. That kind of forgiveness is relatively easy. But what is
so much harder is to show forgiveness and the nature of the father’s love
and grace time and again in daily life; to keep looking and hoping for the
one who has offended us, ruined us, destroyed us, used and abused us… to be
coming home. Actually I know virtually none amongst us who rise up to the
father’s love and grace in this. It remains a stark, sobering challenge to
us all.
It needs to be
understood that the father had to act as the village expected him to. They
expected him to enact the kezazah , to hand the son over to them in
some form for judgment, to make an example of this awful man. No village
member is an island, all have to act within the expectations of the group.
But the father breaks through all that. He again humiliates himself before
the villagers by doing what he did. He likely angers them- for anger so
often comes as a result of being confronted by the grace shown by others. We
see it so often in the life of our spiritual community. Indeed, the Lord got
at this in another parable, where He speaks of how some were angry at the
extreme grace shown by the generous vineyard owner (Mt. 20:1-16).
The honour bestowed upon
the son by the father is totally unreal. Without the slightest sign
that the son is now responsible, is truly repentant, has the right
motives… the father gives him the best robe, which is what was done
for the person whom a leader wished to honour above all (Esther
6:1-9). And the father gives the son his signet ring (cp. Gen. 41:41,42).
All this, before the prodigal has in any way proved himself. All
he’s done is come home, still not wanting to be a son, just a craftsman;
and he was only driven home by his desperation. Such is the huge
significance attached by the Lord to our turning up home. And in
our dealing with returning sinners, which is every one of us day
by day, we should reflect the same attitude.
We are left, as so
often, to imagine how the story finished. How hard it would’ve been for the
younger son to live with the older brother! And one day, dear, darling dad
would’ve died. The younger son would’ve had his sons, been called
upon to uphold the family honour, make decisions in the village. We are left
to imagine how his experience of grace would’ve made him judge differently
to all others.
A
Window Onto The Cross
Who does the father
represent? The context for the three stories is the Lord Jesus justifying
his eating with sinners. The fact that the father had received the sinful
younger brother is phrased in the same way as the Pharisees’ complaint about
the Lord Jesus receiving sinners (Lk. 15:2 = Lk. 15:27). And each of the
stories involve a closing scene featuring a joyful meal of celebration. The
father would appear therefore to refer to Jesus; and yet clearly enough we
are intended to see the father as also our Heavenly Father. As you likely
know, I don’t go for the primitive equation ‘Jesus = God’. I’m not a
Trinitarian. So I take this to be an exemplification of how “God was in
Christ, reconciling the world unto Himself, not imputing their iniquities
unto them” (2 Cor. 5:19). Notice in how many ways the father humiliates
himself before everyone, and breaks all traditional Jewish expectations to
do so. He gives the younger son what he asks, and more than the Law allowed;
he runs to meet the son; he accepts the son; he leaves the banquet where he
is the host in order to plead with his older son; he doesn’t discipline
either of his sons as expected. He makes a fool of himself time and again,
upsetting Jewish rules and norms. And the younger son pestering the father
to divide up the inheritance may indicate that the father was about to die.
Likewise, when the father says to the older son that he gives him there and
then all that is his… this is language only really appropriate if the father
is about to die, or has actually died. Does not all this speak of the cross
as the basis for the Father’s love, grace and acceptance? That there, God
was in Christ to reconcile us to Himself, not imputing sin to us… there the
Father was humiliated in Christ, made a fool of, ridiculed. The Almighty God
came this low… to the public shame and death of the cross. The suffering of
God in the cross was all about rejected and unaccepted love; and so it is to
this day.
Notes
(1) Joachim Jeremias,
The Parables Of Jesus (New York: Scribners, 1963) p. 128.
(2) Kenneth E. Bailey,
The Cross And The Prodigal (Downers Grove: IVP, 2005) p.
52.
(3) Kenneth E. Bailey,
Jacob And The Prodigal (Downers Grove: IVP, 2003) p. 102.
(4) J.H. Moulton &
G. Milligan, The Vocabulary Of The Greek New Testament Illustrated
From the Papyri And Other Non-Literary Sources (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1952) p. 89.
Jacob, Esau And The Prodigal
The parable of the prodigal contains multiple allusions to the record
of Jacob and Esau, their estrangement, and the anger of the older
brother [Esau] against the younger brother (1). There is a younger
and an elder son, who both break their relationships with their
father, and have an argument over the inheritance issue. Jacob like
the prodigal son insults his father in order to get his inheritance.
As Jacob joined himself to Laban in the far country, leaving his
older brother Esau living at home, so the prodigal glued himself
to a Gentile and worked for him by minding his flocks, whilst his
older brother remained at home with the father. The fear of the
prodigal as he returned home matches that of Jacob as he finally
prepares to meet the angry Esau. Jacob's unexpected meeting with
the Angel and clinging to him physically is matched by the prodigal
being embraced and hugged by his father. Notice how Gen. 33:10 records
how Jacob felt he saw the face of Esau as the face of an Angel.
By being given the ring, the prodigal "has in effect now supplanted
his older brother" (2); just as Jacob did. As Esau was "in
the field" (Gen. 27:5), so was the older brother.
What was the Lord Jesus getting at by framing His story in terms
of Jacob and Esau? The Jews saw Jacob as an unblemished hero, and
Esau / Edom as the epitome of wickedness and all that was anti-Jewish
and anti-God. The Book of Jubilees has much to say about all this,
as does the Genesis Rabbah (3). The Lord is radically and bravely
re-interpeting all this. Jacob is the younger son, who went seriously
wrong during his time with Laban. We have shown elsewhere how weak
Jacob was at that time. Jacob was saved by grace, the grace shown
in the end by the Angel with whom he wrestled, and yet who finally
blessed him. As Hos. 12:4 had made clear, Jacob weeping in the Angel's
arms and receiving the blessing of gracious forgiveness is all God
speaking to us. The older brother who refused to eat with his sinful
brother clearly represented, in the context of the parable, the
Jewish religious leaders. They were equated with Esau- the very
epitome of all that was anti-Jewish. And in any case, according
to the parable, the hero of the story is the younger son, Jacob,
who is extremely abusive and unspiritual towards his loving father,
and is saved by sheer grace alone. This too was a radical challenge
to the Jewish perception of their ancestral father Jacob.
The parable demonstrates that both the sons despised their father
and their inheritance in the same way. They both wish him dead,
treat him as if he isn't their father, abuse his gracious love,
shame him to the world. Both finally come to their father from working
in the fields. Jacob, the younger son, told Laban that "All
these years I have served you... and you have not treated me justly"
(Gen. 31:36-42). But these are exactly the words of the older son
in the parable! The confusion is surely to demonstrate that both
younger and elder son essentially held the same wrong attitudes.
And the Father, clearly representing God, and God as He was manifested
in Christ, sought so earnestly to reconcile both the younger and
elder sons. The Lord Jesus so wished the hypocritical Scribes and
Pharisees to fellowship with the repenting sinners that He wept
over Jerusalem; He didn't shrug them off as self-righteous bigots,
as we tend to do with such people. He wept for them, as the Father
so passionately pours out His love to them. And perhaps on another
level we see in all this the desperate desire of the Father and
Son for Jewish-Arab unity in Christ. For the promises to Ishmael
show that although Messiah's line was to come through Isaac, God
still has an especial interest in and love for all the children
of Abraham- and that includes the Arabs. Only a joint recognition
of the Father's grace will bring about Jewish-Arab unity. But in
the end, it will happen- for there will be a highway from Assyria
to Judah to Egypt in the Millennium. The anger of the elder brother
was because the younger son had been reconciled to the Father without
compensating for what he had done wrong. It's the same anger at
God's grace which is shown by the workers who objected to those
who had worked less receiving the same pay. And it's the same anger
which is shown every time a believer storms out of an ecclesia because
some sinner has been accepted back...
Notes
(1) K.E. Bailey, Jacob And The Prodigal (Downers Grove:
IVP, 2003) lists 51 points of contact between the Jacob / Esau record
and the prodigal parable.
(2) A.J. Hultgren, The Parables Of Jesus (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 2000) p. 79.
(3) See e.g. Jacob Neusner, Genesis Rabbah: The Judaic Commentary
To The Book Of Genesis (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1985) Vol.
3 p. 176.
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