In this paper we are going to look at the parable of the
Prodigal Son and view it in its most basic form regarding the struggle of the
saints in dealing with wayward children. Now, let it be said up front that I
fully recognize that this parable is not intended to deal with this issue
exclusively, or even primarily, but it is nonetheless a part of the
consideration.
It is a sad reality of Christian homes that children break away from us and go
their own way. At times it can be a painful ordeal as you struggle to impress
upon them the need to care for their souls versus satisfying their lust for
immediate sinful gratification. But in many cases after years of Christian
education and after much pleading for their souls the child still feels the
need to reject what they have been taught and to leave the family in search of
what they think will please them more. As we walk through this parable it will
no doubt cause a great many of you to nod in agreement that this is what you
are or have experienced with your own children. But as you do so remember there
is hope in this parable and in many places beyond, some of which we will look
at as well.
Lu. 15:11-13
First we see the introduction of the whole parable in light
of the actions and the motivations of the younger son. William Hendriksen
explains, “The younger of the two sons became tired of staying at home. As has
been the case with certain young people ever since (and the situation
deplorable even today), this young man desired to be free from parental
restraint. He was convinced that being by himself, away from the eyes of his
parents…, he would be able to do whatever he wanted, and this “freedom” would
make him happy. Of course, to carry out his plan he needed money. He probably
knew that… one-third of the parental estate would be his when his father died.
But he wanted that portion now. He could not wait. Now it must be
granted that a father did at times make “gifts” to his children while he was
still alive, but this young man was not satisfied with a mere gift. He wanted
his entire portion, and he wanted it here and now."[1]
David Brown says, “[…] weary of restraint, panting for independence, unable
longer to abide the check of a father’s eye."[2]
The child has reached an age where rather than heed the instruction of his
parents in a pious manner he behaves more like the men mentioned in Ps. 2:1-3. Is
this not a fairly common experience? We see our children become hard to the
exhortations of their parents and infatuated with the world about them they
seek to be freed of the bonds that have held them so tenderly throughout their
youth. If you have been fortunate enough not have seen this in your own
children then perhaps you may recall a time when you yourself were guilty of
this. The reality is they have caved into their flesh, they have seen a glimpse
of the other side of the hill and nothing can restrain them from traveling into
those distant lands no matter how hard you try. Your yoke has become unbearable
and nothing much matters to their youthful minds except to escape.
But more than that there is normally little or no regard to the welfare of
those around them. The hurt that ensues is acceptable collateral damage for
them. It is highly likely that whether or not they are hurting others hasn’t
even crossed their minds. Here the young man displays his selfishness through
the demand for his inheritance. And make no mistake about it, though it may
have been his eventually anyway it was not the norm that he should have it now,
so demand he will and demand he does. Matthew Henry says, “What his request to
his father was: He said to his father, proudly and pertly enough, “Father,
give me” – he might have put a little more in his mouth, and have said, Pray
give me, or, Sir, if you please, give me, but he makes an imperious
demand – “give me the portion of goods that falleth to me; not so much
as you think fit to allot me, but
that which falls to me as my due."[3] He selfishly views his
inheritance not as the blessing it is, but as a debt owed to him that must be
paid upon demand. It smacks of the same selfish arrogance shown in the parable
of the Unforgiving Servant in Matt. 18.
Hendriksen sums up the selfishness of the child well when he
says, “Aside from the fact that in all probability [the son’s demand] meant
that the entire estate had to be broken up – a considerable portion of the
holdings sold and converted into cash – and that as a result whatever was left
would be seriously affected, did he at all consider what he was doing would
grieve his father? What an insult it was to him? As if the young man’s
“freedom” would actually be better for him than the loving care and advice he
was constantly receiving from his father at home!"[1]
Children in this state of mind view the instruction of their
parents as unreasonable shackles, whatever they may gain from them for their
benefit as debt, and whatever the cost may be to the rest of the family as
inconsequential. What they desire, what they chase after, what they think is
best for them is not rooted in logic or love for their family and certainly not
with any regard to whether or not they are glorifying God. For the time being,
they are lost to you (at least spiritually speaking). Thinking they are ready
for the world they travel, as Hendriksen says, “Apparently as far away from
[their] home as [they] dare to go. Does not this folly remind one of the
prophet Jonah who seems to have thought that by boarding a ship for Tarshish he
could get away from God?"[1]
Luke 15:14-19
Next we see the often unfortunate reality these children
face. They run after the desires of the flesh and never stop to consider that
they will not be left peacefully alone like other children. These children have
been raised in Christian homes by pious parents who have instructed them in the
way of God. Their conscience is a burden to them and nothing seems to
ultimately go right for them. Eventually they find themselves mired in ruin and
desperate for help.
The young man in the parable provides us with an example of
what many of these children face. Once again Hendriksen says, “How utterly
foolish this conduct of his! First he gathered “all he had,” leaving nothing
behind in case his plan should not work out and he should wish to return home;
and now, in addition, he spent money right and left until in no time there was
nothing left."[1] It may not be riches that are being squandered by
the vast majority of our children but their spiritual health fades as quickly
as the money this young man spent. Then, like him, they find themselves
destitute and broken, mere shells of the glorious specimens that left the home.
Imagine the humiliation these children feel. Having abandoned all that is right
and pure in their lives, having left the comfortable confines of their homes,
they find themselves destitute and then famine arrives. Perhaps like the young
man in the parable they are forced to do things to provide for themselves that
otherwise would have been unimaginable, things that are even contrary to the
quiet voice of conscience in their heads. For the young man in the parable the
greatest expression of this was to be found in his caring for the pigs. This
wasn’t just work that had previously been beneath him and in and of itself
humiliating, but he was a Jew, doing so bruised his spirit as well as his
pride. Hendriksen says, “A Jew feeding pigs, unclean animals, how
degrading! How humiliating! Was not this saying current among the Jews:
‘May a curse come upon the man who cares for the swine’?"[1] In spite
of all that has happened to the young man it is as Brown says for the man in
the parable and our wayward children alike, “[…] pride, it seems, was not yet
humbled; he could not brook the shame of a return."[2]
To add insult to injury the young man couldn’t even fill his aching stomach
with the food the pigs were eating though he longed to. It doesn’t even seem
that anyone stepped in to help him, they just let him starve. I suppose we can
assume that he was paid a small wage for caring for the pigs and it was just enough
for him to survive on though not enough to satisfy him. This too, is the way
that wayward children face the world. They get to a low point and their souls
are aching for the care that they were previously accustomed to. Yet the world
cares nothing for these children and should their story be ultimately known
they may even relish in their demise. “Ha! Another Christian who has turned his
back on God and is worth nothing! See! There is no hope in Christianity, all
religion is a lie!” Jer. 30:14 becomes all too real, “All thy lovers have
forgotten thee; they seek thee not; for I have wounded thee with the wound of
an enemy, with the chastisement of a cruel one, for the multitude of thine
iniquity; because thy sins were increased.”
Their disquieted souls long to be nourished as they had
become accustomed to and all they can find is wickedness which leaves them
perpetually hungering for more; something, anything, to satisfy the hunger they
feel inside them. Like the man in the parable they fill this need with
inadequate and unfulfilling means. They join false churches; they put on a
pretense of religion as long as it doesn’t challenge their hearts towards true
piety or turn them back to their homes. Alas, they find that only for a very
short time do they seem able to hope for something better than what they
currently have. It is at this moment that they feel, as David Brown says, “[…]
like Jonah, whom the storm did not overtake till on the mighty deep at the
mercy of the waves, [and then they feel] as if ‘the stars in their courses were
fighting against’ [them]."[2] The Lord is dealing with this wayward
child and as we all know from experience, as necessary as it is, being
disciplined by the Lord is not an enjoyable time.
But, the Lord must deal with them; the Lord must have His will fulfilled in
their lives. We must allow that to happen. We cannot be agents of disruption in
their lives. We care for them, we pray for them, we long for them with all of
our hearts, yes; but we turn them over to the Lord and happily allow Him to
work in their lives regardless of the emotional strain that may cause us and
them at the time. We have committed these children to the Lord from their
birth, we have set them aside for His disposal, and we have faithfully raised
them accordingly believing all along in the covenant promises of God to save
our children; nothing has changed. Do we assume that the Lord becomes impotent
when our children leave the home? Has His purpose changed? No, nothing has
changed! “For I am the Lord, I change not.” (Mal. 3:6). God has assured us that
He is the same “yesterday, and today, and forever.” (Heb. 13:8) The only thing
that has changed is that we now question Him; we panic, and our faith in Him,
that He will save our children, falters. But we must hold on to faith in God
for in that we can rest easy knowing that whatever happens His will is going to
be accomplished, whatever that will may be, and that is our overriding concern.
We represent to these children what we have always represented and what we must
not depart from, we are to be examples of piety and faithfulness, and we are to
trust that our imperfect examples will have been, and continue to be, pressed
upon their hearts until the Lord extends to them the effectual call and they become
not just children alone but brothers in Christ.
Eventually, and please don’t try and put a time limit on it
as it will happen if and when the Lord pleases that it should happen, they are
humbled; no longer able to bear the burden of the world they return home. The
same was true of the Prodigal Son. Matthew Henry speaks not only of this but of
his return to sanity, which he had clearly abandoned upon leaving the home, he
says, “A sinful state is a state of madness and frenzy. This is
intimated in that expression, when he came to himself, which intimates
that he had been besides himself. Surely he was so when he left his
father’s house, and much more so when he joined himself to the citizens of that
country… Sinners, like those that are mad, destroy themselves with foolish
lusts, and yet at the same time deceive themselves with foolish hopes;
and they are, of all diseased persons, most enemies to their own cure."[3]
With a return to sanity the Prodigal Son returned home prodded on by his
misery. Henry says, “What was the occasion of his return and repentance.
It was his affliction; when he was in want, then he came to
himself. Note, Afflictions, when they are sanctified by divine grace, prove
happy means of turning sinners from the error of their ways. By them the ear is
opened to discipline and the heart disposed to receive instructions; and they
are sensible proofs both of the vanity of the world and of the mischievousness
of sin."[3] The misery that ensues for the Prodigal Son, or in this
consideration our wayward children, is there for a reason! It is used by the
Lord to turn their hearts back to him and back to those who truly love them and
care for them. It is why we cannot be detrimental to that process as the Lord
turns their hearts from stone to clay. It is through such happenings that the
Lord leads them to repentance and sets their feet on the straight path. It
isn’t just that they come back but that they come back with a truly penitent
heart. Hendriksen says, “[The Prodigal Son] arrives at the conclusion that his
decision to leave home was what? Simply unwise? A practical error? No,
definitely a sin, nothing less. A sin committed against whom? Against
his father? Well, first and most of all against “heaven,” that is, “against
God.” It was God who had given him a wonderful, kind, and loving father; hence
“against heaven” and “in your sight” (or: against you)… What a change in this young man. How penitent he has
become."[1] As common
as the experience may be for the children of pious parents to be wayward for
awhile, it is equally common that they return when the Lord has worked in their
hearts as He sees fit. We must wait patiently to see that end realized.
Luke 15:19-24
Now the Prodigal
Son comes home. I love the way that Hendriksen speaks of this moment. It has so
much force and emotion behind it. He says, “It is clear that the father never
lost interest in his wayward son. Again and again he must have been on the
lookout for him. And now… there he sees him in the distance. What does the
father do…? he sympathizes deeply, runs, embraces, and kisses. And all this
before the son has even said a word! Such marvelous love! […] ‘I have sinned
against heaven and in your sight; I am no longer worthy to be called your son.’
That is what the son had intended to say. But he had also intended to say even
more, namely, ‘Make me as one of your hired men.’ He never said it. The father
never gave him a chance to say it. Marvelous!"[1] You see, while we should not interfere with
the work of the Lord we should be eagerly anticipating their return. We should
be diligently praying for them and witnessing to them as the Lord provides
opportunity. We should be joyfully greeting them upon their return and
forgiving them as loving parents who pity the tragedy they have just
experienced and celebrate their repentant hearts returning to the Lord and to
our homes. Forgiveness is theirs without reservation; repentance brings them
back into the fold.
Herein is our hope for these wayward sons of ours. We should have realized long
ago that their salvation was dependent on the Lord just as ours was. We play a
part in bringing them to that end; but, if it was their parents that were the
primary consideration by which they would be saved they would all be doomed for
hell. For example, I fear that a great many of us do not stand up too well to
the demand of Eph. 6:4. Calvin says, “A hard and unkind severity makes
[children] obstinate and destroys their sense of filial duty. At the same time,
Paul insists on discipline, because he does not want children to be spoiled by
doting parents."[4] Martin Bucer adds, “Christian people are free, and
so every teaching and admonition directed at them must be moderated so as to
lead, not drag them, and to advise them gently, not compel them by force.
Therefore the apostle advises parents not to provoke their children to anger,
that is, not to exacerbate their minds. If they force them to do their duty by
employing intemperate severity, they will never make them good or prepared to
of the extra mile. Therefore he urges that they should be brought up in the
training and instruction of the Lord."[4] I don’t know that many, if
any of us, can say we are not guilty to whatever degree of violating this
Scriptural command. If our perfect parenting was to be the thing that their
eternal salvation depended upon then there will never be a godly race on this
earth, our failures and sin would permanently destroy the Christian faith.
But that is not the
case at all. Pr. 22:6 tells us, “Train up a child in the way he should go: and
when he is old, he will not depart from it.” Franz Delitzsch says that this
proverb “refers to that training of youth, in conformity with his nature, which
becomes a second nature, that which is imprinted, inbred, becomes accustomed."[5]
In other words, our duty lies exclusively in the planting of the seed. In
the same way a farmer plants a seed in the ground, and all that entails, as his
responsibility in securing a crop, we plant the seed in the hearts of our
children that they may be blessed with salvation. But, and this is a big but,
just as the growing of the farmers crop depends upon God providing rain and sun
in order to grow a healthy crop, we depend on God to grow the seed of faith we
have planted in our children’s hearts. Archibald Alexander explains it this way,
“It may be justly and scripturally compared to a growing crop: after the
seed is sown it vegetates, we know not how, and then it receives daily the
sun's influence, and from time to time refreshing showers; and later, after a
long drought, there comes a plentiful shower, by means of which, nutriment is
afforded for the formation of the full corn in the ear. No one will dispute the
importance and efficacy of this last shower in maturing the grain; but had
there been no cultivation and no showers long before, this had never produced
any effect."[6] The important
thing to know is that our hope for our children, indeed their hope for
themselves lies not in the brilliance of the parent but in the faithfulness of
God to grow the seed. Without God the seed would lie eternally dormant and even
the best parent ever to walk the face of the earth would see their efforts
amount to nothing. It is a wonderful grace that we look to the Lord to secure
our children’s salvation; it is our hope for them, and it is a blessing to all.
If you are dealing with this issue in your life, regardless of the age of your
children, may you set aside despair and reach for the sure of hope of the Lord
our God. He is rich in grace and we know that not one person that has ever been
numbered with the elect will be lost (Jn. 10:27 -30). Just like the Lord has saved us as
sinners, we whom the Prodigal Son represents, just like He called many of us
back from the brink of destruction, our children are in His hands and with Paul
we may boldly say, “I know whom I have believed, and am persuaded that He is
able to keep that which I have committed unto Him against that day.” (2 Tim.
1:12)
Plead with them, wait eagerly for them, pray for them daily, and wait on the
Lord to answer your prayers. It may not happen in a day, a year, or even a
decade, but if they are His they will indeed come and you have no reason to
doubt that they are not. Do not attempt to delve into eternal calling regarding
your children no matter how bad it gets, the current evidence may have little
or nothing to do with where they will spend eternity. Paul was an accomplice to
murder and yet he was the apostle the Lord used to evangelize the Gentiles.
Your child may yet be called into God’s service and I would not surrender that
hope for anything on this earth.
May the Lord who
gives graciously to His children, may the Lord who has promised that no good thing will He withhold from them
that walk uprightly bring peace
and patience to your stricken hearts, and may He bless each of our children
with salvation to His glory and for their good, Amen.
1. William Hendriksen, New Testament Commentary, vol. 3, Baler Academic, pp
752-756
2. David Brown, JFB
Commentary, vol. 3, Eerdman’s Publishing Co. , pp 288-291
3. Matthew Henry,
Commentary on the Whole Bible, Hendrickson Publishers, pp 1497-1499
4. Gerald L. Bray,
Reformation Commentary, IVP Academic, vol. 10, pg. 395
5. Franz Delitzsch,
K&D Commentary on the Old Testament, Eerdman’s Publishing Co., vol. 6, pp
86-87
6. Archibald
Alexander, Thoughts on Religious Experience, Banner of Truth, pg 3
You were certainly writing about my Prodigal! Thank you so much for posting this and leaving me with hope.
ReplyDeleteDonna Lochridge