Monday, July 16, 2012

A Son Restored

God's Creative Word
God Calls For Justice:  Justice Enacted

A King Acts on a Widow's Behalf

Luke 15:11-24

The Message
The Story of the Lost Son
 11-12Then he said, "There was once a man who had two sons. The younger said to his father, 'Father, I want right now what's coming to me.' 12-16"So the father divided the property between them. It wasn't long before the younger son packed his bags and left for a distant country. There, undisciplined and dissipated, he wasted everything he had. After he had gone through all his money, there was a bad famine all through that country and he began to hurt. He signed on with a citizen there who assigned him to his fields to slop the pigs. He was so hungry he would have eaten the corncobs in the pig slop, but no one would give him any.
 17-20"That brought him to his senses. He said, 'All those farmhands working for my father sit down to three meals a day, and here I am starving to death. I'm going back to my father. I'll say to him, Father, I've sinned against God, I've sinned before you; I don't deserve to be called your son. Take me on as a hired hand.' He got right up and went home to his father.
 20-21"When he was still a long way off, his father saw him. His heart pounding, he ran out, embraced him, and kissed him. The son started his speech: 'Father, I've sinned against God, I've sinned before you; I don't deserve to be called your son ever again.'
 22-24"But the father wasn't listening. He was calling to the servants, 'Quick. Bring a clean set of clothes and dress him. Put the family ring on his finger and sandals on his feet. Then get a grain-fed heifer and roast it. We're going to feast! We're going to have a wonderful time! My son is here—given up for dead and now alive! Given up for lost and now found!' And they began to have a wonderful time.

For Reflection 
Two sons, both educated in the ways of God, one was sober and the other risky. This all too familiar story is not just about the risky son.  It is also about the sober one.  What their father thought was justice in embracing the returning son the sober son saw as unjust.  Considering that both sons had a similar upbringing in spiritual matters what do you suppose accounts for the difference in the way the sober son's and the father's sense of justice?

Pray
that you will adjust your sense of fairness to be consistent with the love God expresses and resides in this father.  Pray that your attitudes of justice and your actions are consistent with Godly wittiness.

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