The Prodigal Son
You will notice that the father never went to
seek him out while he was still in that other land and that was
because the father knew that repentance has to come from the heart.
It would have done no good for father to go and try to persuade him
to come home. It had to come from him. As soon as the father saw him
coming home, and you can just picture him coming home with his tail
between his legs, so to speak. I am sure that he was not striding
home with the attitude and the gait that he had when he left. I'm
sure that he looked lots different. He came home and his father ran
out to meet him. He threw his arms around him and gave him a hug and
kissed him. Then he started to tell his story and his father wasn't
listening. His father interrupted him and told one of the servants to
go back and kill the fatted calf because our son who has been gone
and is home again. I just love that story because it is a beautiful
picture of the response on the part of God to the spirit of
repentance on the part of humanity. In these earlier parables Jesus
said, "There is joy in heaven over one sinner that repenteth,"
then He went on to tell this story.
Maybe I'll just tell you,
just quickly a little story of one of my own special memories of my
own rearing. My Dad, I hesitate to say that he was strict but in a
sense when he told us to do something, he expected it done. He did
not micromanage our lives at all, and in fact we were given a lot of
responsibility as children for our own decisions. When Dad told us
something to do, it was expected that we did it and Dad never
threatened and he did not put up with a whole lot of foolishness.
When I was 16, this one night Dad had bought a brand new Ford pickup,
and in our home new vehicles were not very common. Dad asked me to
take the garbage to the dump which was about a mile and half way.
This was in the pre-environmental days when the local dump was just a
cliff that you dumped things over. It was a winter night and pouring
down rain, I thought, "Ha, I get to take the garbage to the
dump," so I jumped into the brand new truck and went. I backed
up to the edge of the cliff and I dumped the garbage then I thought
that I would punch it. Well, I did. The road was slick and the truck
spun out and the next thing that I knew the back end of the pickup
was over the cliff. The pickup was teetering on the edge and I was
one sick boy. Here was this brand new truck balancing on the edge of
the cliff and it was pouring down rain, dark as pitch and I was about
a mile and a half from home. All of the fun had suddenly gone out of
life. There was nothing to do but start walking home and, of course,
Mom and Dad had gotten worried because it was taking me longer than
it should have. Somewhere in the night we passed each other, Dad in
the car and me walking home in the rain. I didn't see him and he
didn't see me. So I got home and Dad was not there. Mom was there and
very quiet. I stood by the fire to warm up a little bit. Then Dad
came back in the door and I just knew that I was in trouble. You know
what? All he said was, "Let's go pull it out." He had
gotten to the dump and found the pickup hanging over the cliff and no
Ed around. I think that he saw by the expression on my face that it
really probably wasn't necessary to rub it in any further. We went
back and I got in the car and he got in the pickup and we pulled it
back up on the road and we went home. I expected a thorough dressing
down. You know, until his dying day I never heard another word about
that, never. I think it was because he saw that it wasn't necessary,
that I had learned my lesson and any further correction was
unnecessary.
I just like to think of that, how that would
have been that day when that young man came home. I can picture very
well the feeling that he had. The father saw that further correction
was not necessary, all he needed was just to be warmly welcomed back
into the home. That is the love of our Father. He does not change His
truth for anyone but when we are willing and we are humbled and when
we repent, there is no hesitation on His part to welcomed us home.
-Ed Alexander 2005
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