RCL Lent 4C [i]
30 March 2025
Saint Mary’s Kerrisdale
Vancouver BC
When I was a student in theological college, I earned extra money by babysitting the children of my faculty advisor who was both the Librarian and the Professor of New Testament. Since the children were quite young, they went to bed fairly early, leaving me with the run of Jim’s library. Every book had its place, and I was always careful, I thought, to put books back in their original locations after I had looked at them.
But I wasn’t as careful as I thought I had been. One day after Evensong Jim called me over and handed me a book entitled Caught in the Web of Words, the biography of James A. H. Murray, the first editor of the Oxford English Dictionary. When I asked him why he was giving me the book, Jim said that he thought it would keep my attention for the next couple of weeks and I would stop messing about with his library’s carefully arranged shelving.
He was right. I dove into the book, and it did keep me busy for a number of babysitting gigs. And, after I was finished the book, I returned to Jim’s library but learned to be more careful in replacing books.
My encounter with James A. H. Murray left a lasting imprint on me in my ministry as a pastor, priest and teacher. I often find myself caught by a word or a phrase in the Scriptures or in the liturgy or in the writings of a theologian. Today is a case in point and I thank the participants in the Bible study group at Fleetwood Villa in Surrey for entrapping me in a particular phrase of a very familiar parable.
This familiar parable can be read on so many levels. Most of the time we think of it as the ‘Parable of the Prodigal Son’, but I have read commentaries that call it the ‘Parable of the Loving Father’ or the ‘Parable of the Older Brother’. But I think one of the keys to unlocking this parable is in remembering the context in which this parable is told in the Gospel according to Luke.
It is a parable directed towards a group within Judaism who should be Jesus’ natural allies: the Pharisees and the scribes. Unlike the Sadducees who are intimately linked to the Temple, to a strict interpretation of the first five books of Moses and who are deeply aware of the dangers to the Temple if the fears of the Roman authorities are aroused, the Pharisees and the scribes are committed to a Judaism that is not so centred on the Temple. They are interpreters of the whole of what we know as the Hebrew Bible: the Torah, the Prophets and the historical Writings. They understand that what the Bible says may not always be what the Bible means.
But Jesus’ openness to tax collectors and sinners, to women and foreigners, to lepers and the crippled has, for some reason, caused alarm bells to sound in the minds and hearts of the Pharisees and the scribes. So, when Jesus tells them the parable, he uses a phrase which I think strikes at the heart of their hesitancy and of their fears. Because we know this story so well, the phrase I’m thinking of may not have caught you in its web: “But when he came to himself . . . “. [ii] Most other translations read, ‘But when he came to his senses . . . “ [iii], but I prefer the reading from the New Revised Standard Version.
When I hear these words in this translation, I am struck by a fundamental conviction embedded in them. It’s clear that this young man has violated any number of social expectations of the times. In a society where loyalty to one’s family was at a premium, he wants his share of the inheritance and chooses to go off on a frenzy of ‘dissolute living’ without any concern for the needs of his family nor of their reputation in the community. In a Jewish culture where any association with unclean animals such as pigs rendered a person ritually unclean and cut off from the religious life of the community, the only job he can find is feeding swine. I can see the faces of Jesus’ audience and can catch a whisper of what they’re thinking – ‘The kid’s getting everything he deserves. He’s demonstrated that he’s rotten to the core. His family is better off without him.’
And then, as he does so often, Jesus turns all these cultural and social mores on their heads with one phrase: ‘But when he came to himself . . . ‘. These words say to Jesus’ audience that this young man is not wicked, not depraved, not beyond the pale. Has he made some bad choices? Certainly. Has he been irresponsible and short-sighted? Without a doubt. But when he comes to himself, he finds a core of humility, a core of self-worth, a core of self-awareness that is worthy of a father’s forgiving love. Everything that the young man has done cannot erase the fact that he has been made in God’s image. Despite cultural and social norms, there is a way back for this young man from the precipice he has been approaching.
I believe that at the heart of the Anglican way of being a disciple of Jesus of Nazareth is the firm conviction that there an indelible stamp of God’s image embedded in each one of us. We may fail to act in our daily lives and in our relationships in a manner that manifests that image, but our failures cannot erase God’s claim upon us – creatures who have been given the ability to love one another as God loves us. Perhaps the ‘new creation’ that Paul speaks of in today’s reading from 2 Corinthians is our re-discovery of our true selves when we realize that when we meet Jesus, we meet God. This encounter with the living God in the person of Jesus catches us in a web of justice, of loving-kindness, of humility.
We are living in a moment of human history when our commitments to ‘ . . . seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving (our) neighbour as (ourself)’ and to ‘ . . . strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the dignity of every human being’ [iv] are under assault from many and sundry persons and institutions. The perpetrators of this assault claim
· that some people are worthy of our concern and others are not,
· that self-interest rather than the common good of all is paramount, and
· that empathy is a tool for our destruction rather than the path towards our working with God to create a just society, ‘ . . . so that we and all (God’s) children shall be free, and the whole earth live to praise (God’s) name’. [v]
But we who through our baptism into the death, resurrection and ascension of Christ have been entrusted with the ministry of reconciliation and made ambassadors for Christ [vi] must dare to challenge these messages that deny the dignity of every human being. We know that in every human being there dwells the image of the living God –
· whether immigrant, refugee or undocumented,
· whether one chooses to use ‘they’ rather than ‘he’ or ‘she’,
· whether one came to this part of planet Earth ten years ago, one hundred years ago or tens of thousands of years ago.
We are all in the process of ‘coming to ourselves’. Day by day God gives us opportunities to return from our follies and failures and to be embraced by the love of God made manifest in Christ. To be a disciple of Christ is to be both the prodigal young man returning in humble repentance and the father with open arms and joyful heart. To be a disciple of Christ is to engage in public witness to this truth in a world where there are many who need to come back to themselves rather than continue to live in bondage to counterfeit claims that are life-denying rather than life-giving.
Let us pray.
Giver of life, you most wonderfully created us in your image and gave us the power to love as you have loved us: Catch us in the web of love that unites you with Christ and the Spirit, so that we, with all your children, might be restored to our true selves; through your Word made flesh in whom we live and move and have our being. Amen.
Image accessed at https://millennialpastor.ca/2016/03/06/the-prodigal-son-and-his-self-righteous-jerk-of-a-brother/ on 29 March 2025.
[i] Joshua 5.9-12; Psalm 32; 2 Corinthians 5.16-21; Luke 15.1-3, 11b-32.
[ii] Luke 15.17 (NRSV).
[iii] See Common English Bible, New Revised Standard Version updated edition, Revised English Bible.
[iv] The Book of Alternative Services (1985), 159.
[v] The Book of Alternative Services (1985), 215.
[vi] 2 Corinthians 5.18, 20.