|
||||
|
"The Father Who Lost Two Sons" The Parable of the Lost Sheep is not about the lost sheep. All the sheep
ever did was get lost. The parable is about the passion of the shepherd who lost
the sheep to find the sheep. His passion to find is what drives the
parable; and consequently it isn't the Prodigal's lostness, wasting all
his money on wine, women and song in the far country; and it isn't the elder
brother's grousing and complaining and score keeping that stands against him.
What counts in the parable is the father's unceasing desire to find the sons he
lost—both of them—and to raise both of them up from the dead. The story, of course, you know. The story begins with the father having two
sons and the youngest son comes to the father and says, "Father, divide the
inheritance between me and my brother." What he’s in effect saying is,
"Dear Dad, drop dead now, legally. Put your will into effect and just
retire out of the whole business of being anything to anybody and let us have
what is coming to us." So the youngest son gets the money and the older
brother gets the farm. And off the younger brother goes. What he does, of
course, is he spends it all—blows it all—on wild living. When he finally is
in want and working, slopping hogs for a farmer and wishing that he could eat
what he’s feeding the pigs, he can't stand it. When he finally comes to
himself he says, "You know, I've got to do something. How many hired
servants of my father's are there who have bread enough to spare and I'm
perishing here with hunger? I know what I'm going to do." Almost every preacher makes this the boy's repentance. It's not his
repentance. This is just one more dumb plan for his life. He says, "I will
go to my father and I will say, ‘Father, I've sinned against heaven and before
you.'" That's true. He got that one right. "And I'm no longer worthy
to be called your son." Score two. He gets that one right. But the next
thing he says is dead wrong. He says, "Make me one of your hired
servants." He knows—he thinks he knows—he can't go back as a dead son,
and therefore he says, "I will now go back as somebody who can earn my
father's favor again. I will be a good worker or whatever." This is not a
real repentance, it's just a plan for a life. What it is, is enough to get him
started going home, and consequently when he goes home, what happens next is an
absolutely fascinating kind of thing. What happens next is that the father (you must remember this) is now sitting
on the front porch of the farm house. The farm house doesn't belong to him
anymore. The front porch doesn't belong to him. He’s sitting in the rocker
that belongs to his oldest son who is now, you know, the owner of the farm. He’s
sitting there and he sees the Prodigal, the younger boy, coming down the road
from far away. He sees him coming. What does he do? He rushes off the porch,
runs a half mile down the road, throws his arms around the boy's neck and kisses
him. Now, this is all that Jesus does with this scene. The fascinating thing in
this parable is that in the whole parable the father never says one single word
to the Prodigal Son. Jesus makes the embrace, the kiss, do the whole story of
saying, "I have found my son." The fascinating thing also is that when
the father embraces the boy who has come home from wasting his life, the boy
never gets his confession out of his mouth until after the kiss, until after the
embrace. What this says to you and me who have to live with the business of
trying to confess our sins is that confession is not a pre-condition of
forgiveness. It’s something that you do after you know you have been forgiven.
Confession is not something you do in order to get forgiveness. It’s something
you do in order to celebrate the forgiveness you got for nothing. Nobody can
earn forgiveness. The Prodigal knows he's a dead son. He can't come home as a
son, and yet in his father's arms he rises from the dead and then he is able to
come to his father's side. What happens next is that the father, saying not a word to the Prodigal,
turns to the servants and says, "Bring the best robe, bring a ring for his
finger and shoes for his feet, kill the fatted calf and let us eat and be merry
for this, my son, was dead and is alive again. He was lost and is found."
Now this is the point in the parable at which everything is going well. The dead
son, the no-good Prodigal Son, is home. He has been raised from the dead by his
father's embrace. He has done nothing to earn it, but now all that matters is
that the father has called for the party to celebrate the finding of the lost
and the resurrection of the dead. It's the party. Every one of Jesus' parables of grace—not every one, but
most of them—end with a party. When the Shepherd finds the lost sheep, he
doesn't go back to the 99, he goes home and has a party with his friends in
order to celebrate the finding of the lost. The father's will to have a party is
what the parable is all about. That's why you must always do, not the human race
characters in the parable like the Prodigal and the elder brother, why you must
always do the God character first, because it’s the God character who drives
the parable. All right, now, what we've got now is everybody dead in the parable. The
father died at the beginning, the Prodigal died in the far country: he came home
dead and the father raises him. Everything is fine. And now what we've got is
Jesus' genius as a storyteller. The party is in full swing, so Jesus brings back
in the only person in the story left who still has a life of his own: Mr.
Responsibility, Mr. Whining, Mr. Elder Brother. He comes up and hears the music
and the dancing and he probably sees the waiters scurrying around with roast
veal platters and everything else. And he asks one of the servants, "What
is this all about? I didn't commission a party." The servant says,
"No, no, your brother has come home and your father has killed the fatted
calf because he received him safe and sound." And the older brother is
angry and he will not go in. He will not go into the house. He is right out
there in the midst of the party. He is part of the party but he will not join
the party. And the next thing that happens in this: when he comes in with all
this bookkeeping he says, "Look," to his father, "all these years
I served you and I never broke one of your commandments and you never even gave
me a goat that I could make merry with my friends. But when this your son
(notice he doesn't say, this my brother) cuts off his relationship, this your
son has wasted your substance with riotous living, has wasted your substance
with harlots, when this son comes home you kill the fatted calf!" I think that one of the things you could do with this is make up a speech for
the father. The father goes out in the courtyard to plead with the older son. He
goes out there in order to find him as he is and to raise him from the dead. He
never gives up on any of them. He says to him, "Look, Arthur (let’s call
the older brother Arthur), what do you mean I never gave you a goat for a party?
If you wanted to have a great veal dinner for all your friends every week in the
year, you had the money and the resources. You owned this place, Arthur. You
have the money and the resources to have built 52 stalls and kept the oxen
fattening as you wanted them to come along, but you didn't. Why didn't you do
that, Arthur? Because you're a bean counter, because you're always keeping track
of everybody else. That's your problem, Arthur, and I have one recipe for
you." (The father is pleading with this fellow to come out of the death of
bookkeeping.) He says, "I have one recipe for you, Arthur. That is, go in,
kiss your brother, and have a drink. Just shut up about all this stuff because,
Arthur, you came in here already in hell, and I came out here in this courtyard
to visit you in the hell in which you were." This is the wonderful thing about this parable, because it isn't that there
was a Prodigal Son who was a bad boy and who, therefore, came home and turned
out to be a good boy and had a happy ending. Then the elder brother—you would
think Jesus, if he was an ordinary storyteller, would have said, "Let's
give the elder brother a rotten ending." He doesn't. He gives the older
brother no ending. The parable ends with a freeze frame. It ends like that with
just the father, and the sound goes dead—the servants may be moving around
with the wine and veal—but the sound goes dead and Jesus shows you only the
freeze frame of the father and the elder brother. That's the way the parable has
ended for 2,000 years. My theory about this parable is that if, for 2,000 years, he has never let it
end, then you can extend that indefinitely, that this is a signal, an image of
the presence of Christ to the damned. When the father goes out into the
courtyard, he is an image of Christ descending into hell; and, therefore, the
great message in this is the same as Psalm 139, "If I go down to hell, You
are there also." God is there with us. There is no point at which the
Shepherd who followed the lost sheep will ever stop following all of the damned.
He will always seek the lost. He will always raise the dead. Even if the elder
brother refused forever to go in and kiss his other brother, the Father would
still be there pleading with him. Christ never gives up on anybody. Christ is
not the enemy of the damned. He is the finder of the damned. If they don't want
to be found, well there is no imagery of hell too strong like fire and brimstone
and all that for that kind of stupidity. But nonetheless, the point is that you
can never get away from the love that will not let you go and the elder brother
standing there in the courtyard in his own hell is never going to get away from
the Jesus who seeks him and wills to raise him from the dead.
Interview with Robert Farrar
Capon Floyd Brown: I always enjoy your dealing with the parables the way that you do, but you always leave questions in my mind and that, of course, is planned. Right?Robert Capon: Yes, but my whole point is if you give a person an answer without raising the question then they never remember the answer, so you have to raise the question first. You have to be ahead of them. They have to be wondering what does that mean until then you tell them what it means. Brown: Ok. You got some questions in my mind. I've got to ask you a couple of them. You started out saying that the Prodigal came home. He did two things right. What did he do wrong? Capon: Well, in the far country. You have to distinguish when he was in the far country and then when he came home. When he was in the far country, he made up his confession this way. "Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you." Correct. "I am no longer worthy to be called your son." Correct. But then the third part: "Make me a hired hand in your house." Incorrect. Wrong. It's not a repentance. It's a plan for life. His father could no more make him a hired hand. He would either be a dead son or a son raised from the dead, a lost son or a found son, but a son, not a hired hand. And the brilliance of Jesus as a storyteller is that the father kisses him, the boy, when he gets home. Before he makes his confession, the father kisses him, embraces him, accepts him. That's the whole image of grace right there. Then the boy finally, in his father's arms, makes the confession. He says, "Father, I've sinned against heaven and before you, and am no more worthy to be called your son." Period. Jesus has him leave off the clunker the second time around. Brown: The second time around. Well, what about the other side? First, tell me, a lot of people are confused. What does prodigal mean? Capon: Prodigal means a wastrel, a person who foolishly and improvidently spends all his money. You know, a sower of wild oats. Brown: Okay, I assumed as much. Let's talk about the other brother. You called him Arthur. We'll call him Art here. Did he really benefit from this experience later? Capon: I think this is a good question. The trick is the parables were never meant for us to imitate or admire the character of the human race character. What’s there to admire about a lost sheep? The dumb sheep got lost, that's all. What does it tell me I must do in order for the shepherd, the Divine Shepherd, to find me? Get lost. That's all. It doesn't tell me fancy lost, a good lost, an ethical lost. Just get lost, then he will find you. He finds the lost. And the same thing is true of the Prodigal and the elder brother. It's the shepherd who is the God character in the sheep parable. It's the father who’s the God character in the Prodigal Son. So the Prodigal and the elder brother are both us. I can find myself in the Prodigal. I have sown my wild oats. I have wasted lots of time in the world. I have lost all kinds of stuff that would have been better that I kept. And by the same token, I can see myself in the older brother, the whining, complaining, poor me, you don't understand me, you've been mean to me. Brown: The bean counter. I like that! Capon: The bean counter keeping score. We are all both of these people and what Jesus shows us in this parable is that it doesn't matter which one you are; (a) you are lost, and (b) he will never stop finding you. Brown: We can't earn it, can we? Capon: You can't earn it and the thing is you can avoid it. In all of Jesus' other parables of judgment, the imagery for hell is separation imagery: out of darkness, kick him out, throw him away. This is the one place where Jesus has a Christ figure descending into hell to visit the damned, the elder brother, in which they're in the same place. The hell in this imagery, in this parable, is eternally at the party of heaven. Hell is somehow inside heaven. You want to know where I put it? You got a minute? I'll tell you quickly. Brown: Half a minute. Capon: In the nail hole in the left hand of the risen body of Jesus is all the room you need to contain all the zillions and billions of people who ever would be in hell because they are so thin and wispy. They don't spoil the party in there either. You can find them in that nail hole and if they want some day, maybe they can come out. Brown: Thank you, for a marvelous, marvelous message. Capon: Thank you, Floyd. |
||||
|
|
||||
| Home | History | Program Schedule | This Week | Sermons | Publications | Related Links | Contact Us |