Luke 15:1-3; 11-32, 2 Corinthians 5:16-21
There he is, that elder son, standing in the field, clinging to his hard-working righteousness and unable to make himself join the festive dinner with his father and his lost brother.
Every time we get to that scene at the end of Jesus’ parable, it feels just like where we started this story, with Jesus’ philosophical and political opponents griping and muttering about all the sinners coming to be welcomed to dinner by Jesus.
And since the parable doesn’t resolve – since the elder brother neither goes in to the party or actually walks away, we are left in that same tension, deprived of a “right” answer to whether it is holy to party with sinners.
That lingering, unfinished end of the story must have driven the Pharisees nuts.
It certainly itches at me every time I read it; every time this story comes up in our calendar at church.
And that unfinished ending, repeated, makes me wonder if this parable isn’t some kind of biblical form of the classic movie “Groundhog Day”, where we must cycle through the same story over and over and over, trying out all the different ways to live it, until we find the one where all the relationships come into balance – healed, healthy, mutual, and holy.
Because every perspective you can take in this parable has lessons and healings for our spiritual development, our relationship with God, and through God with one another.
(That’s true of many of Jesus’ parables, really. There’s never “one right way” to read them, or learn from them. Always many ways.)
There’s the perspective of the younger son, the one with the big conversion moment. The son who snatches at everything he believes to be his, blows through it, and discovers not only that he is hungry, and alone, and wishes he weren’t, but that there is still someone he can trust, even after he’s wrecked himself.
His repentance – his great turning of heart and life – starts with the remembrance of the generous support his father’s workers receive; with the recognition that here is the fundamental source of trust and goodness in his life.
You and I, too, in order to repent – to turn our hearts and selves to God, as we talked about last week – need to be able to notice and rely on God’s goodness.
To know that in God we do trust.
Even when we are at our own very worst.
Then this lost-and-found son has to learn to accept love and joy and welcome as an unearned gift. To let go of the inheritance he thought was his, and accept that his welcome – even his identity and role in the family, whether hired hand or son – isn’t something he earns or owns, but something he must accept from the overwhelming force of unconditional love.
I won’t ask you to raise your hands, but I wonder if some, or many, of us here find it challenging to trust in God, or in someone else, when we are at our very worst?
I wonder if any, or many, of us find it uncomfortable to let go of what we earn, or own, or deserve on our own merits, in order to accept welcome as an un-earned gift.
Then there’s the father.
Obsessively watching the road home, ready to throw away all his dignity, all his injuries, and embrace his lost son.
If we can put ourselves in his place, we might be able to feel that deep hope and longing for one we have lost. And learn that it is worth it – always worth it in the life of God – to hope and hope that someone who has hurt us, or who has gone astray, will repent. Will return seeking to heal past injuries and begin anew, and give us the opportunity to feel the peace of forgiveness and joy of reunion.
(Now it might be worth noting that in the terms of the parable, the lost-and-found child may be restored to the belovedness of a son, but not to an expectation of further inheritance. This forgiveness isn’t an invitation to repeat the original offenses, but a chance to start anew where the possibility of the same offense is removed.)
I wonder if any of us long for the chance to forgive, to start again, to welcome back someone who has left us?
I wonder if any of us would be relieved to know that God thinks there is no shame in watching and wishing for the return of love that once was lost.
But that’s not all of the father’s story.
Because then he hears how his older son feels insulted, offended, by the welcome of the “sinner”. And may have discovered that he has something to repent of himself.
Had he taken the faithfulness of the older son for granted? Had he not made sure his close, reliable, child heard and knew the trust the father had in him? The joy and love that underlaid the everyday?
I know I’ve had to learn that lesson myself sometimes.
I don’t know if any or many of you also need nudges to remind us not to take faithfulness for granted – whether it’s the faithfulness of a family member, a friend, or God’s own self.
Finally, there’s the older son, standing in the driveway, unable to either go in to the sinner’s party, or stay outside alone and righteous.
I wonder if perhaps he missed, in his life, the same thing I usually miss in reading this story.
That right when the uppity younger son demands early access to his inheritance, the father divides his property [his life in the original Greek] between his sons, implying that the older son, too, has alreadyreceived his inheritance.
It’s easy to miss in the story, with the father still acting as the head of household and ordering the servants about, but what if it’s literally true already that “all that is mine is yours”?
That the older son already has all the young goats he could have wanted to celebrate with; has already been given his father’s “life”, his father’s everything?
This is the big spiritual challenge of Christianity.
How do we – you, and I, and that mythical elder son – how do we respond to the truth that Jesus has already given us God’s life, God’s everything?
It’s the question Paul’s wrestling with for his friends in Corinth, today. Who are we, when we are already a new creation? No longer our old selves waiting to be noticed, cared for, recognized.
Paul answers that by announcing that we are agents of Christ, agents of reconciliation, of healing the brokenness in anyone’s relationship with God, with one another.
How many of us – I will ask for show of hands this time – how many of us go through the world – through the office and the chores and the daily news and the desire for a nice dinner out for once – how many of us go through our dailyness fully aware that you are agents of reconciliation?
That you are, for God’s intents and purposes, Jesus’ presence in the world right now?
Or how many of us, I wonder, could be that elder brother, not quite aware that we have already been given all we could ask for, and more?
How many of us, I wonder, is God inviting today to practice seeing the world through the eyes of God’s own favored child, already gifted with everything God has?
How many of us might even be standing – metaphorically – on the step of our own house, God’s house, still trying to realize what it means that we have already, always been beloved, favored, gifted with God’s life, and empowered with the love to welcome, and celebrate, and rejoice in, every loss being healed, every sheep being found, every sibling restored and loved?
It's too many lessons to learn in one day.
Too many ways and places to stretch our hearts, and be filled with healing and blessing and love, to fit into one telling of the story.
So maybe this story, this parable of Jesus, is a good one to wake up to, over and over. To live through for ourselves: one way, and then another, and then another – until our whole hearts and souls and selves are filled up and flowing over with trust, and rejoicing, and with the unearned and undeservable gift of God’s love.
And the urge to share it, and share it, and share it, this day, and all the days to come.