Catalyst Question
What was the last trip that you went on? How did it feel to come home after being away?
A Surprising Homecoming
After nine months, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams are home. These two are the astronauts who were originally supposed to spend a week at the International Space Station. What was meant to be a short, joyous journey toward the stars became a months-long stay in the vacuum of space. They returned to great fanfare and, of course, to some well-deserved time off.
This week’s Gospel tells of another homecoming. Luke 15:1-3, 11b-32 includes the parable we often call The Prodigal Son. It’s a story of another trip that was meant to be lots of fun but turned into a torturous tail of woe. Unlike the astronauts above, however, the son at the center of the story departed with more selfish intents. He demanded his inheritance early, then went off to some far flung region to party. It’s the biblical equivalent of taking your parent’s savings and running off to Las Vegas. After a series of unfortunate events, this son ended up poor and doing hard labor. Eventually, he remembered the lifestyle of his father’s laborers, which was much better than his current lifestyle. So, he went home in hopes of taking a job just to survive. Yet, upon his return, the father welcomed this son back like an astronaut returning from an extended stay in the cosmos.
This was a surprising homecoming because, unlike the astronauts, the son left with no gratitude with his family and no intent to return. Yet, he was celebrated like a returning hero rather than a greedy child. Why?
Grace. Grace is more powerful than even the son’s most significant failures.
The great grace of the father in the story reflects the great grace of God for us all. We are, in many ways, prodigal children. We turn away from our home in God and try to find satisfaction elsewhere. Yet, when we come home, God receives us not with judgement, but jubilance. God celebrates everyone who comes home, no matter how long it takes. This Lent, remember that the journey we walk toward Good Friday and Easter Sunday is the culmination of grace. There is nothing that God won’t do in order to welcome us home.
Ask Yourself
Have you ever been afraid of admitting you’ve made a mistake? Why was that?
Ask a Friend
Have you ever been given grace after doing something you knew was wrong? What did receiving that grace feel like?