I’ve come to a conclusion: I’ll never plumb the
depths of the parable Jesus told about a prodigal son. Reading
through Mark McMinn’s Why Sin Matters first piqued my
curiosity to take another look at the familiar parable that
appears in Luke’s gospel. McMinn related how Rembrandt’s painting
of The Prodigal haunted him, enticing him to meditate on
the parable more. so last fall, I began reading Luke 15 over and
over. I was hooked. I had to really understand the parable for
myself. Then I read Henri Nouwen’s The Return of the Prodigal
Son and marveled again, this time at the parable’s many facets
highlighted by Nouwen. Last spring, I preached through the parable
phrase by phrase and word by word for three months and thought I
had really covered the parable. Then I read The Prodigal God
by Timothy Keller and found yet greater depth to this
marvelous parable.
Keller adds to our understanding of this parable
in his analysis of the elder son, who represents the
self-righteous Pharisees to whom Jesus told this parable. Keller
exposes how the elder son desired the same thing as the younger
son, his father’s possessions but not his father. Both brothers
resented their father. Both were equally lost.
Keller challenges his readers to examine whether
they have “an elder-brother” spirit also. Do they believe they
deserve better than what God gives them? Do they possess a bitter
spirit? Do they feel superior because of their good works? Do they
live joyless, slavish lives of fear and uncertainty? Are their
prayer lives anemic? Keller contends that the church is full of
elder-brother types.
Perhaps Keller’s greatest contribution comes when
he suggests that Jesus’ listeners would have been aware of a
glaring omission in His parable. The cultural context (as well as
the biblical context) of the story anticipates a true elder
brother who would have left his father and the comforts of home to
search for his lost younger brother. He would have pursued him
until he found him, and then he would have brought him home to
their father with much rejoicing. Keller insightfully states, “By
putting a flawed elder brother in the story, Jesus is inviting us
to imagine and yearn for a true one.” And who else could be our
wonderful, true elder brother except Jesus?
If these pearls of wisdom are not sufficient to
warrant picking up The Prodigal God, Keller explores the
meaning of coming home and our longing for home, the very place
the Prodigal yearned for after he came to his senses. If the
parable of the Prodigal continues to haunt and beckon you, as it
has me, then you must read Keller’s short but insight-packed book.
You will come away convicted, but you will also come away
understanding more about the depth of gospel love and grace. You
will come away loving Jesus even more as your true elder brother
who was committed to finding you and bringing you back home to the
Father.
—
Will Hesterberg, CEP Committee Member