Have you ever heard, or used, the phrase ‘prodigal son’? It’s one of those terms that sneaked its way into the English language from the Bible over many centuries – but I am not sure (to quote Inigo Montoya from ‘The Princess Bride’,) “That word means quite what you think it means.”
The phrase ‘prodigal’ is often used to describe someone who is wayward, who has ‘left the nest’ and gone astray. It’s often used to talk about someone who has ‘gone off the rails’ or is on the wrong path. That’s not what the word means though – it actually means generous: wastefully, overwhelmingly, even thoughtlessly generous.
In the original story, or parable, of the Lost Son ( as it is now known) in Luke’s Gospel chapter 15, Jesus talks of two brothers where the youngest demands his inheritance – basically wishing his father was dead – and then goes off and spends it on ‘dissolute living.’ When the money runs out he returns to his father (after a brief, and desperate, time as a pig farmer) claiming to be unworthy of the name ‘son’ but asking to be a hired worker on the family farm. Rather than judging the son, the father gives him the best robes, a new family ring, and a huge party to celebrate his return – much to the annoyance of the older brother. The father says that the reason for the celebration is that he is overjoyed that the son has returned, and that he is always willing to share all that he has with his children – generously, and without limit.
So perhaps this story would be best called ‘the parable of the prodigal dad’?
The father in this story is often used in Church to represent God – the gracious giver, the one who welcomes us with love and without judgement. But what if we used this image to represent ourselves, and saw it as a challenge to us – as human beings, as spiritual beings – to be people of wasteful generosity? We have certainly seen a hugely generous response over the past months towards the displaced, those seeking refuge and haven in our country – and that generosity continues with refugee support groups springing up all over 91ԭ Island.
What if we applied such non-judgemental generosity in all of our dealings with one another? How different would our world look if we were –as individuals and as a society – more active in our wasteful generosity towards one another? If we stopped judging others on their looks, or background, or riches, or achievements?
For those of us who claim a spiritual path a crucial part of our journey, our calling, is to learn to love generously and without limit. Not to be naïve or uninformed, but to open ourselves to one another and to seek the best not just for ourselves and those who look, sound, or think like us, but to seek the best for all people. It’s certainly a message that Jesus lived out; he was accused repeatedly by the religious types of his day of spending too much time with the ‘undesirables’ of society.
So often the message of ‘religion’ seems to be about building walls – around ourselves, our community, our way of believing, and our religious practice. The great leaders of the religious traditions of the world, including Jesus, seemed much more about welcoming and accepting people into new ways of seeing, of loving, and of living. If we were more like that, perhaps we would truly know what it means to be prodigal – generously and expansively wasteful in our care and compassion for all.
Alastair McCollumis Rector of St. John the Divine Anglican Church in Victoria. He has a passion for the Gospel, motorbikes and bike culture, worship, philosophy, theology, guitars, single malt whisky, real ale, cinema and all things French.You can find Alastair at the church website: andon his blog:
You can read more articles from our interfaith blog, Spiritually Speaking,
* This article was published in the print edition of the Times 91ԭ on Saturday, March 12 2016