If I'm being honest, the beginning of it didn't rock my world too much. He talks about how many people who at first associate themselves with the younger son in the passage later realize that they are actually the elder son. Thankfully, I have had some pretty amazing people in my life who pointed this out to me a long time ago, and in fact I guess I am one of those people who really relates more to the elder son than the younger.
Nouwen goes on to point out how even though the elder son never left home he was just as lost as the prodigal. In a sense both sons are prodigals. This concept of the elder son being just as lost as the younger really clicked with me. See, I've never left my Father's house. I believed when I was young, I went to a Christian college and got a Bible degree, I never stopped going to church or praying, I never stopped reading my Bible, I mean basically I've never left. The truth of the matter is though that throughout most of college I was just as lost as someone who the world (or perhaps the Church) sees as lost. I didn't do drugs, party all the time, flunk out of school, sleep around, deny God's existence, or any of that stuff, but while remaining in God's house my relationship with him deteriorated. I got to the point where I couldn't really even say I had a relationship anymore. As I'm on this journey back to faith I take very seriously the idea of relationship and connect with this story more than ever.
Still none of this is what really stands out to me in Nouwen's book. Nouwen pointed out something that for me was radical: each of us is in some way either the younger or elder son but every one of us is called to be the Father. I am called to be the Father. You are called to be the Father. What that means is that each of us is called to be the one waiting with welcoming arms for that lost son or the one beckoning the elder son to come inside and join the party. None of us will ever reach the point of becoming the Father, but that is the journey we are called to take.
I guess that's kind of vague right? "Just become the Father." The truth is that I think there are a whole lot of practical steps to take toward doing that. Here are a couple I have been thinking about:
1) Spend time with the Father. If I spend time with someone I start to act like them. So I've been trying to spend time reading the Word, worshipping through singing and playing my guitar, praying, journaling, and just being in His presence.
2) Practice being the Father. Now I'm definitely not a saint, but there are tangible ways to do this. The one I have been working on is volunteering. I volunteer with an after school program once a week. It's not a lot, just a couple of hours a week, but it is a chance to pour into the lives of children who need it. A lot of them come from tough situations, and even if they wouldn't be labeled that way- well kids can always use some extra love. Just hanging out with these kids, helping them with their homework, learning their personalities, and caring about them has blessed my soul and I pray that it is a step toward me becoming the Father.
Often my faith is shaky, but a friend and I were recently talking about how sometimes you just have to practice your faith and then the faith itself comes. I think that's an important step in becoming like the Father. So this is me being honest: I am lost though I have never left home. I am on a journey toward turning into my Father (and also my mom and dad... it seems every day I see more and more how I am becoming like them in various ways whether I like it or not:). This is a crazy life, and I'm figuring it out one second at a time.
If you have the time I highly recommend picking up your own copy of The Return of the Prodigal Son, it may not rock your world but it definitely couldn't hurt.
Beth, thank you for sharing your insights! And I will show you the Rembrandt painting in St. Petersburg that inspired Nouwen someday. :) Keep the great posts coming.
ReplyDeleteYes please! Someday you and I will have to go to St. Petersburg together :)
ReplyDeleteThat's cool. Never thought of it that way before.
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