Gospel Reflections by Father Gerry Pierse, C.Ss.R.

C - 4th Sunday of Lent


Jos 5:9-12 • 2 Cor 5:17-21 • Lk 15:1-3, 11-32

A Love That Is Too Much to Take!

One Sunday morning I divided the congregation at a barrio mass into small groups. I asked them to discuss the Gospel, the one we have today, the story of the defiant son and the prodigal Father. After some time an old man raised his hand asking to speak. "How come, Father," he asked, "that Jesus Christ allowed a bad story like this into the Gospel? Isn't it clear that the father should not have forgiven his son? This story is a very bad example to be giving our children. Do you think that we could ask the Holy Father to have it erased?"

The story does turn many common assumptions upside down. The father in the story is, of course, our heavenly Father but he acts very differently to the fathers that we have experienced. We are often made to buy the love we get. As children we are told that if we behave well we will get gifts and opportunities. If we behave badly we will be punished. But here is the story of a father who is total unchangeable love. His attitude to his sons is at all times 100% love. So, even though his younger son leaves him and squanders his inheritance in a life of debauchery, the father can do nothing except to accept him back lovingly on his return. What a surprising father! What a loving God! What a challenge to our conventional way of looking at things. The story teaches us that we are loved for who we are, and not just for the way in which we behave.

But there are more shocks for us in the story! The father has two sons, a reckless rascal and a dutiful deferential one. The anti hero or contrabida of the story is not the bad boy but the good one. The younger son asks for his share of the inheritance which he converts into cash. He leaves and all goes well for him as he squanders it. Then, money-less he also becomes friend-less. He is reduced to the greatest indignity possible for a Jew - attending pigs, unclean animals. There he "comes to his senses." It is in our senses that our deepest memories are stored. He knows that he must go back to his father. He prepares a speech of apology and a petition for his reinstatement in the household as a mere servant. Events were to show that he had totally underestimated his father who would not only embrace him in forgiveness but also declare a banquet to celebrate his return.

The older son also underestimated his father. This dutiful one is shocked at his fathers easy pardon for the erring brother. He feels outraged that there is a banquet for the sinner while he, who in his own eyes was so good, had never been given even a kid goat with which to celebrate. He is deaf to his father's assurance that "all that I have is yours" and continues to sulk at his liberality towards the worthless brother.
The story leaves us with the message that there are two kinds of bad people. The bad bads are those who have fallen through human weakness and who eventually come to admit it and repent. The good bads are those who hold themselves up as paragons of virtue and who self-righteously reject the lesser mortals who are tainted by human weakness. Another shock! The Lord is much more partial towards the bad bads than he is towards the good bads. The people who get the worst press in the Gospels are the Pharisees who looked down on, and set themselves apart from sinners.

Inside each of us there is a bad bad and a good bad. When we sit still in meditation we are being present to this reality and to the reality of a Heavenly Father whose love is so great that we really find it hard to take.

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Taken from Sundays into Silence - A Pathway to Life. Copyright © 1998 by Claretian Publications

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Sundays into Silence

A Pathway to Life

by Gerry Pierse, cssr
380 pp., PhP 299, U$ 19.95

“The best word I can find to describe this book is integration. In these reflections on the gospel readings for year A, B, and C of the liturgical cycle, Fr. Pierse integrates the richness of the word of God with experiences and stories from life in the community. He shows how through silence, the word can bear fruit in service and sacrament.” (R. J. Cardinal Vidal)

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