Blog
Dear Trailhead family,
Cassie and I love to camp and Cassie and I lived for many years in Oklahoma. Do you see the problem? If not, allow me to explain.
Camping in Oklahoma is wonderful for a day or two every year. The other 363ish days are either way too hot, too cold, or a tornado warning is in effect. I may be exaggerating just a tad, but this is my story and this is the way I remember it.
But we did love to camp so Cassie and I made an annual pilgrimage to the Emerald Coast of Florida for many years. We had a favorite campground, a favorite breakfast spot, and a favorite coffee shop that we returned to like migratory birds.
What wasn't a favorite was the 13-hour drive to get to our favorite camping spot. To help pass the time, we would borrow CDs from the library. (Oh my! How that last sentence dates us). We had music CDs aplenty but our favorite for passing time was a disc with stories.
And one story stands out to me after all these years.
I've forgotten most of the story, but it was about a father reflecting on his childhood. I remember vividly how the narrator’s dad would throw horse manure on their roof every Christmas Eve night so he and his siblings would see evidence that Santa’s sleigh and reindeer had visited them.
The author said their shingles had manure stains his whole childhood.
I love that story.
But as good as that story is, it has nothing on Jesus’ short stories. And Jesus’ story of the lost son is worth revisiting frequently.
Do you remember the story?
The younger son decides that for whatever reason, he is ready to fly the coop. He asks his dad for his share of the inheritance and in a surprising twist, the dad agrees and gives the boy what must seem like an inexhaustible supply of wealth.
But the high life doesn't last. The money runs out, and the boy hits rock bottom and concocts a second plan. His dad was once generous, maybe he will be generous again and allow him to return home as a common laborer.
However, the plan doesn't go as expected. His dad refuses to accept the wayward son as a servant but instead reinstates him into the family. And the overjoyed father doesn't stop there, but goes so far as to throw an extravagant party to celebrate his son who “was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found.”
But not everyone rejoices.
The older brother, the faithful son, refuses to join in his father’s joy. And the older son’s accusation isn't against his foolish brother, but against his dad. “Look! All these years I’ve been slaving for you and never disobeyed your orders. Yet you never gave me even a young goat so I could celebrate with my friends. But when this son of yours who has squandered your property with prostitutes comes home, you kill the fattened calf for him!” (See Luke 15:11-32 for the whole story).
The father pleads with the older son but the story ends with this haunting image: the party is in full swing but only one son is home.
Ronald Rolheiser explores this masterfully in his book Sacred Fire. Rolheiser writes, “Someone once quipped that we spend the first half of our lives struggling with the sixth commandment (Thou shalt not commit adultery) and the second half of our lives struggling with the fifth commandment (Thou shalt not kill). That may be a simplification, but it is a fertile image. Indeed the famous parable of the prodigal son and his older brother can serve as a paradigm for this: the prodigal son, illustrating the first half of life, is very much caught up in the fiery energies of youth and is, metaphorically, struggling with the devil; the older brother, illustrating the second half of life, struggling instead with resentment, anger, and jealousy, is, metaphorically and in reality, wrestling with God.”
At some point, if we live long enough, we realize that life isn’t turning out the way we had hoped. Like the older brother, we are tempted to lash out and accuse God, “You didn't even (fill in the blank) while you bent over backward for these other, less faithful people.”
And this will be our struggle: will our anger and disappointment keep us away from Home or drive us inside?
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant