Who Cares about the Lost Son? Published: 7/6/2010 2:17:25 PM
Luke
15:11-32
In our number driven world,
sometimes the vitality of the church is judged by the number of baptisms in a
year (especially adult baptisms). Certainly anytime a person is baptized into
the family of God it is a reason to celebrate. However, I have found little
concern for the lost sons and daughters who are “in the books” of church
membership, but never in the pews. These are the young adults who remain on the
roster because it is too uncomfortable to acknowledge that they are gone.But they are gone. So who cares about the
lost son? When your church discusses reaching the lost, do the lost sons and
daughters count?
In his recent book, What Do They Hear? (2007), Mark Alan
Powell describes how different people hear the parable of the lost son. Take a
moment and summarize the parable from Luke 15:11-32for yourself and answer the question: Why was the lost son
starving?
Powell’s experiment shows
that Western Christians identify the son’s problem to be squandering wealth on
wild living. However, a group of Russian Christians identified the famine as
the son’s problem. While most of the Western Christians he surveyed didn’t even
mention the famine in their summary, the Russians overlooked the squandering of
wealth as an insignificant offence. When a group of Christians in Tanzania
studied the same text, they concluded that the son was in trouble because no
one in the community would care for him. Though social location seems to have
an impact on what each person highlighted as the problem, we can all recognized
that the problems (the misuse of money, famine in the land, and a society that
lacks compassion) highlight the fundamental concern; the son had left his
Father’s home.
Lost sons and daughters make
bad choices with money and credit cards.They can experience many hardships in the world (e.g., loss of job in a
recession or as a result of an oil spill), and some die, homeless and hungry in
a society that lacks compassion. But the root of their problems is the
same.They have left their Father’s
home…they have left the church. Away from the church they find no forgiveness in
Christ for bad choices, or guidance to make good choices. Away from their
Father’s house they face inevitable hardships alone. Away from church, they are
not surrounded by a community that suffers with them and cares for them.
If we want to measure the
health of our church, we should do more than compute our number of members and
begin to measure our compassion for the lost (v.20).
So who out there cares about
the lost son? The Father does (vv. 20-23) and as brothers and sisters in Christ,
I encourage you to do the same!
Have a great day in the Lord!
Matt
2009 LCMS Youth Ministry Office
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