Название: A Life of Conversion
Автор: Derek Rotty
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Словари
isbn: 9781681923345
isbn:
Jesus is the personification of grace, of God’s free initiative to save us, redeem us, and give us abundant life. It all happens through Jesus! To find that life, we must hold fast to Jesus himself, “partaking of his life and his destiny, sharing in his free and loving obedience to the Father” (VS 19). That’s another way of saying, “Come, follow me,” as Jesus said many times in the Gospels. This starts with the commandments, but it goes much further than that. If we accept his invitation, he will lead us, by his grace, into his own perfect happiness — into beatitude.
Thankfully, not all encounters with Jesus end as the encounter with the rich young man did. The young man rejected Jesus’ invitation, but we do not have to make that same choice. Instead, we can choose to reverse the young man’s “no” with our own “yes.” Throughout this book, we will reflect on several other Gospel episodes in which men and women responded with a “yes” to the call of Christ and chose to follow him more deeply.
I hope each of these stories will provide you with inspiration and encouragement to answer Jesus’ invitation as the rich young man could not. As you reflect on these Gospel encounters, ask the Holy Spirit to guide you more and more deeply into a life of ongoing conversion. Even if you have previously chosen the path of the rich young man, Jesus Christ always offers another opportunity. Choose, today, to follow Jesus on the path to perfect happiness and fulfillment.
Questions for Deeper Understanding and Reflection
1. In your own words, define and describe grace.
2. How do you view the importance of rules and commandments in the Christian life? How has your view impacted the way you live out your faith?
3. Are there particular commandments you struggle to keep in your effort to walk more closely with Jesus?
4. What is your hyparchonta? What might God be asking you to give up so that you can follow him more fully?
Chapter 2
Awareness, Repentance, and Reconciliation
Prayerfully read Luke 15:11–32
During his public ministry, Jesus taught in parables. Parables are stories that engage interest and teach lessons through the details, images, and trends of daily life within a culture. Among Jesus’ many parables, the parable of the prodigal son stands out as a paradigm of conversion. We might also call it the parable of the loving father, or the parable of two sons. Even though it is a story and not an encounter with Jesus during his public ministry, it is still good to consider because it provides us with deep insights into important aspects of conversion.
We know and love this story so well, probably because we all see a little bit of ourselves in each of the characters. Each of us has been like the younger son, saying hurtful things and squandering the inheritance we receive from our families and our Church. Each of us has probably been like the older son, refusing to enter into a relationship with someone because we wanted them to receive “justice,” not mercy. Each of us has many opportunities to be like the loving father, waiting eagerly for reconciliation with a family member or friend despite the deep hurt they have caused us. In each of these scenarios, there is a lesson for us as we seek to enter more deeply into a life of ongoing conversion.
A troubled history
Parables have many layers of meaning. Here, the first layer of meaning is God’s plan for his whole kingdom. In this story, Jesus provides an allegorical account of Israel’s sordid history. A man has two sons, one of whom demands his inheritance and leaves home for “a far country” (Lk 15:11–13). Jesus intends to teach his audience about the ways that Israel has rejected the Father’s perfect plan over the centuries. Jesus tells the parable so that we, too, can remember the Father’s great blessings and so that we will not leave for “a far country” in our modern age.
After the reigns of King David and King Solomon, the high point of Israel’s history, around the eighth century BC, the kingdom split into two because of a feud between Solomon’s sons. The descendants of the ten northern tribes became the kingdom of Israel, while the descendants of the two southern tribes became the kingdom of Judah. After more than 200 years of civil and social strife, and ignoring messages from prophets, both kingdoms were exiled to the “far countries” of Assyria and Babylon. While they were exiled in Assyria, the descendants of the ten northern tribes of Israel began to worship idols and abandoned the one true God.4
After the period of exile, only the southern kingdom of Judah returned to the promised land. The ten northern tribes assimilated into the cultures of the surrounding nations. Like the younger son in the parable, they squandered their inheritance from the Lord by rejecting his perfect plan for them.
In the parable, the older son is bitter about the father’s mercy toward the younger son. This is a bit like the way the descendants of the kingdom of Judah felt toward the descendants of the kingdom of Israel. By the time of Christ, the Samaritans were the remnant of those tribes. After several centuries of life and culture divorced from covenant relationship with God, the Samaritans were a sort of religious half-breed.5 They wanted to mix the worship of the one true God with the beliefs and rituals of the surrounding pagan nations. This caused the Jews to view them as traitors to the covenant. Elsewhere in the Gospels, we read that “Jews have no dealings with Samaritans” (Jn 4:9). By interacting with Samaritans and sinners, Jesus wants to show that God wants his lost tribes restored to full relationship and status in his kingdom.
This is where the parable of the prodigal son comes into play. God has a plan for his new people, the Church, too. Yet many of us have rejected his will and strayed from his divine plan, sometimes causing others to stray too. Because of this, we are always in need of conversion, as has been true of God’s people in every age of salvation history. The only way for the whole people of God to be fully in right relationship with him is for each of us to return to him day after day, season after season. We can find inspiration for that conversion when we read parables such as this. In fact, that’s why Jesus told these parables: so we can constantly find inspiration to begin anew, despite our selfish ways. We realize too that the conversion of the whole Church happens only when each individual — you and I — convert more fully to the Lord’s plan.
Seeing myself in the son
I mentioned that the first layer of meaning in the parable was historical. The parables can also be read morally (how they teach us to act) and anagogically (how they teach us about eschatological realities, the things that will come about at the end of history). The remainder of our discussion of this parable will focus primarily on the moral sense.
From the very beginning of the parable, we sense that something is amiss in the dynamics of this family. An inheritance only passes from father to son when the father dies. So when the younger son demands his inheritance, what he means is, “Father, you are dead to me.”
This raises a number of questions for us. First, have I ever treated my father (or any person of importance in my life) the way the son treats his father in this story? If I had a son who treated me this way, how would I react? Would I be very hurt? Would I react as any rational human being might and reject the demand? At certain points in my life, my relationship with my father was incredibly strained. Both of us said and did hurtful things. At one point, we didn’t speak for many months while I went on living with my self-righteous attitude. Only now, as a father of sons myself, can I imagine the anguish and pain I caused СКАЧАТЬ