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A Parable
of Mercy
an excerpt from Divine Mercy: A Guide
from Genesis to Benedict XVI
by
Robert Stackpole, S.T.D.
Click
here to read Lay Witness’s interview with
Robert Stackpole.
With
My mercy, I pursue sinners along all their paths, and My Heart
rejoices when they return to Me. I forget all the bitterness
with which they fed My Heart and rejoice in their return.
. . . What joy fills My Heart when you return to Me. Because
you are weak, I take you in My arms and carry you to the home
of My Father.
—Christ’s words to St. Faustina
Diary of St. Maria Faustina Kowalska, 1728 and 1486
These
words of Christ spoken to St. Faustina echo a truth revealed
throughout all of Sacred Scripture—God’s unending
love and mercy for the repentant. Christ Jesus endeavored
to express in human terms the depths of Divine Mercy through
the parables of the Gospels, including the parable of the
lost sheep, the missing coin, and of course the most well-known,
the parable of the prodigal son.
Pope John
Paul II sought during his many years on the seat of Peter
to have this message of Divine Mercy proclaimed to all peoples,
penetrating every human soul with its truth. In his encyclical
Dives in Misericordia (“Rich in Mercy”),
he focuses explicitly on the parable of the prodigal son as
portraying for us how Divine Mercy overcomes human sin (no.
5).
In the
parable, the son begins by asking for his inheritance early.
Basically, he says to his father: “I really wish you
were dead so that I could have my inheritance; just give me
my inheritance now, and I will go off with it and forget all
about you—just as if you were dead!”
The father
(no doubt sadly) acquiesces and gives his son the inheritance.
Then the son goes off and wastes his father’s (doubtless
hard-earned) gift of money on immoral living. The result is
that the son ends up losing most of his human dignity, for
the parable says that he finds himself ultimately in a condition
lower than the pigs he takes care of just to survive.
Then,
verse 17 says, “But when he came to himself”—that
is, when he saw something of the truth about himself—he
saw into the depths of his “squandered sonship.”
Pope John Paul II writes:
He seems
not to be conscious of it even now, when he says to himself:
‘How many of my father’s hired servants have
bread enough to spare, but I perish here with hunger.’
He measures himself by the standards of the goods that he
has lost, that he no longer ‘possesses,’ while
the hired servants of his father’s house ‘possess’
them. These words express above all his attitude to material
goods; nevertheless, under the surface is concealed the
tragedy of lost dignity, the awareness of squandered sonship.
(no.5)
Up until
this point in the parable, the prodigal son’s repentance
does not appear to be very genuine. There is a strong element
of self-seeking calculation—what Catholicism has traditionally
called “imperfect contrition”—in his words,
“treat me as one of your hired servants,” a speech
obviously designed just to get him a few decent meals!
Nevertheless,
he also seems to have gained some kind of appreciation for
the offense that he has done to his father, and in addition,
an awareness of the fact that he has squandered something
precious—his relationship of sonship to his father—because
the speech he rehearses begins with the words, “Father
. . . I am no longer worthy to be called your son.”
Deep down, he knows that by his actions he has thrown away
more than good food: He has thrown away a treasured relationship,
and he knows as well what that sin justly deserves.
Then Jesus
says: “But when he was still far off”—that
is, when the prodigal son’s repentance was still half-hearted
and imperfect—“his father saw him.” The
father must have been gazing down the road constantly, hoping
and praying to see his son return one day (which is why he
caught sight of him when he was still “far off”);
the father had compassion on him (splagchna eleous—compassion
from the “guts”), and ran and embraced and kissed
him (literally in the Greek text: “showered him with
kisses”).
That was
no way for a Middle Eastern father to behave! By rights, he
should have made the son who had offended him at least grovel
in the dust before forgiving him. But that would not be in
accord with this father’s merciful heart. In fact, by
running out to embrace him with tenderness, the father obviously
moves to the depths the heart of his son, enabling and assisting
his son to make his contrition more perfect. This is clear
from the fact that when the son recites his prepared speech—“Father,
I have sinned against heaven and before you; I am no longer
worthy to be called your son”—he leaves out the
last line: “Treat me as one of your hired servants!”
There
is no longer any selfish calculation involved: In the light
of his father’s boundless, tender love for him, he just
acknowledges his grievous sin, and pleads to his father for
a full restoration of their broken relationship. Moreover,
there is no longer any doubt in his mind about his father’s
merciful love. He “throws himself on the mercy of the
court,” so to speak, trusting now that this court—his
father’s merciful heart—is full of compassion
and love.
What we
see in the story of the Prodigal Son, therefore, is a father
who reflects both aspects of Divine Mercy:
1. His
faithfulness to himself, to his commitments as a father to
care for his children, and
2. His
passionate pity for his lost son’s plight.
Pope John
Paul II concludes in his encyclical Dives in Misericordia
that what we see happen to the prodigal son in this parable
is a grace-assisted repentance that restores his true dignity
as a son of his father:
Mercy—as
Christ has presented it in the parable of the prodigal son—has
the interior form of the love that in the New Testament
is called agape. This love is able to reach down to every
prodigal son, to every human misery, and above all to every
form of moral misery, to sin. When this happens, the person
who is the object of mercy does not feel humiliated, but
rather found again and “restored to value.”
The father first and foremost expresses to him his joy that
he has been “found again “ and that he has “returned
to life.” This joy indicates a good that has remained
intact: Even if he is a prodigal, a son does not cease to
be truly his father’s son. It also indicates a good
that has been found again, which in the case of the prodigal
son was his return to the truth about himself. (no.6)
Robert
Stackpole, S.T.D., is professor of theology at Redeemer Pacific
College and director of the John Paul II Institute of Divine
Mercy. He is the author of numerous journal articles on Divine
Mercy, as well as the book Jesus, Mercy Incarnate, and
editor of Pillars of Fire in My Soul: The Spirituality
of St. Faustina.
Stackpole
lives in Canada with his wife, Katherine, and their daughter
Christina.
To
learn more about the Divine Mercy message from the Marians
of the Immaculate Conception, visit www.thedivinemercy.org.
To order Divine Mercy: A Guide from Genesis to Benedict
XVI, visit www.marian.org/giftshop.
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