Sunday of the Prodigal Son - 34th Sunday After Pentecost

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Sunday of the Prodigal Son - 34th Sunday After Pentecost

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Sunday of the Prodigal Son

MATINS (I)

Matthew 28:16-20

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 Then the eleven disciples went away into Galilee, into a mountain where Jesus had appointed them. And when they saw him, they worshipped him: but some doubted. And Jesus came and spake unto them, saying, All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth. Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen.

LITURGY

1 Corinthians 6:12-20

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 All things are lawful unto me, but all things are not expedient: all things are lawful for me, but I will not be brought under the power of any. Meats for the belly, and the belly for meats: but God shall destroy both it and them. Now the body is not for fornication, but for the Lord; and the Lord for the body. And God hath both raised up the Lord, and will also raise up us by his own power. Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ? shall I then take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot? God forbid. What? know ye not that he which is joined to an harlot is one body? for two, saith he, shall be one flesh. But he that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit. Flee fornication. Every sin that a man doeth is without the body; but he that committeth fornication sinneth against his own body. What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God's.

Luke 15:11-32

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 And he said, A certain man had two sons: And the younger of them said to his father, Father, give me the portion of goods that falleth to me. And he divided unto them his living. And not many days after the younger son gathered all together, and took his journey into a far country, and there wasted his substance with riotous living. And when he had spent all, there arose a mighty famine in that land; and he began to be in want. And he went and joined himself to a citizen of that country; and he sent him into his fields to feed swine. And he would fain have filled his belly with the husks that the swine did eat: and no man gave unto him. And when he came to himself, he said, How many hired servants of my father's have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger! I will arise and go to my father, and will say unto him, Father, I have sinned against heaven, and before thee, And am no more worthy to be called thy son: make me as one of thy hired servants. And he arose, and came to his father. But when he was yet a great way off, his father saw him, and had compassion, and ran, and fell on his neck, and kissed him. And the son said unto him, Father, I have sinned against heaven, and in thy sight, and am no more worthy to be called thy son. But the father said to his servants, Bring forth the best robe, and put it on him; and put a ring on his hand, and shoes on his feet: And bring hither the fatted calf, and kill it; and let us eat, and be merry: For this my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found. And they began to be merry. Now his elder son was in the field: and as he came and drew nigh to the house, he heard musick and dancing. And he called one of the servants, and asked what these things meant. And he said unto him, Thy brother is come; and thy father hath killed the fatted calf, because he hath received him safe and sound. And he was angry, and would not go in: therefore came his father out, and intreated him. And he answering said to his father, Lo, these many years do I serve thee, neither transgressed I at any time thy commandment: and yet thou never gavest me a kid, that I might make merry with my friends: But as soon as this thy son was come, which hath devoured thy living with harlots, thou hast killed for him the fatted calf. And he said unto him, Son, thou art ever with me, and all that I have is thine. It was meet that we should make merry, and be glad: for this thy brother was dead, and is alive again; and was lost, and is found.
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Post by Mary Kissel »

I'll post the commentaries for these readings tomorrow :) I think this Sunday coming up is one of my favorite Sundays...I like the story about the Prodigal son.

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Notes for the Gospels for the Sunday of the Prodigal son

Matt.28:16-20 (Matins Gospel)

28:18
Saint Bede: "He was not speaking about the divinity coeternal with the Father, but about the humanity He assumed." [Hom. II.8, op. cit., 71.] (ONT. p. 133)

Luke 15:11-32(Liturgy Gospel)

15:12 Saint Ambrose: " The divine inheritance is given to those who ask. Do not think it the Father's guilt that He gave to the younger son." [Ib., Bk. VII, §213] (Ibid., p. 358 )

15:13 Saint Ambrose: "Fittingly did he who departed from the Church squander his patrimony. Surely, whosoever separates himself from Christ is an exile from his country, a citizen of the world. But we are not strangers and pilgrims, but we are fellow citizens of the saints and of the household of God [Eph. 2:19]....We too were in a distant land as Esaias teaches: 'Ye that dwell in the region and shadow of death, a light shall shine upon you [Is. 9:2].'" [Ib., Bk. VII, § 214.] (Ibid.)

15:14 Saint Ambrose: "Herein is not spoken of a famine of fasts, but of good works and virtues. What hunger is more wretched? Surely, whosoever departs from the Word of God hungers, because 'man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word of God [Lk. 4:4].' Fittingly did he begin to be in want, he who abandoned the treasures of wisdom and the knowledge of God and the profundity of heavenly riches. Therefore, he began to want and to suffer starvation, because nothing is enough for prodigal enjoyment." [Ib., Bk. VII, § 215.] (Ibid.)

15:15a Saint Ambrose: "That citizen is seen to be the prince of this world." [Ib., Bk. VII, § 216.] (Ibid.)

15:15b Saint Ambrose: "He is sent to the farm bought by the man who excused himself from the kingdom. He feeds swine, those, indeed, into which the devil sought to enter, which were cast out into the sea of the world as they lived in filth and foulness [cf. Mt. 8:31,32]." [Ib.] (Ibid.)

15:16a Saint Ambrose: "The extravagant do not have any other care than to fill their belly.... What food is more fitting for such as these than that which like husks is empty inside and soft outside, with which the body is filled but not restored, so that it is more for weight than for use?" [Ib., Bk. VII, § 217.] (Ibid., p. 359)

15:16b Saint Ambrose: "'No one was giving to him'; for he who was in the region of him who had no man, because he does not have those who are. For, 'all the nations are as nothing, and counted as nothing [Is. 40:17],' but it is God alone 'Who giveth life to the dead, and calleth the things not existing as existing [Rom. 4:17].'" [Ib., Bk. VII, § 219.] (Ibid.)

15:17a Saint Ambrose: "Well did he return to himself who departed from himself. Indeed, whosoever returns to the Lord returns to himself, and whosoever departs from Christ disinherits himself." [Ib., Bk. VII § 220.] (Ibid.)

15:17b Saint Ambrose: "Who are the hired servants, save those who serve for wages, who are of Israel, not pursuing that which is good in zeal for honesty, nor for the sake of virtue, but provoked by lust for profit?....Now there are hired servants in the vineyard [Mt. 20:1], such as Peter, John, and Iakovos. They were good hired servants who abound with bread, not with husks; and so they collected twelve baskets of fragments [Lk. 9:17]." [Ib., Bk. VII, § 220.] (Ibid.)


15:19
Saint Ambrose: "For being cast down, he should not exalt himself, that he may be raised by the merit of his own humility." [Ib., Bk. VII, § 227.] (Ibid.)

15:20 Saint Ambrose: "Christ falls on your neck to free your nape from the yoke of slavery and hang His sweet yoke upon your shoulders." [Ib., Bk. VII, § 230.] (Ibid.)

15:22a Saint Ambrose: "The robe is the garment of wisdom with which the apostles cover the body's nakedness....Thus, they receive the robe, so that they may clothe the weakness of the body with the virtue of spiritual wisdom....The robe is a spiritual covering and a wedding garment." [Ib., Bk. VII, § 231.] (Ibid.)

15:22b Saint Ambrose: "What is a ring, if not a token of sincere faith and an expression of truth?...Whosoever has the ring has the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, because God has sealed it [cf. Esther 8:8]. Christ is His Image [2Cor. 4:4], and He gave as a pledge the Spirit in our hearts [2Cor. 1:22], that we may know that this is the token of the ring which is placed on the hand, with which the inner places of our hearts and the works of our deeds are sealed. Thus we are sealed as we read: 'After ye believed, ye were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise [cf. Eph. 1:13].' " [Ib., Bk. VII, §§ 231, 232.] (Ibid., p. 360)

15:22c Saint Ambrose: "Then the sandal is the preaching of the Gospel [cf. Eph. 6:15]." [Ib.] (Ibid.)

15:23 Saint Ambrose: "The calf, the fatted one, is killed, so that restored by participation in the mysteries through the grace of the Sacrament, he may feast on the flesh of the Lord, rich in spiritual virtue." [Ib., Bk. VII § 232.] (Ibid.)

15:29
Saint Ambrose: "The envious person asks for a kid, the evil-smelling sacrifice, the innocent desires a lamb to be sacrificed for him. The elder, aged by envy, stands outside, because the malevolence of an envious spirit excludes him." [Ib., Bk. VII, § 237, 239.] (Ibid.)

15:25-32 Saint Kyril: "We sometimes experience something of this sort. For there are some who live a perfectly honorable and consistent life, practising every kind of virtuous action, and abstaining from everything disapproved by the law of God, and crowning themselves with perfect praises in the sight of God and of men; while another is perhaps weak and trodden down, and humbled unto every kind of wickedness, guilty of base deeds, loving impurity, given to covetousness, and stained with all evil. And yet such a one often in old age turns to God, and asks forgiveness of his former offenses. He prays for mercy, and putting away from him his readiness to fall into sin, sets his affection on virtuous deeds. Or perhaps when about to close this mortal life, he is admitted to divine baptism, and puts away his offenses, God being merciful to him. And perhaps sometimes persons are indignant at this, saying that such a one did not pay to the judge the retribution of his conduct, but has been vouchsafed grace, and has been inscribed among the sons of God. Such complaints given by these persons are from an empty narrowness of mind, not conforming to the purpose of the universal Father. For He greatly rejoices when He sees those who were lost obtaining salvation." [Hom. 107, Commentary, Ch. 15, 434.] (Ibid., p. 361)

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The Parable of the Prodigal Son

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34th Sunday after Pentecost - The Parable of the Prodigal Son
Luke 15:11-32
From The Explanation of the Gospel of St. Luke
by Blessed Theophylact, Archbishop of Ochrid and Bulgaria

11-16 This parable is like those which precede it. For it also presents a man, Who is in fact God, the Lover of man. The two sons represent the two kinds of men, righteous and sinners. The younger son said, Give me the portion of the property that falleth to me. Of old, from the beginning, righteousness belonged to human nature, which is why the older son [born at the beginning] does not become estranged from the father. But sin is an evil thing which was born later. This is why it is the younger son who alienates himself from the father, for the latter-born son grew up together with sin which had insinuated itself into man at a later time. The sinner is also called the younger son because the sinner is an innovator, a revolutionary, and a rebel who defies his Fathers will. Father, give me the portion of the property [ousia] that falleth to me. (1) The essential property of man is his rational mind, his logos, (2) always accompanied by his free will [autexousia], for all that is rational is inherently self-governing. (3) The Lord gives us logos for us to use, according to our free will, as our own essential property. He gives to all alike, so that all alike are rational, and all alike are self-governing. But some of us use this generous gift rationally, in accordance with logos, while others of us squander the divine gift. Moreover, everything which the Lord has given us might be called our property, that is, the sky, the earth, the whole creation, the law and the prophets. But the later sinful generation, the younger son, saw the sky and made it a god, saw the earth and worshipped it, refused to walk in the way of Gods law, and did evil to the prophets. On the other hand, the elder son, the righteous, used all these things for the glory of God. Therefore, having given all an equal share of logos and self-determination, God permits us to make our way according to our own will and compels no one to serve Him who is unwilling. If He had wanted to compel us, He would not have created us with logos and a free will. But the younger son completely spent this inheritance. Why? Because he had gone into a far country. When a man rebels against God and places himself far away from the fear of God, then he squanders all the divine gifts. But when we are near to God, we do not do such deeds that merit our destruction. As it is written, I beheld the Lord ever before me, for He is at my right hand, that I might not be shaken. [Ps. 15:8] But when we are far from God and become rebellious, we both do and suffer the worst things, as it is written, Behold, they that remove themselves from Thee shall perish. [Ps. 72:25] The younger son indeed squandered and scattered his property. (4) For every virtue is a simple and single entity, while its opposing vice is a many-branched complexity, creating numerous deceptions and errors. For example, the definition of bravery is simple--when, how, and against whom, one ought to make use of ones capacity to be stirred to action. But the vice of not being brave takes two forms, cowardice and recklessness. Do you see how logos can be scattered in every direction and the unity of virtue destroyed? When this essential property has been spent, and a man no longer walks in accordance with logos, by which I mean the natural law, nor proceeds according to the written law, nor listens to the prophets, then there arises a mighty famine--not a famine of bread, but a famine of hearing the word [logos] of the Lord. [Amos 8:11] And he begins to be in want, because by not fearing the Lord he has departed far from Him. But there is no want to them that fear the Lord. [Ps. 33:9] How is there no want to them that fear Him? Because blessed is the man that feareth the Lord; in His commandments shall he greatly delight. Therefore glory and riches shall be in his house, and far from being himself in want, he hath dispersed, he hath given to the poor. [All from Ps. 111] Therefore the man who makes a journey far from God, not keeping Gods dread face ever before his eyes, indeed is in want, having no divine logos at work in him. And he went, that is, he proceeded and advanced in wickedness, and joined himself to a citizen of that country. He who is joined to the Lord becomes one Spirit with Him. But he who is joined to a harlot, that is, to the nature of the demons, becomes one body with her, [I Cor. 6:16] and he makes himself all flesh, having no room in himself for the Spirit, as it was for those men at the time of the flood. (5) The citizens of that country far from God are none other than the demons. The man who joins himself to these citizens, having advanced and become powerful in wickedness, feeds the swine, that is, he teaches others evil and filthy deeds. For all those who take pleasure in the muck of shameful deeds and carnal passions are like swine. Pigs are never able to look upward because of the peculiar shape of their eyes. This is why, when a farmer grabs hold of a pig, he is not able to make it stop squealing until he turns it upside down on its back. This quiets the pig, as if, by looking upward, the pig can see things it had never seen before, and it is startled into silence. Such are they whose eyes are ever turned to filthy things, who never look upward. Therefore, a man who exceeds many others in wickedness can be said to feed swine. Such are the keepers of brothels, the captains of brigands, and the chief among publicans. All these may be said to feed swine. This wretched man desires to satisfy his sin and no one can give him this satisfaction. For he who is habitual in sinful passions receives no satisfaction from them. The pleasure does not endure, but is there one moment and gone the next, and the wretched man is again left empty. Sin is likened to the pods (6)which the swine eat, because, like them, sin is sweet in taste yet rough and harsh in texture, giving momentary pleasure but causing ceaseless torments. Therefore, there is no man to provide satisfaction for him who takes pleasure in these wicked passions. Who can both satisfy him and quiet him? Cannot God? But God is not present, for the man who eats these things has travelled a far distance from God. Can the demons? They cannot, for they strive to accomplish just the opposite, namely, that wickedness never end or be satisfied.

17-21 The man who until now had been prodigal came to himself. This is because he had been "outside himself" and had taken leave of his true self so long as he committed foul deeds. Rightly is it said that he wasted and spent his essential property. This is why he was outside himself. For he who is not governed by logos, but lives irrationally without logos, and teaches others to do the same, is outside of himself and has abandoned his reason, which is his very essence. But when a man regains his logos [analogizetai] so as to see who he is and into what a state of wretchedness he has fallen, then he becomes himself again, and using his reason, he comes to repent and returns from his wanderings outside reason. He says hired servants, signifying the catechumens, who have not yet become sons because they have not yet been illumined by Holy Baptism. Indeed the catechumens have an abundance of the rational bread, the sustenance of the Word [Logos], because they hear each day the readings of Scripture. (7) Listen, so that you may learn the difference between a hired servant and a son. There are three ranks of those who are being saved. The first kind are like slaves who do what is good because they fear the judgment. This is what David means when he says, Nail down my flesh with the fear of Thee, for of Thy judgments am I afraid. [Ps. 118:120] The second kind, who are like hired servants, are those who are eager to serve God because of their desire for the reward of good things, as David again says, I have inclined my heart to perform Thy statutes for ever for a recompense. [Ps. 118:112] But if they are of the third kind, that is, if they are sons, they keep His commandments out of love for God. This is what David means when he says, 0 how I have loved Thy law, 0 Lord! The whole day long it is my meditation; [Ps.118:97] and again, with no mention of fear, I lifted up my hands to Thy commandments which I have loved, [Ps. 118:48] and again, Wonderful are Thy testimonies, and because they are wonderful, therefore hath my soul searched them out. [Ps. 118:129] One must understand the hired servants to refer not only to the catechumens, but also to all those in the Church who obey God out of some lesser motive than love. Therefore when a man is among the ranks of those who are sons, and then is disowned because of his sin, and sees others enjoying the divine gifts, and communing of the Divine Mysteries and of the Divine Bread, such a man ought indeed to apply to himself these piteous words, How many hired servants of my fathers have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger! I will arise, arise, that is, from my fall into sin, and go to my Father, and will say unto him, Father, I have sinned against heaven, and before Thee. When I abandoned heavenly things, I sinned against heaven, preferring shameful pleasure to heavenly things, and choosing the land of hunger instead of my true fatherland, heaven. Just as we have a saying that the man who prefers lead to gold sins against the gold, so too the man who prefers earthly things to heaven, sins against heaven. Indeed he has gone astray from the road that leads to heaven. Understand that when he sinned, he behaved as if he were not acting in the sight of God, that is, in the presence of God; but once he confesses his sin, then he realizes that he has sinned in the sight of God. And he arose, and came to his father, for we must not only desire the things that are dear to God but must get up and do them as well. You see the warm repentance--behold now the compassion of the father. He did not wait for his son to come to him, but he went and met him on the way and embraced him. God is called Father on account of His goodness and kindness, even though by nature He is God Who encompasses all things so that He could have restricted a man within His embrace, no matter which way the man might try to turn. As the prophet says, The glory of God shall compass thee. [Is. 58:8] Before, when the son distanced himself, it was fitting that God, as Father, release him from His embrace. But when the son drew near through prayer and repentance, it was fitting that God again enclose him within His embrace. Therefore the Father falls on the neck of the one who before had rebelled and who now shows that he has become obedient. And the Father kisses him, as a sign of reconciliation, and by this kiss He first makes holy the defiled ones mouth, which is as it were the doorway to the whole man, and through this doorway He sends sanctification into the innermost being.

22-24 The servants you may understand to mean the angels, the ministering spirits who are sent to serve those who are counted worthy of salvation. For the angels clothe the man who has turned from wickedness with the first robe, that is, with the original garment which we wore before we sinned, the garment of incorruption; or, it means that garment which is honored above all others, the robe of Baptism. For the baptismal robe is the first to be placed around me, and from it I receive a covering of my former shame and indecency. Therefore you may understand the servants to mean the angels who carry out all those things that are done on our behalf, and by means of which we are sanctified. You may also understand the servants to mean the priests. For they clothe the repentant sinner with Baptism and the word of teaching, placing around him the first robe, which is Christ Himself (for all we that have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ (8)). And they put a ring on his hand, which ring is the seal of Christ given at Chrismation so that we might execute good deeds in His name. The hand is a symbol of action, and the ring is a symbol of a seal. Therefore he who has been baptized, and, in general, everyone who has turned from wickedness, ought to have on his hand, that is, on his entire faculty of action, the seal and the mark of Christ, which is placed on him to show that he has been made new in the image of his Creator. You may also understand the ring to signify the earnest of the Spirit. (9) By that I mean that God will give us perfect and complete good things when it is time for them; but for now He gives us gifts as earnest, that is, as tokens of assurance of those good things to come. For example, to some He gives the power to work miracles, to others the gift of teaching, and to others still other gifts; having received these gifts, we have more confident hope in the perfect and complete good things to come. And shoes are put on his feet to protect him from scorpions, that is, from the seemingly small and hidden sins described by David [Ps.18:12], which are in fact deadly. And these shoes also protect him from serpents, that is, from those sins which can be seen by all. And, in another sense, shoes are given to him who has been counted worthy of the first robe: God makes such a man ready to preach the Gospel and to bring benefit to others. This is Christianity--to benefit ones neighbor. We are not ignorant of what is meant by the grain-fed bullock which is slain and eaten. (10) It is none other than the very Son of God, Who as a Man took flesh which is irrational and animal by nature, although He filled it with His own glory. Thus Christ is symbolized by the bullock, the Youngling which has never been put under the yoke of the law of sin; and He is grain-fed in the sense that Christ was set apart and prepared for this mystery from before the foundation of the world. And though it may seem somewhat difficult to take in, nevertheless it shall be said: the Bread which we break in the Eucharist appears to our eyes to be made of wheat [sitos] and thus may be called of wheat [siteutos]; but in reality it is Flesh, and thus may be called the Bullock. For Christ Himself is both Bullock and Wheat. Therefore every one who is baptized and becomes a son of God, or rather, is restored to the status of son, and in general, every one who is cleansed from sin, communes of this Bullock of Wheat. Then he becomes the cause of gladness to the Father and to His servants, namely, the angels and the priests, because he who was dead is alive again, and he who was lost is found. For whoever is dead from the abundance of his wickedness is without hope; but whoever is able, with his changeable human nature, to change from wickedness to virtue, is said to be only lost. To be lost is less severe than to be dead.

25-32 Here is the celebrated question--how is it that the son who lived a God-pleasing life in all other respects, and who faithfully served his father, could display such envy? The question will be answered if one considers the reason why this parable was told. This parable and the ones preceding it were told because the Pharisees, who considered themselves pure and righteous, were grumbling at the Lord because He received harlots and publicans. The Pharisees murmured indignantly, believing themselves to be more righteous than the publicans, and therefore the Lord taught this parable. Consider that the figure of the son who is seen to grumble is understood to refer to all those who are scandalized at the sudden good fortune and deliverance of sinners. Such men grumble, not because of envy, but because neither they nor we can understand the outpouring of Gods compassion for man. Does not David bring forward the figure of a man scandalized at the peace of sinners? [Ps. 72:3] And Jeremiah likewise, when he says, Why is it that the way of ungodly men prosper? Thou hast planted them, and they have taken root.[Jer. 12:1-2] Such thoughts reflect mans weak and poor understanding, which easily ignites with annoyance and questions the good fortune of the wicked, which seems undeserved. In this parable, therefore, the Lord is saying to the Pharisees words like these: "Let us suppose that you are as righteous as that elder son and well-pleasing to the Father; I entreat you who are righteous and pure not to grumble, as this elder son did, against the gladness which we are showing over the salvation of the sinner, who is also a son." Do you see that this parable is not about envy? Instead, in this parable the Lord is instructing the minds of the Pharisees, so that they will not be vexed that the Lord receives sinners, even though they themselves are righteous and have fulfilled every commandment of God. It is no wonder that we do become vexed at those who appear undeserving. For Gods compassion is so great, and He gives to us so abundantly of His own good things, that we may even grumble at Gods generosity. That criticism follows generosity is a fact to which we refer in everyday speech. If we do good to someone who fails to thank us, do we not say to him, "Everyone says I am a fool for having been so good to you"? We use this expression, even if no one has actually criticized us, because extreme generosity is so often followed by criticism that to suggest the latter is to prove the former. But let us turn to the particulars of the parable, in brief. The elder son was in the field, that is, in this world, working his own land, meaning his flesh, so that he might have his fill of bread, sowing with tears that he might reap with rejoicing. When he learned what was being done, he did not want to enter into the common joy. But the compassionate father goes out and begs him to come in, and explains to him the reason for the joy, that a man who was dead has come back to life. Because as a man he did not understand, and because he was scandalized, the elder son accused the father of not giving him even a young goat, while for the prodigal son he slaughtered the fatted calf. What does the kid, the young goat, signify? You may learn here. Every young goat is considered to be of the portion of sinners who are placed on the left side. The righteous son is saying, then, "I have passed my life in toil and labor, I have been persecuted, suffered hardships, been oppressed by sinners, and on my behalf you have never slaughtered and killed a kid, that is, a sinner who afflicts me, so that I might have some small measure of rest." For example, King Ahab was just such a goat to the Prophet Elijah. Ahab persecuted Elijah, but the Lord did not quickly give this goat over to the slaughter so that Elijah could have some small rest, and take his ease with his friends, the prophets. Therefore Elijah complained to God, Lord, they have digged down Thine altars, and have slain Thy prophets. [III Kings 19:10] And Saul was a goat to David, as were also all those who slandered David. But the Lord allowed them to tempt him, and did not slay them to give David some rest. Therefore David said, How long shall sinners, 0 Lord, how long shall sinners boast? [Ps. 93:3] The elder son in the parable is saying these things: "You did not count me worthy of any consolation in all my toils; you never handed over to me for slaughter any of these who were afflicting me. But now you save the prodigal son who never had to toil." This, then, is the entire purpose of the parable, which the Lord told for the sake of the Pharisees who were grumbling that He had accepted sinners. The parable also instructs us that no matter how righteous we may be, we ought not to rebuff sinners, nor to grumble when God accepts them. The younger son, therefore, represents the harlots and the publicans; the elder son represents those Pharisees and scribes who consider themselves righteous. It is as if God were saying, "Let us suppose that you are indeed righteous and have not transgressed any commandments; if some others have turned away from wickedness, why do you not accept them as your brothers and fellow laborers?" The Lord instructs such grumblers as these with this parable. I am not unaware that some have interpreted the elder son to signify the angels, and the younger son, the latter-born nature of men which rebelled against the commandment it was given and went astray. Still others have said that the two sons represent the Israelites and the Gentiles who later believed. But the simple truth is what we have said here, namely, that the person of the elder son should be understood to signify the righteous, and the person of the younger son, to signify sinners who have repented and returned. The entirety of the parable is given for the sake of the Pharisees, to teach them not to be vexed that sinners are received, even if they themselves are righteous. Therefore, let no one be vexed at the judgments of God, but let him be patient with those apparent sinners who prosper, and are saved. For how do you know if a man whom you think is a sinner has not repented, and on this account has been accepted? Or that he has secret virtues on account of which God looks favorably upon him?

  1. The more mundane meaning of the Greek word ousia is "what belongs to someone," i.e. his property. But ousia, a noun derived from the present participle of the verb eimi, "to be," also means "essence," "substance," and "being" itself. What a man truly is differs not at all from what belongs to him essentially. Because no single word in English captures the related meanings of ousia, we have variously translated this word as "property" or "essential property."

  2. The Greek word logos, as understood by the Church, encompasses not only Christ Himself, the "Word" of God, but also the faculties of speech, thought, mind, and reason which God gave of Himself to those created beings, angels and men, whom He fashioned in His own image and likeness. No single English word suffices to translate these many and related meanings. Because logos is central to Bl. Theophylacts explanation here, we have identified throughout this parable the word logos in the various forms in which it is used (e.g. to logikon), so as to alert the reader to the interrelatedness of several concepts which might otherwise seem unconnected in English.

  3. The Greek word autexousia, often translated as "free will," has the literal meaning of "self-authority" [auto-exousia], or "self-determination." When God created man with autexousia, He ceded to man authority over his own essential property, his logos, that is, He gave man a free will.

  4. The Greek word which we have translated here as squander is diaskorpizei, which literally means "scatter."

  5. See Gen. 6:4: And the Lord God said, My spirit shall certainly not remain among these men for ever, because they are flesh.

  6. In Greek, keratia, "little horns," another name for the edible pods of the carob tree. See Vol. I, The Explanation of St. Matthew, p. 33, footnote 4.

  7. The first part of the Divine Liturgy, called The Liturgy of the Catechumens, consists primarily of the readings from the Psalter, the Epistles, and the Gospel. After this, in the ancient church, the catechumens actually left the temple as they were not able to partake of, or even to witness, the Mystical Bread.

  8. See Gal. 3:27. This verse is also chanted as a hymn at every Baptism and at the great feasts of the Lord.

  9. See II Cor. 1:21-22. Now He Which establisheth us with you in Christ, and hath anointed us, is God; Who hath also sealed us, and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts.

  10. To translate ton moschon ton siteuton as "the fatted calf," as does the KJV, does not allow the reader to see what is so clear in the Greek text--that the animal in question is male, a young bullock, and raised on grain in anticipation of its slaughter for food or for sacrifice. The Greek adjective siteutos, derived from the noun sitos, "grain," means "of grain" or "made of grain."

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Sunday of the Prodigal Son

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Here is the Homily for this weekhere.

Justin Kissel

Post by Justin Kissel »

"Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ? Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them members of a harlot? Certainly not! Or do you not know that he who is joined to a harlot is one body with her? For 'the two,' He says, 'shall become one flesh.' But he who is joined to the Lord is one spirit with Him. Flee sexual immorality. Every sin that a man does is outside the body, but he who commits sexual immorality sins against his own body. Or do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own? For you were bought at a price; therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God's" - 1 Cor. 6:15-20

This passage obviously means to deal with the sin of sexual immorality. In a less explicit way, though, I think this passage articulates the awesomeness of our being members of (the body of) Christ (cf 1 Cor. 12:12-27). Indeed, Paul's argument (in this passage) for avoiding sexual sins is built exactly on the foundation and constitution of our relationship with God and the body of Christ. It is because we are "members of Christ," because our "body is a temple of the Holy Spirit," and because we are "not [our] own," but are God's, that we are instructed to flee sexual immorality.

The point is that we Christians are servants of God instead of slaves of sin. (Rom. 6:17-23) We are partakers of the divine nature, and, in the most actual and true sense, in communion with Jesus Christ our God (2 Pet. 1:4; John 6:35-64; 1 Cor. 10:16-17; Eph. 2:19-22; etc.) [1] Paul here uses a point of comparison often used by the Scriptures to describe our relationship with God. Namely, marriage and sexuality are used throughout the Scriptures to describe the relationship between God and His people. [2]

For instance, God said to Israel through the prophet Hosea: "the land commits great harlotry by forsaking the Lord" (Hos. 1:2); but then later the Lord says to Israel: "And I will betroth you to me forever; I will betroth you to me in righteousness and justice, in steadfast love, and in mercy. I will betroth you to me in faithfulness, and you shall know the Lord." (Hos. 2:19-20) This is a familiar pattern throughout the Old Testament (1 Chr. 5:25; Ps. 106:39; Eze. 6:9; etc.).

In the Gospels, one of the ways that Kingdom of God (or Heaven) is described is by the parable of the virgins who are awaiting the bridegroom (Matt. 25:1-13). And in addition 1st Cor. 6:15-20, Paul elsewhere speaks in a similar way of our relationship with God (Rom. 7:4; 2 Cor. 6:14-18; 11:2), most notably in Eph. 5:22-33. I believe that there are differences regarding how this comparison is used, though.

In the Old Testament, the comparison seems mainly to be one of an already lapsed person (or persons). In other words, the language connecting the people of God and sexuality/marriage was used mostly after Israel had already apostasized, and so was used as an ex post facto judgment. In the Gospels, the parable Jesus gives is mostly looking forward: their is an expectation of the coming of the bridegroom to take the virgin(s) away to the marriage. In other words, the language connecting the people of God and sexuality/marriage expressed a future hope or expectation.

Paul's handling of the comparison, however, seems to take a different approach. For Paul and those working out their salvation in his (and our) time, Christ (the bridegroom) had already come: the God-man had conquered death by his death, and destroyed the power of sin, continually conquering the gates of hell through the continuation of the incarnation, the Church. The Holy Spirit had come, and rested upon those who were received into the Church through the Divine Mysteries. Therefore, Paul says to the Corinthians immediately before the passage we are discussing: "Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? ...And such were some of you. But you were washed, but you were sanctified, but you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God." (1 Cor. 6:9, 11)

So then, for Paul (and for us now) our relationship with God is not simply something which is used in judging us, as ancient Israel was judged because it should have known better. Neither is our relationship with God simply something which is used in judging us because we should have been more vigilant in our hopes and expectations like the wise virgins. Now that God has come in the flesh and established (to an extent) His Kingdom: now is the time that we have a greater responsibility than those in ancient Israel, but now is also a time in which we receive much more divine aid.

This distinction that I am speaking of is, I think, the meaning behind the rhetorical device used by our Savior in the Sermon on the Mount, when he says "You have heard... but I say..." (Matt. 5-7). There were some new things in the Sermon on the Mount, but much else that was not new at all. Indeed, it should not suprise us that many of the same teachings might be found--if in perhaps a less authoritative and explicit form--in the Old Testament, and even among the ancient pagans: for the giver of truth gives the same principles and truths no matter what year or in what place He is teaching.

Yet, the teaching that Christ our God gave to us was, in a significant way, very different. Even if the words were not always different: the application and the new responsibility certainly was new. With Christ came much greater freedom--but also much greater responsibility. One example is that both the Old Testament and the New Testament command us to be perfect (Deut. 18:13; Matt. 5:48 ): but in the New Testament this means a different thing than it did in the Old Testament. Not a small part of Saint Paul's Epistle To the Hebrews is spent expressing the idea of the New Covenant's superiority in comparison to the Old one; for example:

"Therefore, if perfection were through the Levitical priesthood (for under it the people received the law), what further need was there that another priest should rise according to the order of Melchizedek, and not be called according to the order of Aaron? For the priesthood being changed, of necessity there is also a change of the law... For on the one hand there is an anulling of the former commandment because of its weakness and unprofitableness, for the law made nothing perfect; and on the other hand, there is the bringing in of a better hope, through which we draw near to God" (Heb. 7:11-12; 18-19; cf Saint John Chrysostom, Homily 13 on Hebrews)

"But now He has obtained a more excellent ministry, inasmuch as He is also Mediator of a better covenant, which was established on better promises. For if that first covenant had been faultless, then no place would have been sought for a second... He has made the first obsolete. Now what is becoming obsolete and growing old is ready to vanish away." (Heb. 8:6-7, 13; cf Saint John Chrysostom, Homily 14 on Hebrews)

We are now under a new covenant, and this means that, while God and his morality are the same yesterday, today, and forever (Heb. 13:8 ), what he expects of us and how he helps us is not the same. I am not speaking of dispensationalism as some Protestants envision it, but speaking simply of what the Bible itself says: that different people(s) are judged against different standards at different times. (Matt. 11:20-24; Jn. 15:22, 24; Mk. 10:4-9; Rom. 2:12-15; James 4:17; etc.) [3]

With all this in mind, Paul does not simply say to the Corinthians who were still sinning: "you have committed spiritual adultery". Neither does he simply say to the Corinthians: "you should place your hope in God and refrain from sinning until the Lord comes". It's not that these are things that he would not say... but he also goes a step further. The incarnation had continued in the body of Christ, the Church; the Holy Spirit had come down and was now resting upon Christians. Therefore, Paul was able to go all the way, so to speak: he was able to not just discuss sin as a breaking of a marital covenant (with emphasis on covenant) or a failure to persevere in a hope: Paul was not able to discuss sin as a real and profound personal sin against He who we are to love infinitely: against He Who is infinite love. [4]

This is not to say that sin was not profound or personal before Christ came (I do not wish to make this distinction too large); yet, things nonetheless there is a difference to be noted. We are now, truly and actually, members of Christ, which is something never experienced in ancient Israel. And this is the profound change that the distinction I am making hinges upon. We are not simply the ethnic and religio-cultural members of the "people of God" Israel, and neither are we simply those expectant people who had been baptized by Saint John the Forerunner: we are much more than this, being adopted sons of God, a royal priesthood, a peculiar people, saints, living stones in the spiritual house of God, actual members of the actual body of the God-man Christ.

The Old Testament talked of spirtual adultery, and it was a very serious and important matter--one with salvific consequences. For those eagerly awaiting salvation when the God-man was walking on the earth, spiritual adultery (or negligence) was also a very serious and important matter, with salvific consequences. But now, from the time of Christ's victory and the coming of the Holy Spirit onwards, spiritual adultery is important in the most real and vital way that it possibly can be.

To sin now is not simply to cut yourself from Israel, or to cut yourself off from the hope in God. It is true that the ancient Israelites had a very community-based understanding of themselves, and viewed the sins of individuals as effecting the entirety of God's people. Yet, this meant something different for them, since the very consitution of ancient Israel was of a very different kind. The New Israel is a different matter entirely, and goes beyond the shadows and types of the Old Covenant: bringing to life, fully and vibrantly, all the splendedness and dreadfulness of God and man, and the relationship that they have to on another. [5]

When we now, as sinners, "pollute the people of Israel [ie. the Church]," we are doing something to an extent that those in ancient Israel could have never done. This is shocking and a fearful thing. But God gives grace in our weakness, and so for all of the added responsibility and complications, the new covenant really is a better covenant, and we really were bought at a price and need not worry ourselves since our Master, our Father, infinitely loves us and will provide us with that which we need.

[1] Of course, the word "communion" is a term that is used in a relative way here: I mean to say that we experience "communion" insofar as we, as created beings, are capable of experiencing communion with the uncreated God. My words are not an attempt to define, but only to (admittedly, inadequately) describe.

[2] Clement of Alexandria, in his interpretation of 1 Cor. 6, articulates well what I am trying to say in this post: "For he who conducts himself heathenishly in the Church, whether in deed, or word, or even in thought, commits fornication with reference to the Church and his own body. He who in this way 'is joined to the harlot,' that is, to conduct contrary to the Covenant becomes another 'body,' not holy, 'and one flesh,' and has a heathenish life and another hope. 'But he that is joined to the Lord in spirit' becomes a spiritual body by a different kind of conjunction." (Stromata, 7, 14)

[3] Saint John Chrysostom, Homily 5 on Romans; Homily 37 on Matthew

[4] When I speak of a personal sin "against" God, I am not speaking as the Catholic theologians speak, where God necessitates payment for his having been slighted or offended. I rather speak of our personal sin "against" God from our own perspective: the sin is "against" God and is personal in that it seperates us from God and drives a wedge between God and man. What I am speaking of, then, is how the offense is perceived from our end: how it brings about sadness, repentance, spiritual dryness, and so forth. It is like we have let a loved one down: they may not be personally harmed or hold us at fault, but we feel like we've done them wrong nonetheless.

[5] For those who think I am drawing too sharp a distinction here, I highly suggest reading through Saint John Chrysostom's 15th through 18th Homilies on Matthew, which are the documents I am primarily basing my understanding on; though of course other Church Fathers, such as Saint Justin Martyr (cf Dialogue with Trypho, 19-31), support this position as well.

Justin Kissel

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