Text: Luke 15:1-3, 11b-32
If you open up your Bibles to Luke chapter 15, you are going to see a heading right above verse 11. In almost every translation sitting in your laps or on your phones, that heading reads: “The Parable of the Prodigal Son.”
We know this story.
We’ve painted it on church walls, we’ve sung songs about it, we’ve heard it preached since we were children in Sunday School. It is so deeply embedded in our religious subconscious that we think we know exactly what it’s about. We look at that heading and we say, “Ah, yes. The story of the rebellious kid who blew it, and the good father who let him back in.”
But I want to start this morning with a bit of a shock to our system: Those headings in your Bible are lying to you.
Well, let me rephrase that. They aren’t lying, but they are editorial additions.
They were written by publishers and translators centuries after Luke penned these words under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. Jesus never gave this story a title. And by focusing entirely on the word “prodigal” as an accusation against a rebellious teenager, we have missed the entire point of the explosive bomb Jesus dropped into the middle of first-century religious culture.
Let’s talk about that word: Prodigal.
If I asked you to define “prodigal” right now, most of you would use words like sinful, rebellious, wayward, dirty, or wicked. But that’s actually not what the word means.
If you open up the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, the primary definition of “prodigal” is this: recklessly wasteful; extravagant; spending resources to a degree that is completely unmeasured and unrestrained.
Now, it’s true that the younger son was deeply prodigal with his sin. He was recklessly wasteful with his inheritance, his character, and his family heritage.
I want to invite you to look past the subtitle in your Bible and look at the actual mechanics of the story. Because if “prodigal” means recklessly wasteful, extravagant, and lavishly unrestrained, then I submit to you that the most prodigal character in this entire story is not the son.
The son wastes an inheritance; the Father wastes mercy.
The son spends money; the Father spends grace.
The son is extravagant in his rebellion; the Father is reckless in His love.
Welcome to the story of The Prodigal Father.
To understand how shocking this story truly is, we have to understand why Jesus told it. Look at how Luke chapter 15 begins. This is the setup for the trap Jesus is about to spring:
“Now all the tax collectors and sinners were coming near to listen to him. And the Pharisees and the scribes were grumbling and saying, ‘This fellow welcomes sinners and eats with them.’” — Luke 15:1-2
Picture the scene. You have two distinct groups of people standing around Jesus.
On one side, you have the “sinners.” These are the tax collectors—not the white-collar accountants of our day, but state-sanctioned thieves who extorted their own people for Roman profit. You have the prostitutes, the ritualistically unclean, the people who haven’t been inside a synagogue in decades. They know they are dirty. They know they don’t deserve God. Yet, they are drawn to Jesus. They are crowding around Him.
On the other side, you have the Pharisees and scribes. These are the religious elites. They have memorized the Torah, which is the 1st 5 books of the O.T. They don’t miss the tithe. They have built an entire lifestyle around flawless performance and rigid personal control. And they are absolutely furious. They are muttering under their breath: “Why does He spend time with people like that? Why does He eat with them?”
See, In the ancient East, eating a meal with someone wasn’t just a casual lunch; it was an act of covenantal acceptance. They were saying, “Jesus, by validating them, You are insulting us.”
So Jesus decides to tell a story. Actually, He tells three stories in a row: a lost sheep, a lost coin, and finally, a story about a father with two sons.
Notice that. We always call it the story of the single prodigal son, but verse 11 begins: “There was a man who had two sons.”
Jesus is setting a trap. He knows the tax collectors and sinners are going to identify perfectly with the younger brother. And He knows the Pharisees are going to look at the older brother and say, “That’s right, that’s a good, hardworking boy, his mamma must sure be proud.”
And right when both groups are fully locked into the story, Jesus turns the mirror on all of them—and on us.
Let’s look at the younger brother first. Verse 12 tells us he comes to his father and says: “Father, give me the share of the estate that belongs to me.”
In the cultural context of the ancient Middle East, this request is seismic. It is an unthinkable insult. In that culture, an inheritance was only distributed after the patriarch died. By asking for his share now, the younger son is fundamentally saying to his father: “Dad, I wish you were dead. I don’t want you. I just want what you can give me.”
How many of us do the exact same thing with God?
We want the blessings, but we don’t want the Father. We want peace, we want purpose, we want financial security,maybe a good looking ministry, we want a ticket to heaven when we die—but we don’t want intimacy. We don’t want The LORD in absolute control of everything in our life. We want the inheritance without total surrender.
And the father in the story does something terrifying: instead of looking at him and saying what you talking about Willis.? He lets him go.
A traditional Middle Eastern patriarch would have struck the boy across the face and driven him out of the house empty-handed. He lets him go. He divides the property; the eldest son always got double portion inheritance and gives the boy his freedom. Because love cannot be forced. God will let you walk away if that’s what your heart insists on.
Psalm 37:4. delight yourself in the lord and He will give you the desire s of your heart. Be careful what you wish for.
The Bible says the boy takes everything, goes to a “far country,” and dissipates his life on loose, decadent living. The money flows. The parties are loud. The friends are plenty. The world applauds.
But here is the unchanging law of living like that: Eventually, the money runs out.
Verse 14 says a severe famine hit that country, and he began to be in need. He ends up taking a job feeding pigs. For a first-century Jewish audience listening to Jesus, this is the absolute rock bottom. The pig was the ultimate symbol of defilement. He is sitting in a pigpen, starving, filthy, covered in mud and animal waste, looking at the pods the pigs are eating, wishing he could fill his stomach with them
The people who loved his money are gone. The applause has stopped. The illusion of freedom has turned into absolute slavery. Sin always over-promises and under-delivers. It advertises a penthouse; it leaves you in a pigpen. then comes verse 17, one of the most beautiful phrases in all of Scripture: “When he came to himself…”
Sin is a form of spiritual insanity. It convinces us that independence from God is freedom, and that rebellion is wisdom. But eventually,hopefully, reality hits. The boy looks at his life and realizes, “My father’s hired servants have more than enough bread, and here I am dying of hunger!”
So he prepares a speech. He builds a self-defense mechanism made of shame and legalism. He says, “I will get up and go to my father, and I will say to him, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and in your sight; I am no longer worthy to be called your son; make me as one of your hired servants.’”
Notice his expectation. He knows he has burned his bridges. He knows he has embarrassed the family name. He knows what he deserves. He expects strict judgment, a probationary period, legalistic conditions, and total exclusion from the family circle. He is banking on becoming a servant because he knows sonship is completely off the table.
And many of you are sitting today with that exact same speech running through your head. You think God tolerates you, but doesn’t love you. You think you’ve crossed a line, exhausted His patience, or used up your expiration date on grace. You have been approaching God like a harsh employer, waiting to work off your debt.
But watch the narrative take a breathtaking, scandalous turn. Verse 20:
“So he got up and went to his father. But while he was still a long way off, his father saw him and was filled with compassion. He ran, threw his arms around his neck, and kissed him.” — Luke 15:20
How did the father see him while he was still a long way off?
Because the father had been looking. Every single day. Every sunrise, every sunset, the father would walk out to the edge of his property, shield his eyes, and look down that long, dusty road, wondering, “Is today the day my boy comes home?” The son may have forgotten the father for a while, but the father had never, for one single moment, forgotten the son.
And then, the father does something that would have caused the Pharisees listening to Jesus to gasp out loud: The father runs.
In the ancient Middle East, a dignified patriarch never ran. It was considered deeply humiliating. To run, a man would have to lift up his long robes, exposing his ankles and legs, completely compromising his patriarchal dignity. Middle Eastern fathers walked slowly and majestically. Children ran. Servants ran. Desperate people ran. Wealthy landowners did not run. It was considered deeply shameful.
Why did the father run?
Certainly out of love, yes. But historical context tells us something deeper. In that culture, if a Jewish boy lost his family’s inheritance among Gentiles and tried to return home, the village would perform a ceremony called the Kezazah. The cutting off ceremony. The villagers would gather, smash a clay pot at the boy’s feet, and yell, “You are cut off from your people!” He would be publicly shamed and ostracized, excommunicated forever.
The father sees his boy walking over the hill. He looks at his son’s torn clothes, his bare feet, his posture of defeat. The father realizes that if the village sees him first, they will destroy him. That is what the world does, it kicks you when you are down. So the father lifts up his robes, shatters his own dignity, and sprints down the dirt road. He reaches the boy before the village can get to him. He intercepts the shame. He absorbs the disgrace.
The son tries to start his rehearsed speech: “Father, I have sinned… I am no longer worthy…”
But before he can even finish the sentence, before he can say “make me a hired servant,” grace cuts him off. The Father interrupts him with an outpouring of extravagant restoration.
He yells to the servants: “Quick! Bring out the best robe and put it on him!” The robe represents honor and righteousness; it’s the father’s own garment. “Put a ring on his finger!” The ring was the family signet ring, representing authority and full reinstatement into the family business. “Put sandals on his feet!” Servants went barefoot; only sons wore shoes. “And bring the fattened calf and slaughter it, and let’s celebrate with a feast!”
This is not calculated, measured forgiveness. This is reckless, wasteful, extravagant grace. The son expected probation; he received a party. He expected rejection; he received a ring. He expected to be a servant; he was restored as a son.
Grace always arrives before worthiness.
If the story ended there, it would be a beautiful, comforting message. But Jesus doesn’t stop. He turns his gaze directly to the Pharisees, because now it’s time to talk about the second lost son.
The older brother is out in the field. He walks back toward the house, and he hears music and dancing. He calls one of the servants and asks what’s going on.
The servant says, “Your brother has come, and your father has slaughtered the fattened calf because he has received him back safe and sound.”
Look at verse 28: “But he became angry and was not willing to go in.”
This is also a massive cultural insult in their day.
Think about it, because the younger brother already spent his entire 1/3 portion, everything remaining belongs to the elder brother. The older brother is furious because the father is literally throwing a party using assets (the calf, the food, the resources) that now legally belong to him
The younger brother was lost in rebellion, but the older brother was lost in religion. One left home physically; one left home emotionally. One broke all the rules; one worshipped the rules. One was far away geographically; one was far away spiritually while standing right in the backyard.
The father leaves the party—notice the grace of the father here again, he leaves the celebration to pursue the older son just like he ran to meet the younger son—and he begins to plead with him.
Listen to the older brother’s bitter response in verse 29:
“Look! For so many years I have been serving you and I have never neglected a command of yours; and yet you have never given me a young goat, so that I might celebrate with my friends; but when this son of yours came, who has devoured your wealth with prostitutes, you slaughtered the fattened calf for him.”
Look at his language. It high lughts his frustration and lack of respect. He doesn’t say “Father.” He says, “Look!” He doesn’t say “my brother.” He says, “this son of yours.”
His entire identity is rooted in his performance. “I have served you. I have never disobeyed. Look at my track record! Look at my resume!” It’s almost like He views his father’s house as a servant quarters rather than a home. He doesn’t seem to want the father either; he just wanted a goat to party with his friends. He wanted recognition based on achievement.
And because his heart was filled with self-righteousness, he was absolutely offended by grace. See Grace always offends people who think they have earned their way to the table. The older brother is furious because the father is giving away for free what he had spent his entire life trying to earn. I am sure no one here has ever gotten frustrated looking at what The father was blessing someone else with in comparison to what they have…Jesus is only talking to the Pharisees here right?
Let me tell you This is the great danger for those of us who have been in church a long time. You can have proximity without intimacy. You can do the duty without ever having the delight. You can keep all the rules and still completely miss the Father’s heart.
The father looks at this bitter, religious boy, and speaks with unbelievable tenderness: “Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours.”
He reminds him of his position. He doesn’t answer his resentment with rejection. He invites him into the joy.
Church, this is not just an ancient Middle Eastern story told to shock first-century leaders. This is an active, living reality happening right now in our world.
I want to share a story:
There once was a young man , who like many young men, had found himself discontent with how his parents had run things so as soon as he could, he moved out. Don’t get me wrong, his parents raised him in church, he had grown up as involved in pretty much everything that was ever going on at the church. However, the flip side was that in spite of all this the home life was still very dysfunctional in many ways and he was ready for a fresh start where he could just follow all his own rules.
So one week before his 18th birthday, this young man got in his loaded up car and set out from Biloxi, Ms. Heading to Texas. Things were planned out and he was going to be his own man. Earlier in the year he had gone through MEPS and had signed a delayed entry for the Marine Corps. All he had to do was bide his time until Feb. His plan was to attend a Junior College for one semester, because this allowed him to go into the Service as a Lance Corporal
. Yep Life was planned out and no one was going to tell Him what to do anymore. He even had his own garage apartment waiting for him because this nice pastor and his family invited him to live with them in Texas. Well for a while things were going pretty good, he was his own man. Sure the pastor kept giving him chores to do, but since he was living in the garage apartment rent free it was the least he could do. In reality it was a lot like bartering.
Well one day this young man got caught up with his friends and pretty much goofed off all day instead of taking care of the list of things he was supposed to do at the church. When he got home that evening the pastor asked him to sit with him out on the front porch.
It was a nice early evening, the pastor sat in the porch swing and the young man sat in a rocking chair across from the porch swing. As you would expect the pastor asked him why he had not taken care of the things at the church. So the young man eloquently explained to him how things had come up that in all reality were out of his control that drew him away from the church and he just never got back to it in time.
Well the pastor sat there nodding and seemed to understand perfectly, but then he got a quizzical look on his face and said, You are lying to me” Of course the young man denied it, but then the pastor said, “no the Holy Spirit is telling me you are lying to me.” The young man thought, “really now you want to start talking to people again God, and about this, seriously?”
You could see the color changing in the pastors face like a thermometer rising. HE was mad. He looks at the young man and says, “Stand Up” Well the young man knew what was coming next, he had been on the receiving end of anger many times before and he was done with it.
So he stood up, arms at his side and with fists clinched, stared right into the pastor’s eye fully thinking he knew what was coming next.
So there I was, yes if you have not already guessed, the young man was me, there I was standing with fists clenched staring at the pastor. I remember thinking this is it, if this pastor lays a hand on me I am knocking him off this porch and I am gone. I am tired of giving myself time after time to just have it blow up in my face.What happened next blew me away.
He took a step toward me and pulled me into one of the strongest, warmest hugs I have ever experienced. I stood there dumbfounded as he explained to me how he loved me and thought of me as his son and could not throw me out any more than he could one of his daughters and for the very same reasons was why he had high expectations and standards for me. This was something new and unexpected.
I experienced something profound, I experienced the overwhelming, never-ending, reckless love of a prodigal God. My external circumstances didn’t fix themselves overnight. I still had bills to pay; I still had broken relationships to navigate. But the definitive turning point of my life had begun and a change happened on that day that set forth a new path for my life, even in regards to the military. I ended up spending the next two years living with this family, learning daily what it means to receive the unconditional love of the Prodigal Father.
The Bible guarantees this truth for every single one of us. In Acts chapter 10, verse 34, Peter stands up and declares: “Now I really understand that God doesn’t show favoritism.”
What the Father did for both sons in the parable, what he has done and still does for me, and what He has done for millions of broken travelers throughout human history, I’m telling you He is standing ready to do for you here today.
Jesus ends this parable with one of the most brilliant literary moves in history: He leaves it on a cliffhanger.
We know the younger son put on the robe and went inside. But the story ends with the father standing outside in the yard, pleading with the older brother to drop his pride and come into the party. We never find out if the older brother swallowed his resentment and joined the celebration, or if he stayed outside in the cold, holding onto his self-righteousness.
Do you know why Jesus left the story open-ended?
My thoughts are because He was looking right at the Pharisees—just like He is looking right at you and me today—and He is saying, “How do you want the story to end?”
This parable forces us to look squarely into the mirror this morning and ask a definitive question: Which son are you?
Some of you reading are like the younger son. You are living in a far away country. Maybe physically, maybe emotionally, maybe secretly while sitting in these chairs. You have wasted years, you have burned bridges, you carry deep, heavy shame, and you are terrified of rejection. You’ve been trying to clean yourself up before you approach God.
Hear me clearly: Stop trying to fix yourself. You do not need to be clean to come to the Father; the Father embraces you in your filth and cleanses you with His love. Turn around. He is already running down the road toward you.
Others of you are more like the older brother. You don’t miss a Sunday. You know the scriptures. You work hard. But your heart has grown cold and hard. You are bitter, you are judgmental, you are comparing your performance to everyone else’s flaws, you are living in religion instead of relationship. You need to repent just as much as the rebellious wanderer needs to repent.
Whether your sin is obvious like the younger brother or hidden like the older brother, the invitation from the Prodigal Father is exactly the same today: Come home.
The road is open. The cross of Jesus Christ was God running down the road to absorb your shame. The empty tomb is the confirmation that the feast is ready. The robe of righteousness is waiting, the ring of authority is available, and heaven is waiting to throw a party over you.
How do you want your story to end?