The younger son gathered everything together and went on a journey into a distant country.
–Luke 15:13
I’m not a mind reader, but I imagine one or more of the following is true about you:
- You can point to a time in your life when you were closer to God than you are right now.
- You know that you ought to read your Bible more and pray more, but frankly, you don’t have the desire to do so.
- You feel guilty for thinking about money so much and thinking about God so little.
- You find it easy to become obsessed with your work.
- You can look back to at least one mistake in your life that you wonder if God can ever forgive you for.
- You genuinely desire to have a closer relationship with God than you now experience.
Paul said one test of our Christlikeness is our relationship with God. Jesus enjoyed perfect fellowship with His heavenly Father. But if we’re honest, I think most of us can point to a time in our lives when we were closer to God than we are at the present. For some of us, our departure from God can be traced to a specific event–a bitter divorce, the death of a loved one, a prolonged illness, or the loss of a job. But for most of us, our departure from God is a gradual one. We move away from God step by step, choice by choice, until one day we awaken in a place we never thought we would be, separated from our heavenly Father.
In Luke 15, Jesus told a story about a young man who enjoyed a good relationship with his father, but he allowed his desire for money, his thirst for pleasure, and his drive toward significance to cause him to leave his father and move to the far country. Only because of a dramatic crisis in his life did he return to the security of his father’s home.
Many people use the story of the prodigal son to illustrate God’s attitude toward non-Christians, and I think that certainly fits the context in which Jesus told the story. But I also believe the story of the prodigal son illustrates our relationship with our heavenly Father. Specifically, the story demonstrates why we who love God wander away from God–it’s easier than you think. The story also illustrates what life apart from God is like–it’s different than you’ve been led to believe. And most importantly, the story of the prodigal son tells us how we can return to a right relationship with a Father who loves us–it’s simpler than you imagine. (Jeffress)