Points of Cultural Misconception of the Parable of the Compassionate Father
- The request: The prodigal's request is an unthinkable breach of traditional culture. (He wants his father to die.)
- His father's gift: The father reprocesses anger into grace and thereby deeply violates the code of an Oriental patriarch. (As is shown five times in the parable).
- A hurried sale: The prodigal triggers the anger of the community. (He must leave town quickly.)
- The kezaza ceremony: A threat hanging over the prodigal as he leaves town. (He must not lose the money.)
- Expensive living: Not riotous (KJ), nor loose (RSV), nor dissolute (NRSV), nor wild (NIV). (The Greek word asotos is literally a + sozo, i.e. without saving. No hints of immorality)
- Search for employment: The prodigal must find a paying job so he can repurchase the land. (The kezaza ceremony now threatens.)
- Inauthentic Repentance: He projects A self-serving plan: (Augustinian or Pelagian? Complications with the lost sheep and coin.)
- Turning point: The costly demonstration of unexpected love. (Grace not law. Love is offered before the confession.)
- A father who behaves like a mother. (The father is defined by Hosea 11, not by Middle Eastern culture.)
- Authentic Repentance: The Prodigal Revises His speech – he is not interrupted. (Like the lost sheep, he accepts to be found).
- Christology: Incarnation and atonement meet. (This happens with the shepherd, the woman and the father.)
- The meaning of the banquet (a theological trialogue):
- Father's comments: Because - He was lost and is found .. dead and is alive (divine passives)
- Young boy: .... Because, he (the Father) received him (the prodigal) with peace.
- Older son: You killed for him the fattened calf.
- Older son's anger at grace. (for some grace is not only amazing – it is also infuriating!)
- His mentality: (You get what you pay for, don't you?)
- His response: (He breaks his relationship with his father - like the prodigal, only more so.)
- Father's response: The Father once again reprocessed anger into grace. At the same time the father urges the older son dealing with the prodigal in the same way.
- Older son's final reaction: An unfinished theological symphony (participation theater).
Reference: Kenneth E. Bailey.
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