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A Modern Prodigal
E.A. Johnston
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0:00 10:25
E.A. Johnston

A Modern Prodigal

E.A. Johnston · 10:25

E.A. Johnston passionately teaches that God's boundless grace and love eagerly welcome back every lost sinner or backslidden believer, exemplified in the parable of the prodigal son.
In this heartfelt sermon, E.A. Johnston explores the parable of the prodigal son from Luke 15, emphasizing the depth of God's love and grace for lost sinners and backslidden believers alike. Johnston unpacks the emotional and spiritual significance of the father's compassion and eagerness to welcome his returning son. Listeners are encouraged to overcome guilt and embrace God's invitation to return, highlighting the joy in heaven over one repentant sinner. This message offers hope and assurance to anyone feeling distant from God.

Full Transcript

Chapter 15 of the Gospel of Luke is about the parables of the lost, the lost sheep, the lost coin, the lost son, but there are different degrees of loss mentioned here. The lost sheep goes out from the ninety and the nine. This represents a one percent loss.

The lost coin represents a larger percentage of loss as the woman having ten pieces of silver loses one piece, which is a loss of ten percent. Notice the progression in the text. With the first two items, they represent property.

A sheep, a coin, there is a common feeling attached to the loss of property. Though it has a loss, it can be replaced, but the third parable takes it all to a much higher level and a higher loss. The father had two sons.

One is lost, and this represents a fifty percent loss, which is felt deeply in what makes this loss so stinging. To the heart of the father is the fact that it is not merely a property loss like in the first two parables, but this is a personal loss. What can be more devastating, more wounding, more personal than a family loss? In this parable, friends, we have the universal emotion of fatherhood laid bare as a father yearns over a wandering child.

A fifty percent loss is a tragic loss. If you lose fifty percent of your money in the stock market, it will greatly impact your entire net worth. But to lose a child to the world who grew up in church and delighted in vacation Bible school and perhaps even attended private Christian school, when they leave the church and turn their back on God and go into the world, it's a much harder loss to swallow.

Oh, how the godly parents' heart breaks to watch a child grow up and leave the church to go wander in the world, to drift with its tide, to experience its bruises and yet not turn back to God and their Christian testimony. Oh, how this breaks a mother's heart. How it wounds a father's heart to have a backslidden child.

We do all we can to pray for them. We witness to them. We are there for them, but yet they show no interest in returning to God.

And to top it all off, our fears are increased because they run with a fast crowd of friends. How many modern prodigals do we have out there now? The title of my message today, friends, is the modern prodigal, but I want to make a statement right here before I go any further. I firmly agree with most Bible scholars who say the prodigal son represents the lost sinner.

I believe if you read Luke chapter 15 about the prodigal son with that mindset, you will get all the rich meaning of the text. However, it is permissible to read also into it as the prodigal being a backslidden Christian because God's mercy and grace is bountiful enough for both cases. The part of the passage which I feel best captures the heart of God toward a returning sinner is seen in verses 20 to 24, which read, 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. Let me pause here to say, friends, notice the two little words, and ran. For I believe the entire love of the heart of God is bound up in those two little words.

He couldn't wait to be reconciled with his son. He ran to him, and I believe he ran as fast as he could. Those two words are charged with emotion, and ran.

The devil tries his best to load us down with guilt when we sin, to stay away from God as long as we can. But it is God who is more than ready to receive the repentant sinner. Christ's reception of sinners is a master oil painting of a bloody cross.

The father, when he saw him, he had compassion and ran. Oh, how we parents would run to our own returning children. How we would embrace them and kiss them and rejoice over them.

Here, the father in our text 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 make merry.

I will stop there, friends. Oh, how God's love goes out to meet his returning prodigals. The gifts the father gives him are significant.

Notice the robe is an emblem of character. The prodigal is treated like a high priest with a royal robe. The ring is a token of wealth, position, and honor.

The ring may have even had a family crest on it, signifying a return to the family. Either way, the father is liberal in his giving to the penitent sinner. Them he also justified.

And whom he justified, them he also sanctified. Grace is on display here. Notice that when Jesus was telling the first two parables of Luke chapter fifteen about the recovered sheep and the found coin, he followed up each with the words, I say unto you, there is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that repented.

We can translate that joy, friends, to the joy and merrymaking in the father's house at the return of the prodigal. I want to say something here, friends. I want to address a particular person here listening to me now.

If you've been away from God, friend, if you have backslidden away from God through sin, and you are yet back in a vibrant love relationship with him, you're still back in your backsliding, fearful to face God like Adam in the bushes, I want you to know one thing. God wants you to return to him more than you want to return to him. God says, return to me, and I will return to you.

Gone is the closed heaven. Gone is the guilt of sin. Forgiveness awaits you, friend, no matter how badly you've sinned or how far you've gone away from God.

There's enough grace waiting for you right now. And God wants to welcome you back in his love and embrace. Say with the prodigal, I will arise and go to my father.

God is full of expectation of your return, friend. He's been continually looking out the windows of heaven to see your returning figure on the horizon. Go to him now and ask him to forgive you.

He has more than enough grace waiting for you to lavish upon you. There's more than enough love in his father's heart that he wants to spend on you. You come back to God, friend, and he will throw a big party for you.

The party will be merry because Jesus is standing at the door with his arms outstretched, beckoning you to come to him. Let us pray.

Sermon Outline

  1. I
    • Introduction to the three parables of loss in Luke 15
    • Explanation of different degrees of loss: sheep, coin, son
    • Significance of personal loss in the prodigal son parable
  2. II
    • The emotional heart of the father in the parable
    • God’s compassion and eagerness to receive the returning sinner
    • The symbolism of the robe, ring, and celebration
  3. III
    • Application to modern prodigals and backslidden Christians
    • God’s invitation to return and experience forgiveness
    • Encouragement to overcome guilt and come back to God
  4. IV
    • The joy in heaven over one sinner who repents
    • God’s readiness to reconcile and restore
    • Call to action: arise and return to the Father

Key Quotes

“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.” — E.A. Johnston
“God wants you to return to him more than you want to return to him. God says, return to me, and I will return to you.” — E.A. Johnston
“The devil tries his best to load us down with guilt when we sin, to stay away from God as long as we can. But it is God who is more than ready to receive the repentant sinner.” — E.A. Johnston

Application Points

  • Recognize that God's love and grace are always ready to welcome you back, no matter how far you've strayed.
  • Do not let guilt keep you from returning to God; He desires your repentance and restoration.
  • Respond to God's invitation by taking the step to arise and come back into a loving relationship with Him.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who does the prodigal son represent in this sermon?
The prodigal son represents both the lost sinner and the backslidden Christian, highlighting God's mercy for all.
What is the significance of the father running to his son?
It symbolizes God's eagerness and compassion to welcome repentant sinners without delay or hesitation.
How does this sermon address feelings of guilt?
It reassures listeners that despite guilt, God's grace is abundant and He desires their return more than they do.
What practical steps does the sermon encourage for those who have backslidden?
It encourages them to arise, return to God, ask for forgiveness, and embrace His love and grace.
Why is the celebration important in the parable?
The celebration reflects the joy in heaven and the Father's heart over the restoration of a lost child.

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