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The Prodigal's Father Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 7, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Fathers need some encouragement. There are two things I see in the parable of the Prodigal that can be an encouragement to fathers, for these two things make it clear that fatherhood is hard, but that there is hope. The two things I see here are the intricacy and the intimacy of fatherhood
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We live in the age of the marvelous machine. In Washington D.
C. the traffic for a half mile around the White House is controlled by
a computer system. The system is constantly telling the lights when to
change to move the traffic according to the need. 450 buses have a
transmitter which is linked to the master computer, and if the driver
needs to set up a serious of green lights to keep moving on schedule he
can tell the computer what he needs. If the computer decides it is a
justified request, he will get his green lights. If the request will only
create problems for others he will be denied.
The machine makes the decisions and this is great, for no man
can know enough to know what the best decision is. The machine is
taking over more and more of man's life. A machine wakes us up in
the morning; a machine makes our breakfast; a machine takes us to
work where we spend the day working on or with a machine, after
which we reverse the process to get back home where we spend the
evening being entertained by a machine. We live in a mechanical
monarchy where the machine is king. This is certainly not all bad,
and we cannot be anti-machine, for God is the creator of the most
marvelous machine of all-the entire physical universe. The problem
comes when we get so enamored with the machine that we forget our
Father in heaven, and begin to worship the creation rather than the
Creator.
Dr. Ron Doly, a family life specialist, asked 50 thousand children
to choose between their TV set and their father. Fully half of them
chose the machine rather than the person. Fathers play second
fiddle, not only to mother, but to machines. This role of second fiddle
is not new. The Prodigal Son chose living with dad as the last choice.
His first preference was for the far country, and the pigpen was his
second choice. Only in desperation did he go home to dad. The elder
brother didn't mind living with dad, but he sure didn't want to
cooperate with his father's value system by welcoming his brother
home. Here is one of the best fathers in the Bible, and he can't get
first place in the hearts of his children even without the competition of
machines.
Fathers need encouragement for their egos, but there are not a lot
of resources devoted to this goal. Even Paul says in Eph. 6:4,
"Fathers do not provoke your children to anger." In Col. 3:21 he
writes, "Fathers, do not exasperate your children that they may not
lose heart." But who is telling the children not to provoke their
fathers to anger, and exasperating them so they lose heart? Most of
the literature is either degrading, or else it puts such a burden of
responsibility on fathers that it leads to despair.
Sam Levenson is saying it as a joke, but the only reason its funny
is because it is so often true. He said, "When I was a boy I had to do
what my father wanted. Now I have a boy and I have to do what he
wants. My problem is when do I ever get to do what I want?"
Fathers react in frustration and go to one extreme or another. They
escape by just letting their children do as the please and give very
little guidance, or they try to demand total conformity to their will
regardless of how unfair and unreasonable it is. Both extremes lead
to the same reaction. Children come to feel that their fathers do not
care. They don't care and so they let us do anything, or they don't
care so they won't let us do anything. In the book of children's letters
to God one little girl wrote, "Dear God, my father said kids is the
best time in life. Please tell him what good is it if we never get to stay
up and watch anything."
Society blames fathers for not being strict enough, and the kids
blame fathers for being too strict. One boy said, "When my dad says
he wants me to have everything he didn't have when he was a kid-he
means A's in school." Fathers are the scapegoat of our cultural
desire to find blame for the mess the world is in. Fathers need some
encouragement. There are two things I see in the parable of the
Prodigal that can be an encouragement to fathers, for these two
things make it clear that fatherhood is hard, but that there is hope.
The two things I see here are the intricacy and the intimacy of
fatherhood. Let's look first at
I. THE INTRICACY OF FATHERHOOD.
By intricacy I mean what Webster's Dictionary defines it to be,