this is a post from http://www.jonacuff.com/stuffchristianslike/
it's so great that I had to share...
Hearing Your Name for the First Time:The Bible is full of examples of God giving someone a new name, their
true name. After a season of struggle or redemption, God bestows a new
identity on someone. Saul becomes Paul. Abram becomes Abraham. Jacob
becomes Israel.
My favorite example is a little less obvious though. The name change
is not so direct, but it is powerful. And I uncovered it while working
on what might someday be a book about the prodigal son.
In Luke 15, Jesus tells three parables. The first is about losing one
of 100 sheep. The second is about a woman who loses one of 10 coins.
And the third, the prodigal son story, is about a father who loses one
of two sons.
I once heard pastor Rick McKinley say that you can feel the tension
building in the chapter. From 100 sheep to 10 coins to 2 sons, it
builds. And in the first two parables, Christ does something really
interesting. In the parable of the sheep he starts the story by saying,
“Suppose one of you has a hundred sheep and loses one of them.” In the
parable of the coins, he says, “Or suppose a woman has ten silver coins
and loses one.”
The pattern has been established.
So does he start the third parable about the prodigal son the same
way? He’s got a rhythm going, shouldn’t he? You’d think so, but he
doesn’t.
The story doesn’t start with, “Suppose there was a man who had two
sons.” Instead Christ says, “There was a man who had two sons.” He jumps
into the parable with two feet, as if he is relating a true story of
how grace works, not a “what if” example of sheep or coins.
He also explains the other two parables. At the end of the parable of
the sheep he says, “I tell you that in the same way there will be more
rejoicing in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety‑nine
righteous persons who do not need to repent.” At the end of the parable
of the coin he says, “In the same way, I tell you, there is rejoicing in
the presence of the angels of God over one sinner who repents.”
He connects the dots for the audience of sinners and Pharisees, but
doesn’t do that with the prodigal son parable. He drops that off like a
grenade, and doesn’t explain it at all, content instead to create a tale
with a thousand doorways to enter.
But that’s all lead up. Where’s the part about the prodigal son’s
name? Where’s the identity tale? It’s there. Trust me. There’s a
veritable hot potato of identity happening here.
In verse 11, Christ establishes who the sons belonged to right out of
the gate. “There was a man who had two sons.” They were not just two
men. They were two sons. They had a father.
In verse 19, after coming to his senses and returning home, the son
says, “I am no longer to be called your son.” He’s right. By his
actions, he’s renounced his identity. He realized he had forfeited his
identity. He continues, “Make me like one of your hired men.” The son
tries to take on a new identity.
In verse 24, the father, representing God, turns to his servants and
says, “For this son of mine was dead and is alive again; he was lost and
is found.”
Mine.
Is there a more beautiful word to hear from a father you’ve wronged? A God you’ve forsaken?
Mine.
This son of mine.
Not this man. Not this filthy, tattered drifter who we’ve come upon
along the road. Not this person who broke my heart or wasted his life
chasing things that don’t matter.
This son of mine. Identity shouts from these verses.
In verse 27, the identity discussion continues as the servants tell
the angry older brother what has happened. They say, “Your brother has
come.” They understand who the son is because the father has established
that firmly.
In verse 30, driving a stake into his own identity, the older brother
tries to sever his ties with the family by saying to his father, “This
son of yours.” This is the equivalent of saying, “He is not my brother.
He is your son, not my blood. Yours.”
Is the father wounded by this? Does he allow the older brother to
take on a new identity? That’s what the brother is trying to do,
separate himself from a family that throws parties for families. Look at
how he starts his response to the second family member who has tried to
renounce their identity in this short parable:
“”My son,’ the father said, ‘you are always with me, and everything I
have is yours. But we had to celebrate and be glad, because this
brother of yours was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is
found.’”
The father refuses to let his son change his identity. By starting
the sentence that way, he again says, “Mine.” My son, you are mine. He
then begins a full out assault of identity and love.
You are always with me.
Everything I have is yours.
We had to celebrate. Not I. We!
This brother of yours has returned.
Over and over again, God pulls both brothers into his arms. Over and over again, he says you are mine.
And that’s my hope for you and me.
That, even in moments when our arms and are actions try to push God away, we will hear his voice say, “You are mine.”
That, even in moments where it feels quiet or desperate or the
world’s name for us weighs heavy, we will hear the father’s voice say,
“You are mine.”
You are mine.
You are mine.
You are mine.
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