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June 21

Today’s Bible Verse

Luke 15:20 ESV: “And he arose and came to his father. But while he was still a long way off, his father saw him and felt compassion, and ran and embraced him and kissed him“.

 

Today’s Reflection

This story is one of the most tender in Scripture. Jesus paints a portrait of a father who watches, runs, and embraces a returning child. The younger son’s journey — demand, departure, waste, repentance, and return — is the story of many hearts. The older son’s response — anger, comparison, and self‑righteousness — is the story of many others. The parable exposes both the sinner’s need and the danger of a religion that forgets mercy.

The father’s posture is striking. He does not wait for the son to reach the gate; he watches and runs to meet him. That image reveals God’s initiative in grace. Salvation begins not with our perfect repentance but with God’s compassionate pursuit. The father restores the son without a long interrogation; he clothes him, feeds him, and celebrates. Restoration is immediate and costly — a picture of grace that costs the father but frees the child.

At the same time, the parable warns the “older son” within us. It is possible to be religious and resentful, to serve God and miss His heart. The father’s invitation to the elder son — “we must celebrate and be glad” — calls us to rejoice when grace is extended to others, not to tally debts and demand justice.

This parable is pastoral medicine for both the wandering and the judging. For the wanderer: come home. For the one who stays: open your arms and celebrate. For the church: be a place of welcome, not a club of the morally superior.

Practical application

  • If you’ve wandered, come home. Take one step: call a pastor, attend a service, or confess to a trusted believer. Grace meets you before you finish your sentence.

  • If you’re the elder son, examine your heart. Ask God to reveal any pride or bitterness and practice rejoicing when others are restored.

  • Practice extravagant welcome. Make your church a place where returning people are embraced, not interrogated. Offer hospitality, not a checklist.

Prayer

Father of compassion, thank You for watching and running to meet us. For those who have wandered, draw them home. For those who have stayed, soften our hearts to celebrate Your mercy. Teach us to welcome with the same lavish grace You show us. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

Further reading:

Luke 15:11–32; Romans 5:8.

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