“ All I have is yours.” Lk 15.31
“My son, you are with
me always and all I have is yours. ” Lk 15.31. These words addressed by the
father to the elder son are very relevant especially for us, Priests and Religious.
We are sons and daughters of the father
in a unique way. The father has entrusted to our care all he has – his own son,
his word, his sacraments, his own body and blood. Our mission is faithfully to
guard and administer these to God’s people.
In these words addressed to the elder son we see our vocation to be with
him as well as our mission to guard and administer all he has given to us.
As priests and religious, we have more affinity to the elder
son than the younger. We have not wandered far. We have not been too rash or
irresponsible. We have not wasted the father’s property in loose living. We
have not disobeyed the father like the younger son. Instead, we have been home
bound, obedient, poor, chaste, dutiful, responsible and working hard. We have
been staying close to the altar, administering the sacraments, preparing people
for baptism, visiting the sick, preaching the word, helping the poor.
The father calls the elder son, “My son”. The father owns
him. The son has the features of the
father. The father’s blood runs through his veins, The son has inherited the
father’s temperament and attitude. He is the father’s son. He is his image. In
spite of the harsh and hurting words of the elder son, the father owns the son
and calls him, “My son”. The father does not accuse nor condemn. He looks at the intimate relation he has to his
son, than find reasons for division and quarrel.
“You are always with
me.” says the father. Our vocation as
priests and religious is to be with him. Christ called the twelve, “to be with
him”(Mk.3.14). Our first and primary
vocation is to be with him. Another word
for ‘being with him’ is holiness. Sanctification of our life by listening to
his word, celebrating the sacraments, experiencing his forgiveness, is our
first vocation. The father invites us to be ‘with’ him always. He is with us
and not against us. He invites us to be with him ‘always’ – in the church, in the presbytery, in the
workplace, in the market, on Sundays and weekdays. His last words to us are “ I
am with you always”.
“All I have is yours.”. The father is an old man. His days on
earth are numbered. He gives away everything - his property, his house, his
wealth, his servants, his bank balance, everything belongs to the son. All that
the father has, he has given to us – his son, his church , his people, his
sacraments, his word, Our vocation is to
pass on what we have received. The Vatican documents tell us that the role of a
priest is to be teachers of the word and to be santifiers through the
celebration of his sacraments. Celebration of the sacraments finds its
culmination in the celebration of the Eucharist. The best service a priest can
render to the church is to make the Eucharist the center of one’s own life and
the lives of the people whom they serve.
The elder son grumbles because he did not get the fattened
calf but the father is offering him his entire flock, his farm, his house, his
property. Jesus asked the Samaritan women for few drops of water and in return
he promises her a perennial spring. In
return for the generosity of the boy who gave five loaves and two fish, Jesus feeds five
thousand with it and returns twelve baskets full. Jesus asks Peter for his boat
to use it as a pulpit and he returns the boat full with fish. At Cana in return for the faith of Mary, his mother,
he gives six jars full with fresh new
wine, “filled to the brim”. For every
step the prodigal son takes towards the
father, the father takes a hundred steps towards the son. The son comes
limping, the father goes running. We offer a drop and in return he offers us an
ocean. “How much ‘more’ your father in
heaven give” ( Mt.7.10), Jesus tells his
disciples. “Give, and it will be given to you, a good measure, pressed down,
shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap” ( Lk.6.39). “ If you
only knew.” ( Jn 4.10), Jesus tells the Samaritan women. If we only we knew who
the father of the prodigal son is, who our heavenly father is !

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