IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring
By Carol Glatz
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Salvation has nothing to do with
the tidy business of bartering — earning God’s love in return for good
behavior, Pope Francis said.
“If you do well you get a reward; if you do poorly
you get punished. This is not the logic of Jesus,” whose ability to love and
forgive is unconditional and infinite, the pope said May 11 during his weekly
general audience.
The pope reflected on the Gospel parable of the prodigal
son, which teaches everyone is a child of God not because of one’s merits or
actions, but because of God’s “unchanging love and ready forgiveness.”
The father patiently waits for his sinning son and
rejoices with a celebration when he returns home, the pope said.
Even though the son tells his father, “I no longer
deserve to be called your son” because of the extent of his sins, the
father immediately seeks to restore “the signs of his dignity,”
because in his eyes, he never stopped being his child, the pope said.
No one can take away this dignity of being a child of
God, “not even the devil,” the pope said.
The father responds to his repentant son with tenderness
and love; he doesn’t say, “‘You’ll pay for this.’ No. The father embraces
him, he waits with love.”
The parable also talks about the older son, who never
strayed from the father and worked hard, obediently serving him.
This older son, however, lacks the tenderness and
understanding of the father, and he speaks with disdain and resentment, the
pope said.
“He only thinks about himself. He boasts about
having always stayed by the father’s side and served him; and yet, he never
lived this closeness with joy.”
“Poor father. One son left and the other had never
been truly close” to him with his heart and love, the pope said.
The older son needs the father’s mercy, too, he said. The
older son represents the self-righteous, he “represents us when we ask
ourselves whether it’s worthwhile to work so hard and then we get nothing in
return.”
“Jesus reminds us that you stay in the house of the
father not to get compensation, but because you have the dignity of being a
jointly responsible child. It’s not about ‘bartering’ with God, but following
Jesus who gave himself on the cross.”
God only follows the logic of love and mercy — not the
mindset of the younger son, who “thought he deserved punishment because of
his sins,” or of the older son, who “expected a reward for his
service,” the pope said.
The parable, he said, does not explain what happened
between the two brothers, who can “decide to join in the father’s joy or
refuse.” The fact that it is open-ended can inspire people to reflect on what
they would do, he said.
The parable teaches that everyone needs to “enter in
the house of the father and share in his joy, in his celebration of mercy and
brotherhood.” He said, “The greatest joy for a father is to see his
children recognize each other as brothers and sisters.”
It teaches people to open their hearts to be merciful
like the father, and it offers encouragement to parents whose child has strayed
onto dangerous paths, to pastors and catechists who wonder if their efforts are
in vain, and to prisoners and all people who have made mistakes and believe
they do not deserve forgiveness and mercy.
No matter what happens, “I must not forget that I
will never stop being a child of God, of a father who loves me and waits for my
return. Even in the ugliest of situations in life, God waits for me, God wants
to embrace me, God expects me.”
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