“Ever since the time of your forefathers you have turned away from my decrees and have not kept them. Return to me, and I will return to you,” says the Lord Almighty. |
—Malachi 3:7 |
I have shared on this blog before that, to me, one of the most telling stories in all of Scripture is found in Luke 15:11-32. Editors of the New International Version have titled this passage of Scripture: “The Parable of the Lost Son.” Most of you probably know this story of Jesus quite well.
A younger brother chaffs at having to stay at home and help his father and older brother. He asks his father for his inheritance—a great insult in a Jewish household, since the entirety of the inheritance would typically go to the oldest son upon the death of the father, but never before that death. The father grants this highy unusual request. The son promptly goes away to a far country and squanders the money. Eventually ending up feeding pigs, the runaway son realizes he has sinned. He repents, determines to return to his father, and plans to offer to live as a servant in his father’s household.
Meanwhile, every single day since the younger son left home, the father has gone to a lookout point that faces the road on which his son departed. There, day after day after day, the father scans the horizon, looking for some glimpse of his returning son.
After months and months, one day the father sees his son in the far distance. While the son was still a long way off, the father rushes to greet the son and welcomes him home. The son acknowledges his sin and asks for forgiveness. The father responds by forgiving his son, treats him like royalty, and hosts a banquet to honor his son.
That story, told by Jesus to his followers, is exactly how God relates to you and me. Becuase He has chosen us—before the foundation of the world—to belong to Himself, He lovingly stands on a hilltop, watching to see if we will come to Him. He calls us to repent of our sin and enter into His protective fold. The Prophet Malachi put it this way in Malachi 3:7:
“Ever since the time of your forefathers you have turned away from my decrees and have not kept them. Return to me, and I will return to you,” says the Lord Almighty.
This is a call for revival: it’s a call to come to life, again. It’s a call of spiritual returning. It’s a call for you, and for me, to daily repent of our sins and return to God, with hearts cleansed by the blood of Christ our Savior.
If you have someone in your life who has strayed far from God, why not spend some time today praying for that one. Ask God to speak into the depths of that one’s heart and mind and call that one to come home. No greater joy exists for God, and for us, when one of His own returns to Him. May this be a day of that happening for someone we know and love.
Based on a blog originally posted on Tuesday, June 5, 2018