And
the younger of them said to his father, Father, give me the portion of goods
that falleth to me. (Luke
15:11-32).
The parable
of the Prodigal Son is a most instructive lesson for youth. We see in the
prodigal son the true character of flighty youth: light-minded, thoughtless,
thirsting for independence; in short, everything that usually distinguishes the
majority of youths. The younger son grew up in his parents' house. On reaching
adolescence, he already began to imagine that life at home was too restrictive.
It seemed unpleasant to him to live under his father's rule and his mother's
watchful eye. He wanted to imitate his comrades, who had given themselves up to
the pleasures of the world. "I am the heir of a rich estate. Would it not
be better," he reasoned, "if I received my inheritance now? I could
manage my wealth differently than my father does." Thus the light-minded
youth was carried away by the deceitful glitter of the world's pleasures and
decided to throw off the yoke of obedience and to depart from his parents'
home.
Are not many inspired by similar
impulses today, and, while they may not leave their parents' home, do they not
depart from the home of their Heavenly Father, that is, from obedience to the Holy Church?
The yoke of Christ seems
difficult for immature minds, and His commandments burdensome. They think that
it is not really necessary to keep that which God and His Holy Church command
us. To them it seems possible to serve God and the world at the same time. They
say, "We are already strong enough to withstand destructive temptations
and seductions. We can hold onto the truth and sound teachings by ourselves.
Allow us to perfect our minds through acquiring many kinds of knowledge. Let us
strengthen our wills ourselves amid temptations and seductions. Through
experience our senses will become convinced of the vileness of vice!" Are
such desires any better than the ill-considered request of the younger son to
his father, "Father, give me the portion of goods that falleth to
me?"
And so, a light-minded youth
ceases to heed the commandments and admonitions of the Holy Church. He ceases to study the Word of God and
the teachings of the Holy Fathers, and listens intently to the sophistries of
those who are falsely-called teachers, and in these pursuits he kills the best
hours of his life. He goes to church less frequently or stands there
inattentively, distracted. He does not find the opportunity to devote himself
to piety and to exercise himself in the virtues, because he spends so much time
attending shows, public entertainments, etc. In a word, with each day he gives
himself up more and more to the world, and, finally, he goes off to "a far
country."
What is the result of such an
estrangement from the Holy Church? It is the same as the result of the
prodigal son's leaving his parents' house. Light-minded youths very quickly
waste their excellent energies and talents of soul and body, ruining for time
and eternity all the good they have done. Meanwhile, there appears "a
mighty famine in that land": emptiness and dissatisfaction - the
inevitable result of wild pleasures. A thirst for enjoyments appears, which
intensifies with the gratifying of wanton passions, and finally becomes
insatiable. It often happens that the unfortunate lover of the world, in order
to gratify his passions, resorts to base and shameful pursuits, which do not
bring him to his senses like the prodigal son and do not return him to the path
of salvation, but complete his ruin, both temporal and eternal!
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