Baby
flamingoes are born with grey feathers.
They only become pink because their diet is rich in a natural pink dye
called canthaxanthin, which is found both in brine shrimp and, somewhat
paradoxically in blue-green algae. Zoo
flamingoes used to lose their acquired pinkness until zookeepers realized that
they had to provide them with artificial sources of canthaxanthin. As with flamingoes, so with us: we are what
we eat.
Or,
maybe for us it is more complex, because I can become pink just by putting on
this vestment, but we’re looking to be formed into something more vibrant
still: we’re looking to be formed into the image of Christ, readied to take our
place, saints among saints in the halls of heaven. So, we can’t flourish on a diet of artificial
sources of canthaxanthin. We need the
real thing. What we eat, how we eat,
whom we eat with: all of that matters in a deep way for our journey together
towards holiness.
We see
this theme of how and what we eat running like a thread through the beautiful
parable which is generally called in English the prodigal son (but could just
as well be called the “Lost Sons” or the “Prodigal Father”). The younger son doesn’t realize what a state
he’s in until he has nothing to eat. He’s
hungry. So, out of desperation, he desires
to eat swine food. It’s at this rock bottom
moment he realizes the gravity of his situation: the obvious wrongness of this unclean
food is what finally makes him realize that he has not been living as in the
depths of his heart he longs to live.
So, he resolves to return, confess his sin and offer a deal as a way to
get back to better food.
But, his
father doesn’t let him. As soon as he
sees him, he runs; he makes haste like Mary going to Elizabeth, to perform
mercy out of love. As the son is beginning is pre-planned speech to his father,
the father interrupts him, re-clothes him and calls him to the meal that will
make him whole again, that will restore him to sonship and form him, allow him
flourish, equip him to know true joy.
And the
father keeps on acting in loving mercy, now to his other son, who like his
brother is not yet formed to know true joy.
This is the son who had never hit rock-bottom, but had slowly faded away
from the table, the son who accuses his brother of things the narrator never
ascribed to him, the son who wants to take food, and feast with his friends, not share in the father’s
banquet, not feast side by side with his brother.
We may
find ourselves going back and forth between identifying with these different
brothers. Maybe we can look to our pasts
and see a time when fed on swine food, and it made us as grey as a captive flamingo. I know my challenge at times is to resist thinking
that because I’ve left certain swine foods of my past behind, that means I’ve
fully responded to God’s lavish invitation to the feast.
Maybe we
find ourselves like the older brother, desiring the right food, but not the
right company: for we will only be formed for the heavenly banquet, to stand
saints among saints, if we truly desire that each and every one of our sisters
and brothers feast with us. Holiness is
not like the pinkness of a flamingo; it’s more vibrant. It doesn’t just require a certain ingredient,
it requires company, and it entails a desire to welcome others into that
company, even those whose conversion (incomplete as all of ours are) most
irritate us.
Because
we do not feast on brine shrimp or blue-green algae, but on the fatted
calf. There is no feast in our parable
if an innocent is not slain. There is no
feast if the father does not throw his propriety to the wind and sacrifice some
of his honor and run. There is no
conversion, no welcome, no embrace, no feast, no holiness without our God’s
extravagant gift of self. It is that on
which we feast. It is that that we are
formed to show forth as ambassadors.
Christ, our Passover has been sacrificed, therefore let us keep the
feast!
The poet
Péguy once said that “one would have to have a heart of stone to hear this
story without crying.” The most
beautiful expression of this invitation I’ve ever read outside of the Bible is
from George Herbert, in my favorite poem.
I’ll close with his words:
LOVE bade me welcome; yet my soul
drew back,
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Guilty
of dust and sin.
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But
quick-eyed Love, observing me grow slack
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From
my first entrance in,
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Drew
nearer to me, sweetly questioning
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If
I lack'd anything.
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'A guest,'
I answer'd, 'worthy to be here:'
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Love said, 'You shall be he.'
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'I, the
unkind, ungrateful? Ah, my dear,
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I
cannot look on Thee.'
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Love took
my hand and smiling did reply,
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'Who
made the eyes but I?'
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'Truth,
Lord; but I have marr'd them: let my shame
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Go
where it doth deserve.'
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'And know
you not,' says Love, 'Who bore the blame?'
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'My
dear, then I will serve.'
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'You must
sit down,' says Love, 'and taste my meat.'
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So
I did sit and eat.
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