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Two lost sons, one running father, and a party you might be missing.
What if the parable of the Prodigal Son isn't really about one lost son — but two? In this episode of The Leader Lounge, Chris and Emily Storms dig into Luke 15:11-32 and unpack the story Jesus told the Pharisees about a reckless younger brother, a self-righteous older brother, and a father who ran to them both. They walk through the "came to himself" moment in the pig field, the scandal of a Middle Eastern father hiking up his robe to sprint, and the part of the story where Jesus abruptly stops. Perfect for youth ministry leaders, parents, and anyone wrestling with grace, religion, and what it really means to come home.
"One brother left in rebellion, but the other stayed in religion. Both were lost. Both were pursued."
SCRIPTURE REFERENCED
- Luke 15:11-32 (Parable of the Prodigal Son)
- Luke 15:1-2 (the audience: tax collectors, sinners, Pharisees, scribes)
- Luke 15:1-10 (context: Lost Sheep and Lost Coin)
WHAT TO LISTEN FOR
- Emily's simple definition of a parable and why Jesus used them.
- Who Jesus was really talking to in Luke 15 — and why it matters.
- What the younger son was really saying when he asked for his inheritance early.
- A working definition of sin — using the Father's gifts while rejecting the Father.
- Why a Jewish audience would have heard "feeding pigs" as rock bottom.
- "When he came to himself" — the realization moment before repentance.
- The father watching the horizon: a picture of a God who pays attention.
- In that culture, men didn't run — the scandal of the sprinting father.
- The robe and the ring: full restoration, heir status, back in the family.
- Part 2: the older brother standing outside the party, refusing to come in.
- Why Jesus stops the story mid-scene and leaves it unfinished.
- A warning for lifelong church kids: don't miss the party by keeping score.
RESOURCES/LINKS MENTIONED
"When God Ran" by Benny Hester (1985) – The song Chris mentions about the father running to the prodigal son
FOR YOUTH LEADERS
- Great club talk hook: end the story with the question, "Are you in the party?"
- Use this parable alongside the Lost Sheep and Lost Coin (Luke 15:1-10) to show the escalating stakes of what's "lost."
- When teaching kids, clarify up front that a parable is a story Jesus told to illustrate a point — there was no actual father or son.
- Name the two ways people get lost: rebellion (younger son) and religion (older son). Both need grace.
NEXT WEEK ON THE LOUNGE
Join us next Tuesday as we continue through the stories of Jesus — and look for some youth-ministry-focused conversations mixed in alongside our Bible stories.
Note: We provide links to specific resources; this is not an endorsement of the entire website, author, organization, etc. Their views may not represent our's.
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