Karen Swallow Prior: The Prodigal in All of Us

A thought-provoking and challenging reflection. Read it all.

Steven* (*not real name), also a freshman, was immersed in all that life at a Christian college offered. His charisma, activism, and faith were infectious to others—including Smith. “We bonded over our bookish pretensions and freshman philosophizing. The world was in our pockets, and we were like brothers,” Smith says. The two decided to room together sophomore year.

Early that year, Steven’s mother began having health problems. Soon she was diagnosed with stage IV cancer. Before school was out, she was dead. During her illness, Steven grew frustrated with Christians’ trite responses to his mother’s suffering. He was angry at God. By the time she died, Steven had turned to meditation and Eastern mysticism for solace. By senior year, he had come out as gay and walked away from the faith. Steven’s journey gave Smith a lot to think about.

When Lee,* Michele Sterlace-Accorsi’s husband of 24 years, walked away from Christianity, he walked away from his family, too. Much of their marriage had been difficult, says Sterlace-Accorsi, but the years of raising their four children were mostly good. The couple built a large home in upstate New York on a plot of land with woods and a pond. The family went to church each Sunday, the children attended Christian schools, and prayer began and ended the days and preceded family meals.

…At some point in their lives, one of every three Americans will leave Christianity, according to a 2011 study in the Journal of Religion and Society. Called “leavers,” “deconverts,” or “ex-Christians,” they are targets of fresh concern among church denominations watching their numbers shrink. Pollsters and bloggers tick off reasons why so many are leaving, such as intellectual hurdles to belief, immoral or intolerant church leaders, and profound suffering. But the leavers phenomenon is nothing new. It goes back at least to the parable of the Prodigal Son, told by Jesus and recorded in Luke 15:11–32.

What about the people whom the prodigals leave behind? The ones who love the leavers? The ones left to hold down the forts of remaining families and faith communities? Few theological and practical resources exist for the two out of every three Christians who remain with the Father while they watch their “younger brother” leave.

Columbus Dispatch: Family of Victim Gave Killer Bible for Comfort

Unlike the family of the victim whom Matthew Cordle killed–who by all appearances have not been able to forgive Cordle–there will be closure for this family (if there isn’t already) because they have forgiven. This is what makes forgiveness so terribly costly. We do not forgive and forget. We forgive, by the grace of God, despite the terrible pain and damage inflicted on us. We must acknowledge our terrible hurt and loss and then choose to forgive despite what has been done to us. Apparently this family has done precisely that.

Only when we can forgive can we truly be free–free of the perpetrator having any more claim on us and free from the desire for anger and revenge that will surely destroy us if left unchecked. Good for all involved. May Mitts’ murder victims rest in peace and may the Lord bring his comfort, consolation, and healing to the victims’ families.

If Ohio executes Harry Mitts Jr. on Wednesday as scheduled, the condemned man will leave behind a tattered, worn Bible he received in 1994 from an unlikely source.

Mitts said his eyes filled with tears and he nearly collapsed when he learned that the Bible, inscribed with his name, was a gift from the mother and sister of Sgt. Dennis Glivar, the 44-year-old Garfield Heights police officer he had killed about three months earlier.

Though Mitts had not thought about religion for most of his life, the gift helped point him toward Christianity, said Jeff Kelleher, his attorney. “It affected him deeply.”

Mitts received the Bible through a jail chaplain on the day his death sentence was handed down in Cuyahoga County in 1994. He also received a letter from Glivar’s sister, Cheryl Janoviak, telling him that she and her mother had forgiven him.

“What my mom and I did was only a portion of what God desired to draw Mr. Mitts to the cross and the saving, redeeming, wonderful, cleansing grace that is available to all,” Janoviak, of Newbury in Geauga County, said last week.

Read it all.