William Penn Profile picture
Aug 13 11 tweets 4 min read Read on X
In modern times, the Prodigal Son is reduced to only a story of forgiveness.

A part of the story becomes the whole, far from how the early Church read it.

Tertullian, Augustine, and Jerome saw more: humanity’s fall, Israel’s jealousy, the Church’s feast, and Heaven’s joy. 🧵 Image
“A certain man had two sons…” (Luke 15:11)

The Father is God. The younger is humanity in Adam or the Gentiles who wandered.

The elder is Israel, faithful in service yet slow to rejoice in mercy. (Jerome, Ep. 21.4; Chrysologus, Sermo 1)

The stage is set for exile and return. Image
“The younger… gathered all… took his journey into a far country…”

The “inheritance” is not only wealth but God’s gifts: life, reason, and freedom. The “far country” is alienation from God, not measured in miles. (Jerome, Ep. 21.39–41; 21.7.2)

Thus begins the self-chosen distance from the Father.Image
“He wasted his inheritance… joined himself to a citizen… fed swine… longed for husks…”

The “citizen” is the devil. The swine are demons. The husks are vices and empty “wisdom” that cannot feed the soul. (Jerome, Ep. 21.7; Chrysologus, Sermo 5.6)

From divine gifts to feeding swine, this is the image of sin’s descent.Image
“When he came to himself…”

Sin clouds the mind and drives a man outside himself. Repentance is waking to truth, the mind restored to rule passion. (Cyril of Alex., Hom. on Luke 107)

Here begins the journey back, born of hunger for what was lost. Image
“I will arise and go to my father…”

The Father sees him far off and runs. Mercy meets the sinner before he reaches the door.

He embraces and kisses before even one word of reproach. (Ambrose, De Paenitentia II.18)

Forgiveness moves faster than the returning feet.
“Bring forth the best robe…”

The “first robe” restores dignity lost in sin.
Ambrose calls it the garment of the Spirit.
Tertullian calls it the clothing of righteousness. (Ambrose, De Paen. II.18; Tert., De Pud. 9–10)

It is the covering of a son, not a servant. Image
“Put a ring on his hand… sandals on his feet…”

The ring is the signet, the pledge of faith and the mark of baptism.
The sandals signify readiness for the Gospel and protection from the serpent’s bite. (Ambrose; Tertullian; Augustine, Serm. 112A; cf. Eph. 6:15)

Every gift prepares him to remain in the Father’s house.
“Kill the fatted calf…”

Christ Himself is signified, the slain Paschal Lamb.

The feast is the Eucharist, Heaven’s joy at reconciliation. (Ambrose, De Paen. II.18–19; Augustine, Serm. 112A; Tertullian, De Pud. 9–10)

Here the parable becomes a foretaste of eternity. Image
“These many years I have served you, and I never disobeyed your command” (Lk 15:29).

Augustine: the elder is Israel.
Jerome: envy has no wish to be saved.

“But he was angry and refused to go in. His father came out and entreated him” (Luke 15:28).

The Father still pleads. Image
Follow @penn_williamE for more. New threads every weekday that celebrate our Catholic tradition!

If you enjoyed this, you might like my thread on St. John of the Cross's Dark Night of the Soul. His radical view on suffering:

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More from @penn_williamE

Aug 11
The Virgin Mary’s house is not in Nazareth. It is in Italy.

It mysteriously appeared in the 13th century, perfectly preserved, foundationless, and built from stone found only in the Holy Land.

Some say it was carried across the sea by angels. This is the miracle of Loreto 🧵: Image
In 1291 the Crusader States fell. Around the same time, this small stone house disappeared from Nazareth and appeared in Croatia. It was fully intact.

That is not the sort of thing that happens quietly.

(Ascension Press, “The Extraordinary Story of Loreto”) Image
When it reached Loreto in 1294, people noticed something odd. The house sat directly on the ground without a foundation.

That is almost unheard of in medieval building practice.

(New Advent, Holy House of Loreto) Image
Read 12 tweets
Aug 8
In 1917, 70,000 people said they saw the sun spin, change colors, and plunge toward the earth.

A sign promised by the Virgin Mary to three shepherd children—
after giving them three secrets about hell, war, and the fate of the Church.

The miracle and secrets of Fatima🧵: Image
Mary appeared to the children six times between May and October 1917.

She called for prayer, repentance, and the Rosary—warning of war if her requests were ignored, promising peace if obeyed.

Each month, the crowd grew.

(Canonically recorded testimonies; Sister Lúcia memoirs, 1935–1941.)Image
By the final apparition, October 13, thousands filled a muddy field in Fátima.

Rain poured. Believers prayed. Skeptics scoffed.
At noon, the children pointed skyward.

(O Século, Oct 15, 1917; O Dia, Oct 17, 1917.) Image
Read 11 tweets
Aug 7
In modern times, the parable of the Good Samaritan is reduced to a story about kindness.

We’ve forgot its true meaning—
not the way the early Church understood it.

Irenaeus, Origen, Ambrose, Augustine saw not 'kindness,' but the entire drama of salvation.

The true meaning 🧵: Image
“A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho…”

That man is Adam—a symbol of all humanity.
Jerusalem is the heavenly city of peace, from which he fell.

Jericho, meaning the moon, represents mortality—waxing, waning, and dying.

(Augustine, Quaest. Evang. II.19) Image
“He fell among thieves…”

These thieves are the devil and his angels, who:

Stripped him of immortality

Beat him by persuading him to sin

Left him half-dead—alive in body, but dead in soul, wounded and oppressed by sin.

(Augustine, Quaest. Evang. II.19) Image
Read 14 tweets
Aug 6
He calmed storms with a crucifix.

Spoke languages he never studied.

His body wouldn’t decay for 400 years.

And every claim was investigated by the Vatican. The true story of St. Francis Xavier 🧵: Image
Born in 1506 in Navarre, Xavier studied at the University of Paris.

There he met St. Ignatius of Loyola, joined six others in founding the Jesuits, and was sent to India in 1541.

(Bouhours, 1682) Image
In Goa, India, he preached daily, often in the streets, baptizing tens of thousands.

Local children followed him barefoot across towns. Eyewitnesses testified to healings and conversions.

(Bouhours, Ch. 7; Acta Canonizationis, 1623) Image
Read 12 tweets
Aug 5
“She warned of Church corruption, moral collapse, and a Freemasonic takeover.”

The Virgin Mary appeared in 1600s Ecuador with chilling prophecies.

The convent buried them.

Now a Vatican-approved devotion.

Our Lady of Good Success 🧵 : Image
Image
In 1594, a Spanish nun named Mother Mariana de Jesus Torres began receiving Marian apparitions in a convent in Quito, Ecuador.

The Virgin gave her visions not for her time—but for the 19th and 20th centuries.

They were disturbingly specific.

(Source: Fr. Pereira, The Admirable Life, Bk II)Image
Mary foretold:
•Widespread moral collapse
•Freemasonry corrupting governments
•A crisis in the priesthood
•Sacraments profaned and neglected
•Children raised in impurity and disbelief
(Source: Pereira, Bk II, Ch. 25)
Read 13 tweets
Aug 4
In 1953, a mass-produced image of the Virgin Mary began weeping human tears.

Not once. Not vaguely.
Dozens of times.

In front of thousands.
Doctors tested it. Atheists converted.
And the Church approved it.

This is the Miracle of Syracuse 🧵:Image
Image
It began on the morning of August 29, 1953, in Syracuse, Sicily.

Newlyweds Angelo and Antonina Iannuso, poor and non-practicing Catholics, had hung a $3 plaque of the Immaculate Heart of Mary over their bed.

At 8:30 a.m., Antonina—pregnant and recovering from toxemia—saw the image weeping.Image
Tears flowed from the Madonna’s eyes, down her cheeks, and onto the bedframe.

Neighbors were called. They saw it. So did strangers.

Over the next four days, the statue would shed visible tears at least 58 times, sometimes in front of hundreds of people.

(Source: Archdiocese of Syracuse tribunal report, 1953)Image
Read 14 tweets

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