Hexagram 24: Fu -

Fine Art
Rembrandt — The Return of the Prodigal Son

Rembrandt — The Return of the Prodigal Son

Rembrandt (1660s)

Rembrandt painted this biblical parable late in life, showing the moment when a wayward son returns home after squandering his inheritance. The father embraces his kneeling son, who wears tattered clothing and worn shoes. The composition depicts reconciliation and the restoration of a broken relationship.

Practical Integration

An elderly father embraces his kneeling son, who has returned home after squandering his inheritance in distant lands. Rembrandt painted this biblical parable late in life, illuminating the moment of reconciliation with warm light against surrounding darkness. The son's clothes are tattered, one shoe worn through to bare foot. His father's hands rest on his back—one masculine and strong, one feminine and gentle, as if both parents welcome him. Witnesses gather in shadow, observing the restoration. The I-Ching names this Fù (復), Return—the character combining \"movement\" and \"repeat,\" suggesting the cyclical comeback of what was lost. The hexagram shows Earth (Kūn) above Thunder (Zhèn): receptive stillness over arousing movement. A single yang line enters from below after five yin lines have accumulated—the winter solstice moment when light begins its return. In ancient practice, this configuration appeared after long decline, when the first sign of renewal stirred beneath barren ground. The prodigal's return mirrors the sun's. Rembrandt painted this biblical parable late in life, showing the moment when a wayward son returns home after squandering his inheritance. The father embraces his kneeling son, who wears tattered clothing and worn shoes. The composition depicts reconciliation and the restoration of a broken relationship. The Judgment text speaks to Rembrandt's scene: \"Return. Success. Going out and coming in without error. Friends come without blame. To and fro goes the way. On the seventh day comes return. It furthers one to have somewhere to go.\" The text describes natural cycles—going out and coming in like breath, like seasons, like the son who left and now returns. The \"seventh day\" refers to the seventh month in the Chinese calendar, when yang energy begins its return after reaching its nadir. Ancient diviners saw return as inevitable if one survives the nadir—but survival requires having somewhere to return to. The father's house must still stand. The Image Text observes: \"Thunder within the earth: the image of the Turning Point. Thus the kings of old closed the passes at the time of solstice. Merchants and strangers did not go about, and the ruler did not travel through the provinces.\" At the turning point, movement must be minimal to allow the reversal to establish itself. Rembrandt painted stillness—the son motionless in his father's embrace, not yet risen. In the I-Ching sequence, Return follows Splitting Apart: after complete disintegration comes the first seed of renewal. The next hexagram is Innocence, when return restores original nature uncorrupted by experience.

References & Citations

  1. The Return of the Prodigal Son — Rembrandt-1660s. Rembrandt painted this biblical parable late in life, showing the moment when a wayward son returns home after squandering his inheritance. The father embraces his kneeling son, who wears tattered clothing and worn shoes. The composition depicts reconciliation and the restoration of a broken relationship.

The Judgment

Return. Success. Going out and coming in without error. Friends come without blame. To and fro goes the way. On the seventh day comes return. Movement is cyclic; everything comes at appointed time. No need to force.

returning
hēngfulfillment
chūexit
(and
without
anxiety
péng(a
láiarrive
without
jiùblame
fǎnturn
(and
(is
dàoway
(on) (the) seventh
day
láibrings (about)
return
worth(while)
yǒu(to) have
yōusomewhere
wǎngto go

The Image

Thunder within the earth: the image of the Turning Point. Thus the kings of antiquity closed the passes at the time of solstice. Merchants and strangers did not go about, and the ruler did not travel through the provinces. Rest at the beginning allows energy to strengthen rather than dissipate.

léi(the) thunder
zàiis
(the) earth
zhōnginside
(to) return
xiānthe ancient
wángsovereigns
accordingly
zhì(the) (winter) solstice (most extreme day)
(on) (the) day (of)
closed
guān(the) frontier(
shāng(the) merchants
(and) (the) travelers
did
xíngmove
hòurulers
did
xǐngstudy
fāng(the) quarters

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1不遠復無祇悔元吉

(it is) not (being)
yuǎnfar
(to) return(ing)
(there is) nothing
zhīworthy (of)
huǐregret(s)
yuánmost
promising

Line 2休復吉

xiū(be) content
to return
promising

Line 3頻復厲無咎

pínrepeated
return(s
difficult(y)
(but) no
jiùblame

Line 4中行獨復

zhōngbalanced (in)
xíngaction
(all) alone
(to

Line 5敦復無悔

dūnhonest
return(ing)
no
huǐregret(s)

Line 6迷復凶有災眚用行師終有大敗以其國君凶至于十年不克征

(a
(to) return
xiōngunfortunate
yǒuthere is
zāicalamity
shěng(and) injury
yòng(if
xíngto move
shī(a
zhōng(then) in the end
yǒuthere will be
(a) great
bàidefeat
for
one's (own)
guódomain
jūn(and) (its) nobility
xiōng(with) misfortune
zhìeven
in
shíten
niányears
without
ability
zhēng(to

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Thunder (☳) below, Earth (☷) above—arousing movement underground, returning light after total darkness.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

The classical text describes the winter solstice moment: after darkness pushes yang upward and out, the first yang line re-enters from below. Linked to the eleventh month (December-January) when light begins returning. The pattern is natural, cyclic, inevitable—but fragile at its beginning.

Character Analysis

The madeleine scene is this exactly: after years of linear time pushing the past further away (yin lines accumulating), a single sensory trigger (yang returning from below) collapses the distance. The return must be protected—Proust spent the next thirteen years writing 3,000 pages to capture what the madeleine unlocked.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Thunder

Upper Trigram

Earth

Binary

100000

Energy State

Renewal beginning, light returning. Read bottom to top: one yang line entering below, five yin lines receptive above. The spark underground, not yet visible on the surface.

Trigram Symbolism

☷ Earth (Upper) - Receptive, nurturing, holding space ☳ Thunder (Lower) - Arousing, shock, sudden movement Thunder underground—the past awakening within, not yet breaking surface.

For the classical Wilhelm translation and line-by-line commentary, see Wilhelm Translation.