The youngest son in the parable of the Lost Son (also known as the Prodigal Son) in The Bible went to a distant country and squandered his inheritance on reckless living. He eventually ran out of money and ended up working on a pig farm, before deciding to return home to his father.
This parable can be found in Luke 15. The youngest son of a family asks his father for his inheritance and leaves town. The son wastes his money on fast living and ends up working in a pig farm, eating the pig's food, The son realises that the workers on his father's farm are better off than he is so he decides to go home and ask his father to forgive him. The father sees his youngest son coming down the road and rushes out o meet him. The father puts on a feats for the youngest son, this upsets the oldest son.
Cleopatra's youngest son was Ptolemy Philadelphos.
he ran away from home
Kairos, Caerus - the youngest divine son of Zeus.
David was the son of Jesse , he was the youngest of Jesses son, and he kept over the father flocks.
Brian Kinchen's youngest son is named Beau.
katie prices youngest son is called junior andre
the youngest is 8the second is 12 and the eldest is 16
Willie Lincoln was ther youngest son of Abraham & Marry Lincoln.From, Bryan Hollick
son dongwoon
The youngest child of Tsar Nicholas II was his son Alexi
It doesn't refer to any sacrament the parable is about the nation of Israel. The parable of the Lost Son is in a group of three parables - The Lost Sheep, The Lost Coin and the Lost Son. These three parables are about God's love for people who are lost and, in the context of the parables, God's love for the 'lost' nation of Israel. The father in the parable represents God. The youngest son represents Israel and the oldest son represents the Pharisees and the scribes. The parable was told because of the attitudes of the scribes and Pharisees. Both of these groups were self righteous and rejected Jesus. This parable along with the parables of the lost coin and the lost sheep, are rebukes to the scribes and Pharisees.