Luke 15:1-7 · The Parable of the Lost Sheep
Help Me, I'm Lost
Luke 15:1-10
Sermon
by King Duncan
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It is one of the great adventure stories of all time. A man named Thor Heyerdahl wanted to test the theory that people from South America could have settled the Polynesian Islands in the South Pacific long before Columbus sailed to the New World.

So Heyerdahl took a small team of men to Peru, where they constructed a raft out of balsa logs. These logs were tied together with rope much as a group of sailors might have done in earlier, less sophisticated times. Heyerdahl named the raft the Kon-Tiki. He and his crew of five set out on the Pacific from the coast of Peru on April 28, 1947. They sailed the raft over 4,300 miles across the Pacific Ocean before smashing into a reef in Polynesia 101 days later. They had accomplished their goal. Heyerdahl wrote a best-selling book about their adventure titled, Kon-Tiki: Across the Pacific by Raft.

While the venture was successful, it was not without difficulties. During the three-month journey, the crew of the Kon-Tiki had little control over the direction of the little raft and no way to stop its forward progress. They learned early in the voyage that anything dropped overboard was almost impossible to recover once the raft had left it behind.

Two months into the voyage and thousands of miles from land, one of the men, a man named Herman, lost his footing and fell overboard. The raft, driven by a strong wind in heavy seas, moved ahead faster than Herman could swim. The five remaining men were naturally horrified. They tried to throw Herman a life belt on a rope, but the wind blew it back at them. In seconds, Herman was all but lost to their sight in the mass of waves.

Suddenly one of the men, a man named Knute, grabbed the life belt and dove into the water. He swam back to Herman and wrapped his arm around him, holding his exhausted friend and the rope while the men on the boat pulled them both back to the safety of the raft. (1) All six of the men subsequently finished the journey unharmed.

I thought of Heyerdahl’s friend thrashing helplessly in that mass of waves when I re-read this much loved passage in Luke’s Gospel about the lost sheep and the lost coin.

It’s important to note who was present when Jesus told these parables. Luke tells us that tax collectors and “sinners” were gathering around to hear Jesus. They evidently were hungry to hear what Jesus had to say.

Nearby were the Pharisees and the teachers of the law. They had not come to learn from Jesus, but to criticize him, to find fault with him. They muttered with scorn, “This man welcomes sinners and eats with them.”

With this mixed audience in mind, Jesus tells his parables: “Suppose one of you has a hundred sheep and loses one of them,” he begins. “Does he not leave the ninety-nine in the open country and go after the lost sheep until he finds it? And when he finds it, he joyfully puts it on his shoulders and goes home. Then he calls his friends and neighbors together and says, ‘Rejoice with me; I have found my lost sheep.’ I tell you that in the same way there will be more rejoicing in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who do not need to repent.”

While they are digesting this pithy little story, Jesus tells them another:

“Or suppose a woman has ten silver coins and loses one. Does she not light a lamp, sweep the house and search carefully until she finds it? And when she finds it, she calls her friends and neighbors together and says, ‘Rejoice with me; I have found my lost coin.’ In the same way, I tell you, there is rejoicing in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner who repents.”

It’s important to note the element of helplessness in these two parables. The lost sheep could not have found its way back into the shelter of the sheepfold. It was lost and helpless. Notice that the shepherd puts it on his shoulders and carries it home.

And the lost coin obviously could not find its way back onto the woman’s necklace or into her purse. Both the sheep and the coin were as helpless as Herman foundering in the waves of the Pacific, totally dependent on his friends on the Kon-Tiki.

We often get frustrated with people who have deep-seated problems. “Why can’t they just help themselves?” we ask. “Why can’t they pull themselves up by their bootstraps?” as the old saying goes. When it comes to salvation, however, there is something we all need to understand. We cannot save ourselves. There is no self-help program that will open heaven’s portals. We cannot think our way to Jesus, we cannot work our way to Jesus, we cannot even clean up our act enough to get to Jesus. Salvation is a gift. That is why St. Paul writes in Romans 5: “You see, at just the right time, when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly. Very rarely will anyone die for a righteous man, though for a good man someone might possibly dare to die. But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” (6-8) Salvation is not something we can do for ourselves, but something that has been done in our behalf.

This theme is very important in the writings of St. Paul. He saw the dangers of people believing that they were among the spiritual elite and furthermore believing that they had achieved this status by their own doing. Such an attitude breeds pride. Jesus doesn’t need any more smug, self-righteous followers looking down at the spiritually unwashed among them.

It’s like the story of Mildred, the self-appointed church gossip who kept sticking her nose in the other members’ private lives. She made a mistake, however, when she spread the word that George, a new member, was an alcoholic after she saw his pickup truck parked in front of the town’s only bar one afternoon.

George, a man of few words, didn’t explain, defend, or deny; he said nothing.

Later that evening, George quietly parked his pickup in front of Mildred’s house . . . and left it there all night! (2)

No, Jesus certainly doesn’t need any more smug, self-righteous followers looking down on others. That was the chief problem with the Pharisees and the teachers of the law. They were leaders in their community, blameless to a fault, except for one serious flaw they let their love for religion get in the way of their love for people. In their eyes, they were superior beings, particularly with regard to the sinners and the tax collectors who were also in the audience as Jesus taught. They did not know that there is no such thing as spiritual superiority in the kingdom of God. We are all sinners saved by grace.

The second thing we need to see is the eagerness of the shepherd and the woman to find that which was lost. The shepherd leaves the ninety-nine sheep in the open country and goes after the lost sheep until he finds it and when he does, he joyfully puts it on his shoulders and goes home. Then he calls his friends and neighbors together and says, “Rejoice with me; I have found my lost sheep.”

And the woman who has lost one of her ten silver coins lights a lamp, sweeps the house and searches carefully until she finds it. Then what does she do? She calls her friends and neighbors together and says, “Rejoice with me; I have found my lost coin.”

In both cases, Jesus says, in the same way, there is rejoicing in heaven whenever one sinner repents.

Pastor Dan Baumgartner tells about watching a television news story about three hikers who were high up in the Cascade Mountains.

One of the hikers went ahead of the others to scope out the trail. As he did so, a thick fog settled over the rugged peaks. Two hours later, the other two still couldn’t find him. They looked, they yelled, they searched and searched. Then they got scared. “He couldn’t have gone that far,” one of them said. “The terrain is pretty treacherous. He must have fallen. What do we do?!”

They did what any well-prepared hiker does in the twenty-first century. They pulled out their cell phone, and called for help! And before too long, an emergency rescue helicopter was hovering at 6,000 feet overhead. And not too long after that, a helicopter from the news station was in the area, investigating the story. And just when they were going to call more people into the search . . . the third hiker turned up, out of nowhere, safe and sound. He had wandered off a wrong trail and gotten turned around. Eventually he ran into another group of hikers who pointed him the right way.

Pastor Baumgartner says as he watched this story, he couldn’t help thinking to himself: “Wow, what a lot of energy and time and money invested just to look for one hiker.” Then he thought, “We can’t afford to do that every time somebody gets lost.” That was a logical response. However on further reflection he decided that Jesus would probably disagree. (3) Jesus wants to reclaim everyone who is lost.

That is what the cross says to us. There is no length to which God will not go to rescue one solitary soul. And when that one lost person is found all of heaven rejoices.

This brings us to the next thing we need to see we are the lost sheep, we are the lost coin. It is our tendency to think of lost people as the homeless, the addicted, the person behind bars, or perhaps the idol worshipper in a dark jungle. Friend, we are that lost person if we have never opened ourselves fully to the love of Jesus Christ. We are the lost sheep, we are the lost coin, we are Herman struggling in the waves as the Kon-Tiki moves farther and farther away if we are still keeping Christ at arm’s distance and have never opened ourselves fully to him.

Don’t worry I’m not a backwoods evangelist softening you up for an altar call. I am burdened, however, that so many people who drop in at church from time to time are so casual about their faith. They’ve never made it central to their lives. And so, when Gallup does his polls, he discovers that church people have the same prejudices as the world outside, church people have the same problems as the world outside, church people have the same morals as the world outside. And so people outside the church rightfully ask, does their faith do nothing for them?

And the truth of the matter is that for the casually committed, it really doesn’t. There are many people whose names are on church rolls who are, in a sense, lost. Christian faith is an all or nothing proposition if we want the benefits of the faith the peace, the joy, as well as the love of Jesus Christ, we must give him our all.

In his book God Is Closer than You Think, John Ortberg uses an expression that many young adults are familiar with especially those who are in romantic relationships. The expression is summed up in three letters D. T. R. Those letters stand for “Define the Relationship.” It is a clarion call for relational clarity: Are we in this relationship for laughs, or are we in it for keeps? There comes a time in every relationship when you are either in or out. (4)

That is also true of our relationship with Christ. It’s somewhat like being married. Do you understand that there is no such thing as being a little bit married? Either you are in or you’re out. In the same way, you can’t be a little bit Christian.

John Ortberg goes on to say that in Jesus’ day, being in relationship with him inevitably involved some kind of spiritual D.T.R. Says Ortberg, “Nobody ever went away from an encounter with Jesus saying, ‘That was a good talk.’ Jesus gently but relentlessly asked people to make a decision about their relationship with him. The fundamental decision involved this invitation: Follow me. Come be with me, and learn from me how to be like me.” (5)

I’m asking you today to do a little D.T.R. It is time for you and me to define the relationship we have with Christ.

This brings us to the final thing we need to see in these parables. When we have a relationship with Christ, we have a new relationship with every other person on earth.

Jesus was telling these parables to a crowd that included scribes and Pharisees, as well as sinners and tax-collectors. Jesus wanted them to see that none of them had an exclusive claim on the kingdom of God. We are all sinners saved by grace. Consequently, we dare not look down on anyone else. Each of us is precious to God and so is everyone else on earth. That makes us brothers and sisters, whoever we may be, whatever our rank or station.

There is a wonderful story about a young man named Billy who was attending his first day in Junior High school. At an opening assembly there was an introduction of all the homeroom teachers. Miss Smith was introduced first. She was an “easy” teacher, so the kids cheered as she was introduced. Mr. Brown was next and he also met with thundering approval. But Mr. Johnson was known to be a very strict disciplinarian. The kids jeered most unkindly when his name was called. The pain was evident on his face.

This scene was devastating to young Billy. He was a sensitive kid and he could not believe how the other students were treating Mr. Johnson. Suddenly he stood up in the middle of the bleachers and shouted: “Shut up! That’s my father!” Instantly, the jeering and the booing stopped.

After school, Billy went home. When he saw his real father, he began to cry. “Dad, I told a lie at school today,” Billy said. He told his dad about the incident and how he had said that Mr. Johnson was his father and how he had yelled at all the other kids to “shut up” and be nice to the man.

His dad said: “It’s all right, son. You just got the family members mixed up. Mr. Johnson’s not your father he’s your brother.” (6)

The scribes and Pharisees could not see the sinners and the tax collectors as their brothers. They looked upon them as riff-raff, scum, unworthy of their consideration. Friends, you would think that we must look like riff-raff to God. But not so. When God looks at us, God sees something beautiful and worthwhile, something worth giving His only Son for. That is how we need to look at the world for whom Christ died.

God loves us even when we are unlovable. There is rejoicing in heaven whenever one who has been lost is found. Because we were lost before God found us, we need to regard everyone else as precious souls for whom Christ died as well.


1. Tom Rietveld, http://www.pastortom.org/essentials5.htm.
2. http://www.museumofhumor.com/sermons.htm.
3. http://www.bethanypc.org/sermons/2000/072300.htm.
4. (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2005).
5. Ibid.
6. Daily Grace: Devotional Reflections to Nourish Your Soul (Colorado Springs, Co: Cook Communications Ministries, 2005), p. 153.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Third Quarter Sermons 2010, by King Duncan