Luke 15:1-7 · The Parable of the Lost Sheep
How to Make Heaven Happy
Luke 15:1-10
Sermon
by James Merritt
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For two days in October of 1987, not just a community, not just a state, not just a nation, but the entire world was watching with bated breath the drama of a little girl named Jessica McClure. We all learned all over again just how valuable the life of one person can be, as we watched the monumental rescue efforts that were focused on this eighteen-month-old little girl who had dropped twenty-two feet through an eight-inch opening in an oil pipeline at a daycare center. For fifty-eight solid hours over two and a half days, drilling experts, highway construction equipment, pneumatic drills, special air vents, high pressure hydraulic drills, an unbelievable herculean effort were expended to rescue this one little girl. When she was finally pulled from that hole, an entire world cheered.

Now that is absolutely nothing compared to the hallelujahs in heaven that are heard when one person comes to Jesus Christ! Did you know that in all of the Bible we are told that the one thing that makes heaven happy is when one sinner comes to Jesus?

Have you ever thought of how you could make heaven happy? Let's be very honest. Most of the time we want heaven to make us happy. Probably the number one prayer prayed to God since the beginning of time is this one: "Bless me Lord." The prayer can be said in so many different ways: "Bless my family;" "Bless my children;" "Bless my business;" "Bless my marriage;" but basically we are all saying the same thing—"Lord, make me happy."

Well, the best way for you to be happy is to make heaven happy. The Lord Jesus told a parable that some call, "God's lost and found department" that describes what makes heaven happy and how we can make heaven happy.

I. Realize That People Without Christ Are Lost

Now to understand this parable, you have to understand the background.

"Then all the tax collectors and the sinners drew near to Him to hear Him. And the Pharisees and scribes murmured, saying, ‘This man receives sinners and eats with them.' So He spoke this parable to them, saying:" (vv.1-3)

Jesus told these stories to the Pharisees. As you know these were self-righteous hypocrites in whom the milk of human kindness had curdled. Their hearts were as cold as ice and as hard as steel.

One statement here tells you all you need to know about Jesus—we're told here the sinners loved him, and the Pharisees hated him. Incidentally, the sinners loved him not because he catered to them, nor because he compromised with them, but because he cared for them.

They were criticizing Jesus because sinners hung around Him and He hung around sinners. So in response to their criticism, Jesus told the parable found in this chapter. Now we have often thought that there are actually three parables in this chapter, but verse 3 tells us "He spoke this parable to them." This entire chapter is a parable. Each parable tells us something that was lost. He tells of a lost sheep, a lost silver, and a lost son.

Now today we are going to deal primarily with the first two parables. He begins by telling about a lost sheep. "What man of you, having a hundred sheep, if he loses one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the wilderness, and go after the one which is lost until he finds it?" (v.4) Now the lost sheep was lost because of foolishness. Jesus compares a lost person to sheep. Now I can assure you that is not a compliment.

You see the number one characteristic of a sheep is this: They are dumb. If you have ever been to a circus you will see trained elephants, trained dogs, and you might have seen a trained flea. But you will never see a trained sheep because sheep cannot be trained to do anything.

Have you ever thought about how dumb sheep are? Their vocabulary is limited to one word "Ba-a-a, Ba-a-a." I mean they can't even say, "Ba-a-a humbug"—just "Ba-a-a."

If that doesn't convince you that how dumb they are, think about their mating behavior. When the females come into season and the males want to mate with the females, the males have a ritual they go through; they challenge other males for the right to mate. They stand several feet apart, and they run full speed at each other and butt heads. Now that mature male sheep has major horns on his head. Can you imagine what that kind of head-butting does to the ability of that sheep to think at all?

Did you know that two male sheep will butt heads for as long as 20 minutes until one will finally back down? If you've ever seen this on television they say you can hear the sound of these two sheep butting heads a mile away. Now you think about it. If sheep had any sense at all you would think that in the last several thousand years they would have figured out another way to settle this problem. They could draw straws, they could spit for distance, they could answer riddles, they could flip a coin, they could see who blinked first, they could just ask the female to choose. But, no, what do they do? They just butt heads.

Now what is the point? Without God, a lost person is dumb. Now I don't mean intellectually dumb, I mean spiritually dumb. A man may have more degrees than a thermometer, but even though the most brilliant intellect on earth is stunningly ignorant if he does not know the Lord Jesus Christ.

You see what is sad about lost sheep is this: When sheep get lost they don't even know it. Do you know why a sheep that wanders away from the flock will never find his way back to the flock? There are two reasons: (1) He's too dumb to find his way back; (2) He doesn't even know he is lost.

The only thing that I know of that is worse than being lost, is being lost and not knowing it. Now I know this is not politically correct to say, but I'm going to say it without stammer, stutter, hesitation, equivocation, or qualification. A person without God is hopelessly lost. He is like a blind man in a dark room looking for a black cat that is not there. Martin Luther once said, and correctly, "The ultimate proof of the sinner is that he doesn't know his own sin; our job is to make him see it."[1]

It is in the nature of sheep to foolishly wander away from the flock, and it is in our nature to wander away from God. Isaiah said, "All we like sheep have gone astray." (Isa. 53:6) That's why we talk about "leading people to Jesus." A man on his own will never find the Lord. He will not seek the Lord. Just as the shepherd has to lead a lost sheep back to the flock, so we must also lead people to the Lord Jesus Christ.

Then Jesus tells the story of a lost silver. "Or what woman, having ten silver coins, if she loses one coin, does not light a lamp, sweep the house, and seek diligently until she finds it?" (v.8) Now the silver was lost through carelessness. Now the tragedy of a coin that is lost is it looses all of its value. Because a coin was made either to be saved or to be spent, but if it is lost it cannot do either one.

Now it is important to see how this coin was lost. First of all, it was lost in darkness. We're told the woman "lights a lamp." They didn't have lighting back in the days of Jesus, and the houses were always dark. If you needed to find something you had to light a lamp. This tells us that people without God are not just lost, they are in the dark, and they need the light of the world, the Lord Jesus, in order to come to God.

The reason why the Pharisees hated Jesus is because He was always turning on the light. You see Pharisees look good in the dark, but whenever Jesus would come around them and show them what they really were, they would say, "Who turned on that light?—Put it out." The truth is, everybody looks great in the dark.

But this coin was also lost in dirtiness. Because the woman not only lights a lamp she "sweeps the house." In that day houses did not have wall-to-wall carpet, or hardwood floors, or acrylic tile. All it had was just dirt. This coin had been lost in the dirt.

You may not like to hear this, but people without God are not just depraved, they're dirty. The reason why people without God are dirty is because sin is dirty. We've all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, and therefore at one time we are all dirty. Have you noticed how we've even used the word "dirty" to describe bad things. We will talk about "dirty films," "dirty magazines." Or sometimes a girl will lose her virginity and say, "I feel so dirty." That's because sin makes us dirty.

But this coin was also lost in disgrace. Jesus speaks of this woman having "ten silver coins." Now these were not just any ten coins. They had a tremendous sentimental significance. In that day when a husband took a bride, she did not receive a diamond ring. She would receive a headband with ten coins of silver evenly spaced. When she would go out she would wear this ribbon of coins around her forehead to illustrate she was married.

These coins were the love gift that the husband gave to the wife at the wedding, and it represented the fact that she belonged to him. in fact, usually on each piece of silver, the name of the husband would be engraved. But if the woman were ever caught in adultery; if she were ever unfaithful, the husband would remove one of those coins and there would be a gap there to show this woman had disgraced her marriage vows. So it was a shame and a disgrace to lose any of these coins.

I want to say something to you. If you do not know the Lord Jesus Christ; if you have never been saved; it's not just a tragedy, it's a disgrace. For God to send His only Son to live for you, die for you, bleed for you, give His life for you, and then to come back for you, and you refuse it, it's a disgrace to grace. It is a disgrace to burn the candle of life for the glory of the devil, rather than the glory of God.

Then finally Jesus tells us the story of the lost son. Now the son was lost because of wickedness. He was lost because just literally rebelled against the father that loved him. In the end that is what being lost really is all about. Whether you realize it or not, it's living in rebellion against God. We must realize that people without Christ are lost.

II. Remember That People Without Christ Are Loved

Now the parable goes on to teach us something else, not only about the sinner, but about the Savior. It teaches us that God is a God who sees the sinner; a God who seeks the sinner; and a God who saves the sinner. You will notice in the first two stories that the sheep and the silver are salt.

"What man of you, having a hundred sheep, if he loses one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the wilderness, and go after the one which is lost until he finds it?" (v.4)

Now the shepherd here is none other than the Lord Jesus Christ. Why did Jesus leave Heaven and come to earth? Well contrary to what you might think it was to primarily to preach, to teach, or even to perform miracles. He told us Himself in Luke 19:10, "For the Son of Man has come to seek and save that which was lost."

Why did Jesus leave the golden streets of glory to walk the dirty alleys of a sinful world? Why did he lay down a crown of diamonds to pick up a crown of thorns? Why did He leave the hails of Heaven for the nails of Calvary. It was because He came to "seek and to save that which was lost."

Now you know you would be tempted to say, "What is the big deal about one sheep?" After all, to lose 1 out of a 100 is not too bad. Any businessman I know would be thrilled if he had a 99% profit margin in his business. Most construction workers figure far more than a 1% loss into whatever project they are working on.

So the question is valid. Why would the Shepherd leave 99 sheep to go after one?" It was not because the one sheep was valuable, because one sheep by itself is of very little value. No, there is only one explanation why the Shepherd will leave the 99 and go after the one—the love of the Shepherd. You see, the reason why Jesus came to this planet to die for us was because of His love for us. I want you to learn this today and never forget it. Jesus does not love us because we are valuable; we are valuable because Jesus loves us.

I heard about a wife that borrowed her husband's car, and it was a brand new car. She took it out, and wouldn't you know it, she wrecked it. As a matter of fact, she totaled the car. She felt terrible. With weepy eyes and trembling hands she reached into the glove compartment to pull out the insurance papers. She got them out and when she opened them up, even though the beautiful car was totaled, a smile came to her face and joy came to her heart because there in the middle of the policy was a note written by her husband, and this is what it said: "If you are in this envelope it must be because you have wrecked my brand new car—but just remember, sweetheart, it's you I love."

May I tell you something as a church we better be very very concerned about every single day? We better make sure that we are not more concerned with the 99 who are already in the fold, than we are with the one out in the field who is lost. If Jesus Christ loved you enough to seek you out, we ought to love others enough to seek them out.

But the lost coin we read was also found. "Or what woman, having ten silver coins, if she loses one coin, does not light a lamp, sweep the house, and seek diligently until she finds it?" (v.8) Now I believe here the broom and the candle refers to the work of the Holy Spirit, because it is the work of the Holy Spirit to convict us, and it is the work of the Holy Spirit to cleanse us. You see when we're in spiritual darkness, only the Holy Spirit of God can shine the light of the Lord Jesus into our darkened state. When a person is in spiritual darkness the only way they can know spiritual truth is for God to light the lamp of revelation that he might see.

We not only need the convicting power of the Spirit, we need the cleansing power of the Spirit. When the Spirit of God convicts us and brings us to Jesus Christ, dirt is swept away so that the coin can be restore to its original purpose and condition. That is exactly why the Lord Jesus is looking for us, so He can bring us out of darkness into light, and out of dirtiness into love.

But the important point to remember is this: Both the sheep and the silver were found. Verse 5 says, "And when he has found it..." Verse 6 says, "And when she has found it..." You see we don't really find God; God finds us. Let me tell you why nobody has ever found God. You cannot find what you're not looking for. Rom. 3:11 says, "There is none that seeks after God."

I read a story about a little girl who lived at the edge of a forest. One day she wandered off into the woods and thought she would explore all the deep dark secrets of the forest. But the farther she wandered away the denser it became until she lost her bearings and couldn't find her way back.

As darkness descended fear gripped her little heart, and all of her screams and sobs only wearied her until she finally just laid down and went to sleep. In the thick of the night friends, family, and volunteers combed that area looking for that little girl. Early the next morning as her father was beginning his search all over again, he suddenly caught a glimpse of this little girl lying on a rock. He called her by name, ran over to her as fast as he could. When the little girl heard her father's voice she woke up, jumped into his arms, wrapped him up as tightly as she could, and said, "Daddy, I'm so glad I found you!"

Well, you may be glad, and should be glad that you have "found the Lord," but the truth is, He found you. The reason why He even looks for you to begin with is because, even though you are without the Lord Jesus, you are loved.

III. Resolve To Bring People Without Christ To The Lord

Do you notice that each time the lost was found, the holy celebration broke loose? Listen to verses 7 and 10: "I say to you that likewise there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine just persons who need no repentance. Likewise, I say to you, there is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner who repents."

There is happiness in heaven when just one lost sinner is found. Notice, by the way, it does not say that the angels rejoice. It says, "there is joy in the presence of the angels." (v.10) It is God who does the rejoicing.

Can I tell you how you can always know a church is right with God? You can always know a church is right with God when that church is excited about the things that God is excited about. If we want to ring the joy bells of heaven; if we want to move the heart of God; if we want to light the fires of revival; if we want to put a smile on the face of Jesus; we need to be about the business of rescuing the lost sheep, restoring the lost silver, and receiving the lost son.

Jesus told this parable to tell us this: He wants us to go out and to see the sinner, seek the sinner, and share with the sinner how they can be saved and also know Jesus. Jesus wants us to go out and look for people who are not here.

Just recently there has been a tremendous flap about Augusta National, and the fact that they do not allow women to be members of their club. Well, I'm not upset about that. What upsets me is they won't let me be a member of their club!

But in all seriousness, aren't you glad that anybody that wants to join the church can join? Aren't you glad that you can invite anyone to join the church that you want to invite, and if they really want to join they can? Did you know the church is the only institution that exists for the benefit of its non members?

I believe Jesus was trying to teach in this parable—everyone should always be trying to reach someone. That's why we must begin to build relationships with our neighbors, our business associates, our Little League Baseball coaches, our school teachers; and in the process build bridges between them and the Lord Jesus Christ.

Do you know why this is so important? Do you know what kind of encounters the Holy Spirit uses most often to produce fruit that lasts? He uses a witness from a heart that is motivated by love and friendship. A survey from the Institute of American Church Growth showed that 83% of new believers come to Christ through a friend or an acquaintance who explains the gospel on a one-two-one basis. Only 17% of all conversions come through what is called an "event," such as a Billy Graham Crusade, a friendship Sunday, or even a Sunday morning message.[2]

Now let me close by getting you to think seriously about two things: First of all, there are only two kinds of Christians in this world—only two: (1) Those who talk about the lost; (2) Those who talk to the lost.

If you want to make heaven happy, you're going to have to start using all that God has given you to talk to the lost. That doesn't mean we will all do it exactly the same way. But every one of you have relationships even now with people who do not know the Lord, and you can begin now to do certain practical things such as:

  • Listing your neighbor by name and praying for him specifically.
  • Looking for opportunities just to have casual conversations with your neighbor to get to know them better.
  • Take opportunities to invite your neighbor to come with you to church.
  • Look for opportunities where you could share with your neighbor your own personal testimony of how Christ has changed your life.
  • Look for opportunities to minister to your neighbor when grief and heartache comes into his life.

You may not think this is a big thing, but let me tell you why it is. I was in Calcutta, India not too long ago, and I went to Mother Teresa's Mission to the dying and to the starving, and I thought about a question she was asked one time. "Mother Teresa, how do you possibly hope to feed all of the hungry people who come to your mission?" You know what she said: "One mouth at a time."

You know what makes heaven happy? When one sheep, or just one silver, or just one son is found. When just one sheep is rescued, when just one silver is restored, when just one son returns, it makes heaven happy. We can be a part of that. With God's help, I pray we will be a part of that, so that not only will heaven be happy, but so will we.


1. Cited by Charles Colson, The Body, p. 191.

2. Cited by Bill Fay, Share Jesus Without Fear, p. 12.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt