Luke 15:1-7 · The Parable of the Lost Sheep
Lost
Luke 15:1-7
Sermon
by James Merritt
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Have you ever lost something of value that was really, really important that really mattered to you and you couldn’t find it? Once you realized it, what did you do? You dropped everything you were doing and immediately went looking for it. Do you remember when you found it? Do you remember the joy, the relief and the happiness that you felt? Maybe it was your car keys or your wallet or a credit card or even a wedding ring. How many of you have ever lost a kid?

I can tell every one of you this. If you have never lost a child, here is why, you’ve probably never had one! For all of you young parents and parents-to-be out there here is a tip. Before your kid quits being a kid, you are going to lose that kid! I don’t care if you have a full-time bodyguard and three FBI agents on his trail you are going to lose that kid. Kids are like Ninjas – they just have a way of disappearing right before your very eyes.

Let me tell you a story. There once was a young couple that went shopping at a mall. They had a two year old that we will call “Johnny.” The father decided to stop at a store try on a pair of pants. Like most two-year-olds, he was sitting in a stroller and the mother had placed her purse and diaper bag on the handles. When the dad finished trying on the pants, he looked at the wife and said, “Where is Johnny?” The wife turned around turned around to look, Johnny, the stroller, the purse, and the diaper bag were gone!

The couple began to frantically look for him and couldn’t find him anywhere. They saw a salesperson and asked her if she had seen a little boy and a stroller. She said, “Yes. He just pushed the stroller out the door about two minutes ago.” The father was furious and said, “Why didn’t you stop him?” She said, “He wasn’t my kid.” The parents ran out into the mall, looked both ways and still couldn’t find him. They just instinctively turned to the right, walked up two stores and there was a toy store. They looked into the window and there were two salespeople with smiles on their faces. They just pointed. The man and wife looked to where they were pointing and there was little Johnny, sitting in a little toy car, with the stroller right beside him waving at the parents through the window. The father almost started balling his eyes out. They were so relieved, and so happy, and so joyful. This is a modern retelling of a parable Jesus told and a true story about when Teresa and I lost our oldest son James.

If that has ever happened to you or when it does know this – you will have just seen the heart and the mind of God. When my son was lost, at that point there was only one thing on the planet that could make me happy. Neither fame nor fortune at that point would have put a smile on my face. The only thing that would have made me happy was for my lost son to be found. Key Take Away: Heaven is happy when the lost are found.

That word “lost” is a word that I want you to burn into your mind and brand onto your heart. If you want to understand the Bible, if you want to see the heart of God, if you want to know why the church exists, if you want to know why preaching and teaching and reaching every person we can is so important, it all revolves around the word “lost.”

As we study the parable before us it is really important to understand who Jesus was talking to and why He told this story. The key is found in the first two verses of Luke 15.

“Now the tax collectors and sinners were all drawing near to hear him. And the Pharisees and the scribes grumbled, saying, ‘This man receives sinners and eats with them.’” (Luke 15:1-2, ESV)

There were always two types of people around Jesus. There was the rebellious crowd and the religious crowd. There was what some would call today the “wrong” crowd and the “right” crowd. The Pharisees considered themselves the “right” crowd and it drove them nuts that Jesus hung around with the “wrong” crowd. The Pharisees couldn’t understand why someone who claimed to be the Son of God would hang around with sinful people.

Andy Stanley put it best when he said, “People who were nothing like Jesus liked Jesus and Jesus liked people who were nothing like Him.” Sinners would come to hear Jesus while the Pharisees would get in the ear of Jesus. The reason why the Pharisees didn’t understand why Jesus hung around with sinners is because they didn’t see sinners the way God sees sinners and they didn’t see themselves as sinners either. They saw sinners as losers, but God sees sinners as lost. When you see a person far from God, the same way that you see a child who is lost it will totally change both your attitude and your priorities as a follower of Jesus Christ toward those who are lost.

We are going to learn something today that goes against the grain of everything we have been taught by our parents. Before I say this, I know you have to be careful in hanging around with the wrong kind of people, because you’ve got to be spiritually mature enough to make sure you influence them rather than the other way around. Where we have been told all of our lives, “Don’t hang around with the wrong crowd” here is what we are going to learn today.

It is not the job of those who think they are the right crowd to look down on those they think are the wrong crowd. It is the job of the right crowd to look for the wrong crowd, because the only difference between the right crowd and the wrong crowd is this: if the right crowd has been found the wrong crowd is still lost. Jesus tells a parable to show us how we should think of those who are lost.

I. We Should Have Consternation Over People Who Are Lost

“So he told them this parable: What man of you, having a hundred sheep, if he has lost one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the open country, and go after the one that is lost, until he finds it?” (Luke 15:3-4, ESV)

This is actually a rhetorical question that Jesus asks. He finally found something that everybody would agree on - He, the sinners, the tax collectors and the Pharisees. Anyone knows that if a shepherd loses a sheep that shepherd is going to go after that sheep, because good shepherds don’t care about some of the flock or even most of the flock. They care about all of the flock and especially when one sheep gets lost.

What is so sad about a sheep that is lost is the sheep doesn’t even know that it is lost. The reason why the shepherd has to keep careful watch over the flock is because sheep just naturally wander away. If they ever wander away they will never come back for two reasons: they are not smart enough to figure out how to find their way back, and what is even worse is they don’t even realize they are lost.

Remember my story about James? He not only didn’t know he was lost he didn’t care that he was lost. The only thing I know of that is worse than being lost is being lost and not knowing it, or even knowing it, and not caring. I want you to understand this. A person, far from God is lost. He is like a blind man in a dark room looking for a black cat that is not there.

Then Jesus tells about a coin that is lost. “Or what woman, having ten silver coins, if she loses one coin, does not light a lamp and sweep the house and seek diligently until she finds it?” (Luke 15:8, ESV)

Again, most women hearing Jesus tell this would have been nodding their heads. This woman lives in a typical Palestinian home, which is about the size of a one-car garage and most of them did not have windows. They only had one door, which would let some sunlight in, and most of the time the house would be very dark and pretty cold.

This is a woman who is not wealthy and only has ten coins. As I will share in a moment, the coins really aren’t worth that much. She realizes that one of the coins is lost and immediately she begins to turn that house inside out and upside down trying to find this one small coin.

Why did the shepherd look for the sheep and why did the woman look for the silver? Because, it bothered them and burdened them that one of them was lost. How did they know they were lost? Because, they counted. The shepherd counted the sheep and the woman counted the silver.

I just shake my head when I hear people say, “I don’t know why the church is so concerned about numbers.” I admit that the church has often been too concerned with numbers. But on some level, every church should be concerned with numbers because they should be concerned about people. If you care about people you count.

I want you to imagine that James’ two brothers had already been born when he was lost. If James went missing do you think I would have said to Teresa, “That is alright. We still have Jonathan and Joshua.” Do you think I would have said, “Well, our diaper bill just went down by a third!”

To everybody else in the community one lost sheep wasn’t a big deal. To the other women in that neighborhood one lost coin wasn’t a big deal, but it was a big deal to that shepherd and a big deal to that woman, because it was their sheep and their coin. The point is every person on this planet belongs to God and lost people matter to God and what matters to God should matter to us. There should be consternation in this church. There should be consternation in your home group. There should be consternation in you individually that you live in neighborhoods and work in offices and do life together with people who are lost.

II. We Should Focus Our Concentration On People Who Are Lost

Notice again what the shepherd does.

“What man of you, having a hundred sheep, if he has lost one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the open country, and go after the one that is lost, until he finds it?” (Luke 15:4, ESV)

He leaves the ninety-nine sheep closed up in a pen to fend for themselves and goes and looks for the one sheep that has wandered off. Same with the woman.

“Or what woman, having ten silver coins, if she loses one coin, does not light a lamp and sweep the house and seek diligently until she finds it? (Luke 15:8, ESV)

She forgets that she has nine coins left. She searches diligently for the coin that is lost.

That word “diligently” is only used one time in the Bible (right here). It is a word that referred to obeying the command of the king. When a king gave you a command it became a matter of life and death and here is a woman who literally turned her house upside down, inside out, lighting lamps, and sweeping floors trying to find this one coin which is another story in itself.

The word for “coin” is the word “drachma” which again only occurs here in all of the New Testament. It really wasn’t worth that much money. In today’s currency, it would be worth about eighteen cents. What is the big deal about one coin? What about one sheep? To lose 1-out-of-100 is not bad. Any businessman I know would be thrilled if he had a 99% profit margin in his business. Did you know that major grocery stores work off of about a 2% profit margin total? The question remains why would a shepherd leave ninety-nine sheep to go after one? Why would a woman worry about one coin when she had nine left? It wasn’t because one sheep was valuable, because one sheep by itself is of very little value. It is not because one drachma is valuable, because one drachma is not very valuable. The only reason the shepherd and the woman did what they did was because of their love and their care for what was lost.

Do you know what made that sheep so valuable? Do you know what made that coin so valuable? It was the love and the concern of the one who had lost it. Jesus does not love us because we are valuable. We are valuable, because Jesus loves us.

Notice something else about the sheep and the coin. They had something else in common. They were both found. It was the shepherd that found the sheep. It was the woman that found the coin. Can I let you in on a little secret? Something that is lost does not find itself. Something that is lost is found. We really don’t find God. God finds us.

I read a story about a little girl who lived at the edge of big forest. One day she wandered off into the woods to explore, but as you can imagine she soon lost her bearings. She became lost and couldn’t find her way back. As darkness descended fear gripped her heart. She began to scream and cry and weep until finally she just lay down and went to sleep.

It wasn’t long until her father came looking for her. He looked for a couple of hours calling out her name and suddenly saw her lying on a patch of grass. He called out her name and ran over to her as fast as he could. The little girl woke up, jumped into his arms, hugged him and kissed him and said, “Daddy, I’m so glad I found you!” The truth of the matter is we don’t find God. God finds us. God finds us because He is always looking for us. He is always concentrating on us.

The number one thing this church must always guard against is the tendency to focus inward and the tendency to focus on the ninety-nine rather than the one, the tendency to focus on the nine coins we have in our pocket rather than the one coin that is lost. Just as we should have consternation for people who are lost we should focus our concentration on people who are lost.

III. We Should Express Celebration When Lost People Are Found

Both the shepherd and the woman do something that to the crowd would have left them scratching their heads and somewhat shocked. They both throw a party!

“And when he comes home, he calls together his friends and his neighbors, saying to them, ‘Rejoice with me, for I have found my sheep that was lost.’” (Luke 15:6, ESV)

“And when she has found it, she calls together her friends and neighbors, saying, ‘Rejoice with me, for I have found the coin that I had lost.’” (Luke 15:9, ESV)

Just imagine the shepherd throws this big party and all of his friends and neighbors come out to the party. They had no idea what they are celebrating. When they all get there, before they sit down to eat and drink, he points to this one little lamb and he says, “That sheep was lost, but now it is found. Let’s party!” It is just one sheep. Sheep are just property and nothing more and nothing less. He had ninety-nine other sheep. Losing one sheep every now and then is just the cost of doing business.

How about the woman? It is just a drachma, which is maybe one day’s wage – a dime, a nickel and three pennies. Celebrating a sheep was strange enough, but to celebrate a single coin is just plain weird. As worthless as one sheep was the coin was worth even less than the sheep. In fact the party cost the woman threw was worth less than the coin! Why does Jesus put that in the story?

He was teaching that lost people matter to God. What matters to God should matter to us and heaven is happy when lost people are found.

The conclusion of both of these stories is a punch in the gut to these self-righteous Pharisees.

“Just so, I tell you, there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentance.” (Luke 15:7, ESV)

“Just so, I tell you, there is joy before the angels of God over one sinner who repents.” (Luke 15:10, ESV)

Think about that. Every time one person repents and gets right with God, every time one person surrenders their life to Jesus Christ, every time one lost person is found, God says, “It is party time!”

Can you just hear the angels up in heaven as they look at God? All of a sudden, God begins to shout, dance, and to rejoice. He breaks out the food and the drink. One angel says, “There He goes again. Somebody else just repented. Somebody else just got found. Somebody else just surrendered to Jesus.”

Nothing makes God sadder than people who are lost. Nothing makes God gladder than when lost people are found. The Bible never says God throws a party when we tithe. The Bible never says God throws a party when we reach our budget. The Bible never says God throws a party when we pay off our debt. The Bible never says God throws a party when the preacher quits at twelve o’clock, but the Bible says that God throws a party when lost people are found. God is not happy when we try to tell Him how good we are, but He is happy when we confess how bad we are. God doesn’t get happy, because we are in the right crowd. God gets happy when the right crowd goes looking for the wrong crowd to help them get into the right crowd.

Now do you understand why we are starting a new campus at mill creek high school? Now do you understand why we go on mission trips to places like Nicaragua and Asia and the Congo? Do you understand why I ask you at the end of every service the question “Who? Who did you invite this week? Who will you invite next week?” Now do you understand why we ask you to financially support the work of this church? It is because lost people matter to God. What matters to God should matter to us. It is because heaven is happy when lost people are found. We ought to want to make heaven happy.

That is why the most important question a church ought to be asking itself every single week is not, “How much will this cost?” or “Will everybody like it?” or “Will this make me uncomfortable?” The question we ought to be asking is “Will there be more people in relationship with God if we do this? Will this help lost people be found if we do this?”

One time I lost a credit card. When I lost that credit card I forgot about every other credit card I had in my wallet. I focused my complete attention on the credit card I didn’t have. Do you know what I did? I didn’t call all the credit card companies of the cards that I still had to say, “I was just calling in to let you know that I still have your credit card.” Instead, I called the credit card company to report the one card that was missing.

One soul, one human being is worth more than all the credit you can put on every card in the world. God has called us, who have been found, to go to those who are lost and find them too. When we do, that makes heaven happy.

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