When I was six, I traveled with my parents to Houston,
where we visited Neiman Marcus, a fancy department store. I remember being entranced
by so many beautiful shiny things! Sparkling crystal, baubles encrusted with
glass jewels, golden plates, and gowns shimmering in sequins and beads all
caught my eye.
Before I knew it, I had wandered off from my parents, and
they were nowhere to be found! I ran around frantically, calling out for them,
but there was no answer. Devastated, I broke into uncontrollable sobbing. A
kindly woman approached me and asked what was wrong.
“I’ve lost my parents!” I exclaimed.
“What do they look like?” she asked.
“Don’t worry,” I reassured her. “I’ll know them when I see
them.”
All is well that ends well, and my parents were just around
the corner, apparently caught up in some treasure hunting of their own. But
that was long before the days of children being kidnapped in malls or the need
to be paranoid every moment they are out of sight.
Remembering this story made me realize that to be found, three things must happen. We must first
realize that we are lost; we must want to be found; and we must recognize the person who will find us.
God is a Triune Being: Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit, and that nature is reflected in patterns of threes
found throughout His Word. Salvation is the central theme of Scripture, so it
is not surprising that Jesus spoke three
parables about salvation in which a lost animal, object or person is found (Luke 15).
The chapter opens with Jesus
teaching the publicans and sinners, namely those thought by society
to be wicked beyond help. But many of them realized
their own sorry state, and therefore came
near Jesus to hear His words of wisdom, comfort, and healing (v. 1).
This ministry grouping of three is diametrically opposed by
a judgmental grouping of three: the Pharisees
and scribes criticize Jesus for associating with the baser
element of society. The religious leaders of that day, who should have been
most receptive to Jesus as the Son of God, instead were gossiping about Him, accusing
Him of receiving sinners and of defiling
Himself by eating with them (v. 2).
Jesus then teaches three parables aimed at the repentant sinners, the religious leaders trusting in their own self-righteousness, and all
readers of the Gospel thereafter.
Each of these parables has three elements: the lost treasure; those not considered
lost; and the One Who finds the lost.
Jesus later describes Himself as the Son of man Who came to
seek and to save that which was lost
(Luke 19:10). In three verses He states that He came to
call not the righteous, but sinners, to repentance (Matthew 9:13; Mark 2:17; Luke 5:32). Until we
know that we are lost in our sins to the point of death (Ephesians 2:1,5; Colossians 2:13); that we have no righteousness of our own (Isaiah 64:6), and that we need to
repent (Acts 3:19; 5:31),
we cannot be saved.
The first parable tells of a shepherd whose priorities seem
somewhat unusual by worldly standards. He leaves the bulk of his flock – 99 of
100 sheep – to fend for themselves in the wilderness, while he goes looking for
one lost sheep until he finds it (Luke
15:3-4). An earthly shepherd who did this would be considered somewhat
daft, as he would leave most of his livelihood vulnerable to being eaten by predators, falling down a cliff, or wandering away from the flock.
But thankfully, Jesus is the Good, Great and Chief Shepherd (John 10:11-18; Hebrews 13:20; 1 Peter 5:4) Who
is everywhere to save His flock from danger, and Who will never leave nor
forsake us (Hebrews 13:5).
Like sheep, people are also vulnerable to three types of danger. In spiritual terms, these are being devoured by the devil (1 Peter 5:8), falling into temptation because of our sinful flesh (1 Corinthians 10:12), and wandering away when we are lured by worldly pleasures (James 1:14-15; 2 Timothy 4:10), namely the lust of the eyes, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life (1 John 2:16).
Like sheep, people are also vulnerable to three types of danger. In spiritual terms, these are being devoured by the devil (1 Peter 5:8), falling into temptation because of our sinful flesh (1 Corinthians 10:12), and wandering away when we are lured by worldly pleasures (James 1:14-15; 2 Timothy 4:10), namely the lust of the eyes, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life (1 John 2:16).
Sadly, we are unaware of our exposure to these dangers
until we are saved, and we can’t be saved until we know we are lost. In the
parable, therefore, the Shepherd, Who is Christ Himself (Psalm 23) makes the lost sheep His highest priority, not
resting until He can safely place it across His shoulders Luke 15:5).
Praise God that He goes to such great lengths to seek us out once we want to be found (James
4:8; Ezekiel 34:11), to work
on our heart, and to save us through
His grace! (Ephesians 2 8-9) But
He does this only if we come to the end
of ourselves (Psalm 40:2),
know we can’t make it to Heaven on
our own (Habakkuk 3:19), and realize we need the Saviour! (1 Timothy 1:15) Then He saves us
by our faith in His death, burial and resurrection (1
Corinthians 15:1-4) as the only Way (John 14:6) to Heaven.
Once the lost sheep in the parable is found, there is great
rejoicing by the Shepherd, His friends and neighbors (Luke 15:5-6).Jesus
explains the parallel to the joy in heaven over one sinner that repents of his
sin and knows that he needs the righteousness of Christ (1 Corinthians 1:30; Philippians 1:11; 3:9).
Those who rely on their own good deeds to get to Heaven far outnumber (in the
parable, 99 to 1) those who trust only in the Saviour (Matthew 7:13).
But these “good” people bring little joy to heaven even if
they appear to lead moral and just lives on earth (Luke 15:7). Anyone who relies on keeping the law to get to
heaven is doomed to failure, because all have sinned and fallen short of God’s
glory (Romans 3:23), and whoever
has broken the smallest part of the law is considered guilty of transgressing
all of it (James 2:10). Any
joy over their “good” deeds is short-lived, for their destiny is eternal
separation from God in hell (John 3:18)
unless they realize they are lost so they can be born again (John 3:3-8).
In the second parable, Jesus tells of a woman who drops
everything she is doing to find one silver coin she has lost from her stash of
ten. She lights a candle, sweeps the house, and seeks diligently until she finds the
missing treasure (Luke 15:8). I
believe this parable gives further clues to God’s loving and thorough process
in saving the lost sinner.
God gave us His Word as a light for our path (Psalm 119:105), for saving faith
can only come by hearing the Word of God (Romans
10:17). Often, part of the process of our realizing how lost, helpless, and needy we
are involves God sweeping away the clutter that hinders our dependence on Him.
These weights (Hebrews 12:1) may
be idols of money, power, health, relationships, and even family, for if these
give us too much satisfaction, we may not realize we need God (Matthew 19:24).
Which brings me back to my childhood anecdote – I knew I was lost, I wanted to be found, and I knew
whom I was seeking. I had no worries that I would fail to recognize my
parents. But when I grew up, I spent much of life feeling miserably lost and
wanting to find truth, peace and joy, yet not knowing the only One Who could save me. Like so many,
I was a “seeker,” looking for truth in all the wrong idols, philosophies and false teachings (2 Peter 2) until the only Way found me (Acts 17:26-27).
In the parable, there was great rejoicing by the woman who found her lost coin, and by
her friends and neighbors, just as there is by the angels in heaven (Luke 15:9-10) every time a lost
soul is found! We shall also see this next week in the third parable of the Prodigal
Son (Luke 15:11-32).
© 2015 Laurie Collett
30 comments:
Lovely post...it is a treasure.
Dear Laurie,
For a young child, I can imagine what a frightening experience it must have been to lose sight of your parents in a department store, especially if it has more than one floor. And how more frightening it is now when it's considered too risky to let go of your child's hand in the present day. This goes to show how the prophecy of Jesus had began to be fulfilled - that the wickedness in society continues to grow until all trust is eroded away - a reminiscent of Matthew chapter 24:9-13.
But we can thank the Lord that in his mercy, he seeks out the lost in his characteristic Triune fashion, as you so explicitly detail.
God bless.
Thank you, Betty, for your very kind words! May you have a blessed week in Him!
Laurie
Dear Frank,
So true -- times have changed so much that the freedoms that my contemporaries and I enjoyed while growing up would be dangerous and foolish today. From the time my friends and I were small children, we played outside or in one another's houses all day, and rode our bikes all around the neighborhood. No cell phones, yet we safely stayed out of trouble without causing our parents any worry. Once I entered 7th grade, I used to take the train, by myself, to the town where my school was, then take the train after school to where my ballet class was, then return home the same way in the evening. Nowadays only a lunatic or derelict would allow their children to do that. Surely as wickedness increases every day in these End Times, we can look forward to His soon return! Yet every day He tarries, more may be saved.
Thanks as always for your thoughtful comment.
God bless,
Laurie
Such good teaching - your thesis: "We must first realize that we are lost; we must want to be found; and we must recognize the person who will find us" - you explain it so perfectly, so succinctly! - it has helped me clarify how I need to pray for someone. Thank you!
Lovely post Laurie,
I always knew there was something missing in my life before I became born again of God's Spirit. Part of it, I believe, was due to the fact that my dad had died when I was eleven. My mother was a beautiful mother, but it was through my father that I had experienced the teachings of the Bible, and even a divine healing when he had prayed. I went totally astray for some time after but the more I went astray the more I went into spiritual darkness. Then the 'LIGHT' came into that darkness. Praise our lovely Lord
God bless you Laurie
Stopping by from Spiritual Sundays, and happy to find your blog with this great, uplifting post.
Thank you so much for your words of confirmation! I am so blessed to hear that this post was a help to you. May God continue to bless you and your ministry of writing, which is such an encouragement to me and I know to all your readers.
Love in Christ,
Laurie
Amen, Brenda! God created us to seek Him and to be fulfilled only when He saves us. Praise God that He shines His light into the darkness so that we can see and desire His glory!
Thanks as always for your encouraging and uplifting comment.
God bless you too!
Laurie
Thanks so much, Michele, for your visit and lovely comment! I'm blessed to hear you enjoyed the post.
May you have a blessed week in Him,
Laurie
Laurie,
That reminds me of "I was lost, now I'm found". That's what happened to me too. It's so great to be found.
Blessings,
Janis
Amen, Janis -- it is the greatest blessing ever to be found by Him!
God bless,
Laurie
Very interesting post. Food for thought for me, as I had never thought of some of many of the things the way you said it. Thanks!
Thanks so much, Candy! I'm so blessed to hear that you enjoyed the post!
May you have a blessed week in Him,
Laurie
This is beautiful. How lovely that God seeks us and wants us. He wants us to come back. He rejoices over us. That is the best thing.
http://sweetmidlife.com
Jesus is our ultimate treasure...thanks for sharing Him with the Thursday Blog Hop! Beautiful post.
Thank you, Lynne, for your encouraging comment! Praise God that He created us for fellowship with Him, seeks us, and rejoices over us with great joy when we are found!
May you have a blessed weekend,
Laurie
Amen, Pam -- Jesus is our ultimate treasure, the Pearl of great price! Thanks for hosting and for your lovely comment!
God bless,
Laurie
PINNED. Thanks, Laurie.
Thank you so much for your touching post. I am so pleased with our good Shepherd. No problem is too big for him. Your story, sweet ah ... Fortunately, you found your parents back.
Awesome! Thanks so much, Linda! Have a blessed weekend!
Laurie
Amen, Ariella -- our good Shepherd is the best! Thank you for your lovely comment -- I'm blessed to hear you enjoyed the post!
Love in Christ,
Laurie
Thanks for sharing this great post at Good Morning Mondays. Blessings
Thanks for your lovely comment & for hosting! God bless,
Laurie
A very thoughtful post. I've pinned it...thanks for sharing at #SmallVictoriesSundayLinkup ...hope to see you again this week!
Thanks so much, Betsy, for pinning it, for hosting, and for your encouraging comment!
May you have a blessed weekend,
Laurie
Thanks for sharing on Booknificent Thursday! Always great to have you!
Tina
Thanks, Tina, for your lovely comment and for hosting!
Many blessings to you,
Laurie
So inspirational. Pinned and tweeted! Thanks for linking up and sharing with us at Funtastic Friday. Hope you join us again this week.
Thanks so much, Sherry, for pinning & tweeting this! I'm blessed and honored! Thanks for your lovely comment and for hosting Funtastic Friday -- looking forward to this week's linkup!
God bless,
Laurie
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