Luke
15:1-10 (NRSV)
The
Parable of the Lost Sheep
15Now
all the tax-collectors and sinners were coming near to listen to him. 2And
the Pharisees and the scribes were grumbling and saying, ‘This fellow welcomes
sinners and eats with them.’
3 So
he told them this parable: 4‘Which one of you, having a
hundred sheep and losing one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the
wilderness and go after the one that is lost until he finds it? 5When
he has found it, he lays it on his shoulders and rejoices. 6And
when he comes home, he calls together his friends and neighbours, saying to
them, “Rejoice with me, for I have found my sheep that was lost.” 7Just
so, I tell you, there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents
than over ninety-nine righteous people who need no repentance.
The
Parable of the Lost Coin
8 ‘Or
what woman having ten silver coins,
if she loses one of them, does not light a lamp, sweep the house, and search
carefully until she finds it? 9When
she has found it, she calls together her friends and neighbours, saying,
“Rejoice with me, for I have found the coin that I had lost.” 10Just
so, I tell you, there is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one
sinner who repents.’
William Barclay claims that there is no chapter in the New Testament
so well-known and as dearly loved as the 15th chapter of Luke’s
Gospel. This might have been the case in
1975 when he wrote his helpful commentary, but I am not so sure any longer
today – as we live in a world of mostly biblical ignorance!
Some have seen this passage as being the ‘... Gospel within the Gospel
...’
The parable arouse out of ordinary everyday experiences that everyone
could understand and identify with. It
was offensive to the Pharisees that Jesus associated with men and women who
were labelled (by them) as sinners. There were a host of Pharisaic rules saying
who they could have no dealings with at all and all of them aimed to ‘... avoid
every contact with the people who did not observe the petty details of the
law.’ So, it is not surprising that they were shocked to the core at the way in
which Jesus met with people who were sinners in their minds. Barclay reminds us
that the Pharisees believed that “There will be joy in heaven over one sinner
who is obliterated before God ... They looked sadistically forward not to the
saving but the destruction of the sinner.’
Into this context, Jesus tells the parable of the lost sheep and the
shepherd’s joy at finding it.
Shepherds in Judea had a hard and dangerous task: pasture was scarce
as they were on a narrow plateau only a few miles wide to work with. There were
no retaining walls and it was possible for a sheep to wander. The shepherd was
personally responsible for the sheep so, if one was lost it was his task to, at
least to bring home the fleece so that he could show how it died. They became
experts at tracking and could follow a straying sheep’s tracks for miles across
the hills. But in the process, it often meant risking his life for the sheep.
Many of the flocks were communal, belonging to whole villages with two
or more shepherds in charge. Those whose flocks were safe would arrive home
with news of a shepherd who was searching for a lost sheep. Often this would
mean villagers looking out for the remaining shepherd ad the lost sheep. When
he was sighted, they would shout for joy.
It is on this experience that Jesus based his parable. This, he said,
is what God is like. God is glad when a lost sinner is found as a shepherd is
when a strayed sheep is brought home.
The coin referred to here, refers to a silver drachma worth only about
5p. It would not be difficult to lose a coin in a Palestinian house as
peasant’s houses were very dark and, if they did have a window, it would have been
no more than a circle of about 18 cm in diameter. The floor was beaten earth
covered with fried reeds and rushes, so to look for anything lost would
literally be like looking for a needle in a haystack. The woman swept the floor
in the hope that she might see it glint or hear it tinkle as it moved.
Barclay suggests that there are two reasons why the woman might have been
so eager to find it:
1.
It
could have been a matter of sheer necessity. 5p would have had much more buying
power then than it does today as it amounted to more than a day’s wage for a
working man in Palestine. These people lived on the edges of poverty. She would
have needed to search, because otherwise the family would not eat.
2.
There
could have been a more romantic reason. The mark of a married woman was a head
dress made of ten silver coins linked together by a silver chain. For years a
young girl would save in order to have ten coins to make her wedding ‘crown’.
Once she had this and was married, it could never be taken from her – even for
the payment of a debt. It could have been that the women in the parable had
lost one of these.
In either case, it is easy to think of the joy of the woman when she
eventually found the coin and why she would celebrate. This is what the joy of
God is like when one sinner comes home – like the joy of a found coin that
stood between a family and hunger or of a married woman who had lost part of
her most treasured possession.
No Pharisee had ever thought of a God like this. This was something
absolutely new which Jesus taught them about God – that He actually sought out
people to save. The Jews might have agreed that if a person came crawling home
to God in self-abasement and prayed for pity, they might find it; but would
never have conceived of a God who went out in search for sinners. Barclay
concludes:
“We believe in the seeking love of God,
because we see that love incarnate in Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who came to
seek and save that which is lost.”
Throughout this chapter, Jesus is speaking about repentance.
I know this conjures up the idea that he is being negative, but for me,
repenting is always something positive, because metanoia – having a change of mind and turning from inappropriate
things - is always lovely, because we are given the chance to start again.
Here, Jesus is providing a different understanding of what
it means to repent from the view of the Pharisees. For them, it meant adopting
their standards of purity and ultra-strict law observance. For Jesus, to repent
means to follow him and his ways. Jesus is implying that the Pharisees and
other religious leaders also need to repent.
There is a party going on – all heaven is having a party –
because people are turning away from their sin. We too should be part of this
and be filled with joy. The two halves of God’s creation – heaven and earth –
are meant to fit together and be in harmony with each other. If you discover
what is going on in heaven, you will discover how things are meant to be on
earth. This is why we pray ‘... on earth as it is in heaven ...’
The religious leaders of Jesus’ day believed differently:
they were of the view that the Temple was the closest thing to heaven. In order
to enter the Temple one needed to go through elaborate cleaning rituals and
follow the ways of the priests. Now Jesus is saying that Heaven is having a
wonderful party every time one sinner sees the light and began to follow God’s
ways.
Our lives should be characterised by joy because this is the
product of repentance. Each day we need to make a decision to follow the ways
of Jesus, and so when we pray we ‘... call to mind our sins ...’ and repent of
them.
Tom Wright reminds us that the particular sheep and the particular
coin of not of significance – the only thing of importance was that they were
lost. This would have been of great significance to the sinners that were
gathered there; the realisation that it was not they who had to do something,
it was God who came in search of them – as Wright writes: “He loved coming
looking for them, and celebrated finding them.” Jesus was doing what God was
doing, searching them out and finding them – welcoming them and loving them.
Wright issues a challenge to us in the modern world:
What would we have to do, in the visible, public world, if we were to
make people ask the questions to which stories like these are the answer? We
need to be living the sort of lives that are so different to those of the rest
of the world that would make people stop and ask: “Why are you living the way
you do?” “Why are you different?” The way we live would also need to be
attractive ... peaceful, loving, gentle, compassionate ... bearing the fruits
of the Spirit.
It would seem that the world is lost, and we need to be God’s agents
to go out in love and find them and rejoice in the process. We need to live the
Good News, and be willing to give an account for the faith that we have. We
need to be willing to reach out into a lost world with the message of love,
forgiveness and grace that has enabled us to find fulfilment and our home as we
live in the embrace of the love of God in Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment