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100 sheep parable
100 sheep parable






In so doing He builds a house of love and honor that has the potential to shake the world and reveal the heart of God. He knows the way to secure the hearts of the ninety-nine is leave them for love of the one. We all have needed to repent at one time or another, or maybe even more than that. Too bad there are no such ninety-nine who need no repentance. Heaven rejoices more over one returning lamb than ninety-nine who need no repentance. Heaven’s joy is based on the returning of lost sheep to their true home, the shepherds house. Jesus said a good shepherd would do so ‘rejoicing’! If we did the same with our children we would be put in jail or the Department of Social Services would come get our children! He put him on His shoulders because lost sheep are often paralyzed with fear and the only hope of getting home would be if someone picked them up and carried them. I have heard (as others have taught) that the reason the shepherd put the sheep on his shoulders and carried him home was because the norm was for the shepherd to break the lambs leg for running off, to teach him a lesson. Most complain in the face of having to help others in trouble rather than rejoice. That’s not the normal response He knew to be present in the Hebrew culture, nor in ours today. Jesus said that a good shepherd would find the sheep and lay it on his shoulders, ‘rejoicing’.

100 sheep parable

That is a somewhat different approach than placing all the blame on the sheep for having run off!

100 sheep parable

Jesus also assumed some responsibility for the one sheep’s condition… ‘if he (the shepherd) loses one’ (Luke 15:3). So far, what has Jesus done in just a few short sentences: concluded that the Pharisees should identify with shepherds, revealed their self-centeredness and pride, and reframed their personal responsibility as ministers. That would be my own business sense because that’s good business… just not love, and certainly not the heart of God! Most business men would cut their 1% loss and rejoice over still having 99% on hand. This parable doesn’t only locate the darkness in the hearts of the Pharisees, it identifies some in my heart as well. Jesus assumed each of the Pharisees should leave the 99 for the 1 by saying, “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?”, thereby identifying both Himself and the Pharisees as shepherds, a despised occupation in their culture. Jesus responded by telling the story of a shepherd who had 100 sheep and one of them ran off. Jesus had no shortage of critics.Īs mentioned earlier, Pharisees criticized Jesus for both eating and receiving tax collectors and sinners. He wasn’t from the right tribe, the right town, or the right school, or had the right doctrine, as far as they were concerned.

100 sheep parable

The New Testament reveals that some called Jesus a wine bibber and a glutton, others accused Him of being the illicit child of an immoral mother. The parable of the lost sheep is one of a trilogy of stories found in Luke 15 that Jesus used in response to the Pharisees criticism of His choices of friends and social interactions.








100 sheep parable