I wonder if it has ever occurred to you that, when we gather to worship week by week, we do so in celebration of a love story. Sometimes this is more obvious that others...but in this evening’s readings there’s no room for any doubt. First, we heard one half of the great commandment – Love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind and soul...with the added injunction to make sure that everyone – your children, your neighbours, anyone who passes by your houise – knows that this is a fundamental, non-negotiable fact of life.
Except, of course, that it isn’t.
The command is there but if you’re coming to it for the first time, you might reasonably wonder just WHY this is laid upon you ...and indeed, much of the grand sweep of Old Testament history suggests that even those who were living through events were pretty rubbish at understanding or following through on that relationship between God and humanity.
Why should they invest in it?
And how do you love a God whom you don’t know except through history and hearsay.
So – we have the commandment and then several centuries of failure to obey it.
Centuries in which God’s loving-kindness is rebuffed again and again by people determined to live life on their own terms..until finally God comes into the world and lives among God’s people, not only telling them but SHOWING them what God is like.
That’s what our second reading is about.
Jesus is both demonstrating and telling about God’s all-inclusive love. The reading begins with a complaint. Jesus is mixing with all the wrong people – people who aren’t respectable at all – people whom it would surely be wise to avoid, people who will bring his ministry into disrepute.
Try as we might to be open-hearted ourselves, we can probably think of some groups of people whom we’d cast as undesirable...people whom, with the best will in the world, we might be uncomfortable sitting next to on the train, people whom we would quite like to attend a different church on the other side of town...Were adrpt at drawing lines, avoiding connections, but not Jesus.
He sees those awkward, uncomfortable people rather differently.
This is a love story, remember….God so loved the world – not just the nice, clean, well-behaved parts of it but the whole messed up, self-destructive, hurt and hurting caboode.
All of it.
Particularly the underdogs, the outsiders, the ones whom NOBODY chooses to invite to their party.
That’s really hard for us to accept.
Our love is a pretty amateur affair and we tend, beyond our family, to apply some fairly stringent conditions before opening our arms, hearts and homes.
We may avoid the language of sin – somehow we think it sounds quite old-fashioned- but that diesnt stop us from judging others, as we weigh them in the balance and find them wanting
That habit is alive and well in our community, even in our church...but that's NOT what the gospel is about.
The gospel is all about love.
It's that which means we're in no position to judge.
Even if we managed, as the Pharisees believed that they did, to obey every letter of the law we would trip up over our failure to love. In truth there are no righteous who need no repenting. We fall short. All of us.
However, that's OK.
Listen!
Jesus begins his story, as he so often does, by asking a question
‘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?
It's a good question...so stop for a minute to think about your answer.
Think about how you’ve felt when losing something. Something unique and precious (grandma's wedding ring, the keys to your car) may inspire a pretty concentrated search...
But frankly, if you had 99 other similar things (sheep? Coins?) – would you really bother to hunt for long?
Honestly
There are 99 sheep trotting along happily– why bother to go in search of the 1 that won’t play nicely? The loner, the trouble maker, the one who didn't fit in?
Why risk the safety of the flock – leaving them amid all the dangers of the wilderness while you look for JUST ONE???
It doesn't seem prudent.
It doesn't even seem kind.
All those good little sheep deserve care and attention.
Surely a good shepherd can’t just abandon them...
No, Jesus, I don't think I'd answer your question in the way that you hope.
If I were the shepherd, then the flock would be left incomplete...one sheep lost forever. Because my love is human and limited...It just doesn’t go far enough
But thankfully I'm not the shepherd.
I'm one of the sheep. And so are you.
Perhaps you feel that you're one of the majority, grazing calmly with your fellows, travelling obediently along the path that is set before you...
And that might make you a little sad, even indignant when the shepherd – and the Church that exists to join in with His work – insists on making such a fuss about the missing sheep.
What's so special about that one missing sheep after all? It's not exactly a prize merino. WHY does it matter.
It matters, of course, because God loves it with a love that WILL NOT LET HIM REST until the flock is complete.
That's the gospel..the good news for all of us.....because, you know, actually each of us is sometimes the lost sheep...willfull....Confused....Downright disobedient.....we seem bound to wander away from the Shepherd from time to time....but HE NEVER EVER LEAVES US ASTRAY.
He loves us too much.
I was once at a toddler group when one of a pair of twins vanished.
One moment their mother was happily chatting to a friend, the next she had abandoned the conversation and was scanning every corner of the room for her missing son. It didn’t matter that her daughter was safely by her side…she needed to find that small boy so badly he might have been the only child she had. Her daughter, though, was sensible. As her mother swooped off to the furthest corners of the room, she was followed by a small but determined figure, who had no intention of letting her mother out of her sight.
The whole drama didn’t last long, and ended in a happy reunion behind a stack of tables.…but for a brief period maybe those of us involved had an inkling of the way God feels about each one of us. He loves us so much, that we might be his only child. He actively seeks us out when we have wandered away or broken off communications with Him. It’s almost as if He feels incomplete when one of us is missing. He takes every risk, right down to sending his own Son, to seek us out and rescue us.
And that leaves us with another question...
Are WE in the right place?
perhaps we should ask ourselves whether, if the one sheep is with the shepherd, it might not be the 99 who have gone astray
If Jesus is somewhere out there on the margins, hunting for missing sheep, shouldn’t we be there close beside him.
Surely the most important question for each of us is not
“Is Jesus with me?” but “Am I where Jesus is”
There is no better place, for we can trust him to lead us into new pastures, to keep us from harm, and indeed to lay down his life for us.
It's a love story, remember, and that's just the way love works,
Except, of course, that it isn’t.
The command is there but if you’re coming to it for the first time, you might reasonably wonder just WHY this is laid upon you ...and indeed, much of the grand sweep of Old Testament history suggests that even those who were living through events were pretty rubbish at understanding or following through on that relationship between God and humanity.
Why should they invest in it?
And how do you love a God whom you don’t know except through history and hearsay.
So – we have the commandment and then several centuries of failure to obey it.
Centuries in which God’s loving-kindness is rebuffed again and again by people determined to live life on their own terms..until finally God comes into the world and lives among God’s people, not only telling them but SHOWING them what God is like.
That’s what our second reading is about.
Jesus is both demonstrating and telling about God’s all-inclusive love. The reading begins with a complaint. Jesus is mixing with all the wrong people – people who aren’t respectable at all – people whom it would surely be wise to avoid, people who will bring his ministry into disrepute.
Try as we might to be open-hearted ourselves, we can probably think of some groups of people whom we’d cast as undesirable...people whom, with the best will in the world, we might be uncomfortable sitting next to on the train, people whom we would quite like to attend a different church on the other side of town...Were adrpt at drawing lines, avoiding connections, but not Jesus.
He sees those awkward, uncomfortable people rather differently.
This is a love story, remember….God so loved the world – not just the nice, clean, well-behaved parts of it but the whole messed up, self-destructive, hurt and hurting caboode.
All of it.
Particularly the underdogs, the outsiders, the ones whom NOBODY chooses to invite to their party.
That’s really hard for us to accept.
Our love is a pretty amateur affair and we tend, beyond our family, to apply some fairly stringent conditions before opening our arms, hearts and homes.
We may avoid the language of sin – somehow we think it sounds quite old-fashioned- but that diesnt stop us from judging others, as we weigh them in the balance and find them wanting
That habit is alive and well in our community, even in our church...but that's NOT what the gospel is about.
The gospel is all about love.
It's that which means we're in no position to judge.
Even if we managed, as the Pharisees believed that they did, to obey every letter of the law we would trip up over our failure to love. In truth there are no righteous who need no repenting. We fall short. All of us.
However, that's OK.
Listen!
Jesus begins his story, as he so often does, by asking a question
‘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?
It's a good question...so stop for a minute to think about your answer.
Think about how you’ve felt when losing something. Something unique and precious (grandma's wedding ring, the keys to your car) may inspire a pretty concentrated search...
But frankly, if you had 99 other similar things (sheep? Coins?) – would you really bother to hunt for long?
Honestly
There are 99 sheep trotting along happily– why bother to go in search of the 1 that won’t play nicely? The loner, the trouble maker, the one who didn't fit in?
Why risk the safety of the flock – leaving them amid all the dangers of the wilderness while you look for JUST ONE???
It doesn't seem prudent.
It doesn't even seem kind.
All those good little sheep deserve care and attention.
Surely a good shepherd can’t just abandon them...
No, Jesus, I don't think I'd answer your question in the way that you hope.
If I were the shepherd, then the flock would be left incomplete...one sheep lost forever. Because my love is human and limited...It just doesn’t go far enough
But thankfully I'm not the shepherd.
I'm one of the sheep. And so are you.
Perhaps you feel that you're one of the majority, grazing calmly with your fellows, travelling obediently along the path that is set before you...
And that might make you a little sad, even indignant when the shepherd – and the Church that exists to join in with His work – insists on making such a fuss about the missing sheep.
What's so special about that one missing sheep after all? It's not exactly a prize merino. WHY does it matter.
It matters, of course, because God loves it with a love that WILL NOT LET HIM REST until the flock is complete.
That's the gospel..the good news for all of us.....because, you know, actually each of us is sometimes the lost sheep...willfull....Confused....Downright disobedient.....we seem bound to wander away from the Shepherd from time to time....but HE NEVER EVER LEAVES US ASTRAY.
He loves us too much.
I was once at a toddler group when one of a pair of twins vanished.
One moment their mother was happily chatting to a friend, the next she had abandoned the conversation and was scanning every corner of the room for her missing son. It didn’t matter that her daughter was safely by her side…she needed to find that small boy so badly he might have been the only child she had. Her daughter, though, was sensible. As her mother swooped off to the furthest corners of the room, she was followed by a small but determined figure, who had no intention of letting her mother out of her sight.
The whole drama didn’t last long, and ended in a happy reunion behind a stack of tables.…but for a brief period maybe those of us involved had an inkling of the way God feels about each one of us. He loves us so much, that we might be his only child. He actively seeks us out when we have wandered away or broken off communications with Him. It’s almost as if He feels incomplete when one of us is missing. He takes every risk, right down to sending his own Son, to seek us out and rescue us.
And that leaves us with another question...
Are WE in the right place?
perhaps we should ask ourselves whether, if the one sheep is with the shepherd, it might not be the 99 who have gone astray
If Jesus is somewhere out there on the margins, hunting for missing sheep, shouldn’t we be there close beside him.
Surely the most important question for each of us is not
“Is Jesus with me?” but “Am I where Jesus is”
There is no better place, for we can trust him to lead us into new pastures, to keep us from harm, and indeed to lay down his life for us.
It's a love story, remember, and that's just the way love works,
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