Why Leave the 99?
I
have always had a hard time with the story in the Bible about the good shepherd
leaving the 99 sheep to find one lost sheep in Luke 15: 3-7.
Was
Jesus suggesting that a shepherd should make what seemed to be an obviously
flawed business decision by leaving 99 percent to recover one? Was He also
suggesting that this event took place in “open country” where it would be
suicidal to leave the 99 percent? It just didn’t make sense to me; I didn’t
understand it – BUT JESUS SAID IT SO IT MUST BE RIGHT!
In
John 10:14-15 Jesus said, “I am the Good Shepherd; I know my sheep and my sheep
know me – just as the Father knows me and I know the Father. And I lay down my
life for the sheep.”
For
many professing Christians, the idea of Jesus as our Good Shepherd conjures up
idyllic, sentimental thoughts of Jesus wearing a sparkling white robe (but real
shepherds got pretty dirty in their work!) as if He were an advertisement for a
modern-day detergent or fabric softener. And He is cradling a little lamb whose
fleece is white as snow.
But
the reality of Jesus as our Good Shepherd and of Jesus BECOMING one of His own
sheep is far from a romantic, sanitized Sunday school lesson.
By
identifying himself as the Good Shepherd, Jesus was clearly saying that He
alone was the good spiritual shepherd humanity had never before experienced
There
are three kinds of human shepherds:
HIRED
HANDS are in it for the money. They don’t care. They have no stake in the
future of the flock. They do the bare minimum because the sheep are not their
own.
BAD
SHEPHERDS – drive the sheep rather than lead them. They often feel they are
strong leaders when they push and beat and abuse the sheep. Bad shepherds are
worse than hired hands because they deliberately and sinfully mistreat and even
injure the sheep. With either hired hands or bad shepherds the sheep do not
thrive – they barely survive.
GOOD
SHEPHERDS – gently lead the sheep in such a way that any enemy – human or
animal – must get through the shepherd first before it can ravage the flock.
Good shepherds call the sheep by name and the sheep know the shepherd’s voice.
Sheep
have no weapons. They have no fangs or claws. They have no shell for
protection. They are near-sighted and are not blessed with keen hearing. They
are slow moving, with little strength or stamina, and their poor sense of
direction is legendary. Sheep are easily terrified and predisposed to wander
away from the flock.
God
compares us to sheep because we humans are not as spiritually tough,
independent or intelligent as we would like to think. Sheep need constant
attention. We need the Good Shepherd. The relationship between a shepherd and
his flock is unique, unlike any other human-animal relationship.
OK
– let’s get down to why I see leaving the 99 sheep differently now.
The
religious scholars that Jesus was speaking to had all taken “Basic Spiritual
Shepherding 101”, where they learned that the primary duty of shepherding was
to take care of the healthy, promising sheep, and never, ever expend so much
time and resources on the needy few that you, as a shepherd, might risk losing
the majority of the flock.
But
Jesus didn’t take that class. His teaching was all about going after the least,
the lost and the last.
Though
the parable was a not-so-thinly-veiled rebuke of these religious leaders, Jesus
was not giving this parable to tell them (or us) about how to be a successful
religious shepherd. The parable is all about God’s grace.
The
Good Shepherd is the ONLY person who can get away with leaving the 99 – the ONLY
person who could ever dare to take what might appear to be this extreme risk.
No other human shepherd in history should look on leaving his flock as a good
idea – it just doesn’t add up.
Why
does it add up for the Good Shepherd? Jesus comes to live right within his
sheep (US!). We have a relationship of union with our Good Shepherd that no
human shepherd could ever have with his sheep. Jesus guarantees our future
safety because He is joined to us forever. There is no danger of leaving us to
predators when He searches for a lost sheep because HE IS NOT REALLY LEAVING
US! He still lives right within each of us sheep. How this is all accomplished
is a spiritual matter which is above my pay grade
But
until I came to understand the intimate union relationship of Jesus living in
me, leaving the 99 could NEVER make sense to me. Thank you, Father, for sending
Jesus as MY Good Shepherd in a way that no other shepherd could accomplish.
Amen.
2 Comments:
Luke 15:4 does not say that Jesus left the 99. Why don't you meditate carefully on Luke 15:4 for a while and ask yourself who is the spoken about shepherd in the verse? Hint, it's not Jesus.
This is a good post.
I know this is an old post, but this passage is one that the Lord burned into my heart.
An interesting question: Who are the 99? The common assumption is that they represent saved ("safe") people. The church. I challenge that assumption. There's nothing in the passage or its context that supports this assumption except for the fact that the shepherd owns the sheep. They are his. But we all belong to God, speaking in terms of legal possession, regardless of whether we have put our faith in Him (and are saved) or not. He made us, He owns us. That's all the ownership indicates in this passage. Those 99 are not saved. The 1 sheep is the only one who gets it.
Clues:
-Context: Jesus is speaking to the pharisees and is using this parable to answer their objection that He chooses to eat with "sinners" but rejects them. The parable, therefore, can be seen as a metaphor for what He is doing.
-He leaves the 99, not in the safety of the fold (as many assume, and as the old hymn falsely says - "There were ninety and nine that safely lay in the shelter of the fold..."). The Greek word used here would be best translated as "wilderness." That's where he leaves them. Interestingly, it's fair to assume that the shepherd searches for the one who is lost in the wilderness. The same place where He left the 99.
-He LEAVES them there, which means that's where they were in the first place. The shepherd does not take them there first.
-If the 99 are the church, it's very odd that the one never rejoins them. He just goes home in the arms of the shepherd (Jesus)
-The shepherd never goes back for the 99
-There is absolutely nothing positive said about those 99.
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