Luke 15:1-10; 1 Peter 5:6-11; Micah 7:18-20
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
The scribes and Pharisees, the religious scholars and theologians of Jesus' day, stand in judgment of the only truly holy Man and say, “This man receives sinners and eats with them.” What they accuse Him of is true. Jesus does indeed receive tax collectors, prostitutes, and sinners of every sort. He does indeed eat with them. And that is good news for sinners. It is good news for you and for me.
Ironically, these enemies of Jesus become unwitting preachers of the Gospel. For this is precisely why Jesus came into the world. As St. Paul writes, “Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners.” The Son of God came to seek and to save the lost. And the lost flocked to Him. In Jesus they found not condemnation, but forgiveness. They found the mercy of God, Who casts their sins into the depths of the sea. But this offended the scribes and Pharisees. They had already judged such people. They had already written them off. They wanted to limit God's mercy to those they considered worthy of it. So they grumbled: “This man receives sinners and eats with them.”
But table fellowship follows reconciliation. People do not feast together as enemies. They feast together because peace has been restored. The meal is the celebration of forgiveness, the sign that what was broken has been made whole again. That is why Jesus responds with three parables: the Lost Sheep, the Lost Coin, and the Lost Son. In each parable, something precious is lost. In each parable, what was lost is found. And in each parable, the finding gives rise to rejoicing.
The third parable, which we did not hear today, tells of the prodigal son. A son despises his father, squanders his inheritance, and finds himself utterly ruined. Yet when he returns, he is received with mercy, clothed in honor, restored to sonship, and welcomed to a feast. When we hear that parable with the ears of faith, we discover that it is not really about the prodigal son at all. It is about the father. It is about the boundless mercy, grace, and forgiveness of God the Father. The same is true of the parables we heard today. The Good Shepherd is Christ. The searching woman is His Church. The focus is not ultimately on the sheep or the coin, but on the One who seeks what is lost.
Jesus begins by asking, “What man of you, having a hundred sheep, if he has lost one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the open country, and go after the one that is lost, until he finds it?” I have thought about that question for years, and I have come to the conclusion that the honest answer is: no one. No shepherd, no businessman, no farmer, no ordinary person would leave ninety-nine sheep to go searching for one. The risk seems too great. The loss seems acceptable. One sheep out of a hundred hardly appears worth such effort. And I think that is exactly the reaction Jesus intends. Because the parable is not about ordinary shepherds. It is about the Good Shepherd. The Son of God left the glory of heaven, surrounded by angels and archangels and all the company of heaven, to seek one lost humanity. He came into our fallen world to search for Adam and all his children. He came to seek and to save the lost.
In the second parable, a woman loses one silver coin. She lights a lamp and searches diligently until she finds it. And when she does, she calls together her friends and neighbors to rejoice. Again, the point is not the coin. The point is the value the coin has in the eyes of the one searching for it. This woman is a picture of the Church. The Church seeks the lost because Christ seeks the lost. And you are that precious coin. In Holy Baptism you have been marked with the image of the Prince, Jesus Christ. You are a sheep redeemed by the blood of the Good Shepherd. You belong to Him. And there is rejoicing before the angels of God over one sinner who repents. There is rejoicing because what was lost has been found. This is why the Church exists.
The Church is not a memorial for saints. She is a hospital for sinners. Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners. Those who will not confess that they are sinners cannot receive the forgiveness He came to give. It is like a person who is desperately ill but refuses to admit that he is sick. There is medicine. There is healing. There is a physician. But none of it can help the one who refuses treatment.
That was the tragedy of the scribes and Pharisees. They judged the sinners who came to Jesus, but they would not confess that they themselves were sinners. They too were lost. They too needed forgiveness. They too needed the Great Physician. But only the lost can be found. The Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost. And that means He came for you. We all share the same disease of sin, and left untreated its diagnosis is death. Yet Jesus teaches in these parables that you are so precious to Him that He seeks you relentlessly. You are worth more than one sheep out of a hundred. You are more precious than one coin out of ten. You are more beloved than one son out of two.
On this Father's Day, what a beautiful picture of fatherly love our Lord places before us. Your heavenly Father is not content to lose His children. He is jealous for them. He loves them with a selfless and sacrificial love. No matter how far they wander, He continues to seek them. That is why He sent His Son. Jesus laid down His life to bring the lost home. He gathers them into His Church. He binds up their wounds through Holy Absolution. He restores them as beloved children through Holy Baptism. He feeds them at His Holy Table. And there is rejoicing.
There is rejoicing in heaven. There is rejoicing on earth. There is rejoicing wherever sinners are found, forgiven, and restored. In the love and sacrifice of earthly fathers we catch a glimpse of our heavenly Father's love. The image is imperfect, tarnished by sin, yet it points beyond itself to the One whose love never fails. If imperfect fathers can love their children so deeply, how much more does your heavenly Father love you with an eternal and perfect love?
So come to the feast, found children of your heavenly Father. The Man who receives sinners and eats with them is here for you. He is both Host and Meal. Do not be offended that He receives such sinners. Rejoice that He does. For we are all sinners whom He has found. We are all children whom He has restored. And there is feasting and rejoicing, on earth as it is in heaven, both now and forevermore.
In the + Name of Jesus. Amen.
