Archive for November, 2014

A Whole New Take on Communion

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I rarely discuss topical issues at Mike’s Place.  I have other forums for that.  Here, I try to stick Bible studies and issues of a theological/doctrinal nature.  However, those who are fortunate enough to know me well know that I am an opinionated news junkie.  Having stumbled across this story, I had to comment.   In addition to being a news junkie, I am also big on the free market.  There is no doubt God does use the free market to bless His people with good jobs and opportunities.  Our country itself  (and the lifestyle we enjoy) was built on a combination of Biblical ideas and (relatively) free markets.  So why is it a bad idea to physically wed the two?  What’s wrong with putting a McDonalds inside a church?

Well, on the surface, an idea like this should be appealing to me.  People have to eat, Christians should be in church, therefore putting a McDonalds in a church should draw people into the church.  The only problem with this way of thinking is something I wrote about in a previous study:

[Music] feeds a genuine need man has. Christians want to get to close to God and in our modern thinking, music is seen a means to that end. What Christians aren’t aware of is that’s a completely pagan thought – using means that appeal to the flesh to reach heaven. As Christians, of course we’d never use LSD or alcohol, but we think nothing of using music to help us touch the Divine.

In this case, though, it’s not music being used to satiate a fleshly desire or need, it’s a Big Mac, fies and a Coke.  Just like there may be nothing wrong with music, there is nothing wrong with a Big Mac, fries and a Coke.  But when you use those things as ways to lure people into your church, you are engaging in seriously deranged form of “evangelism.”  And it’s also disingenuous.  It’s a kind of bait-and-switch you’re playing on your “customer.”  They’re wanting a cheap lunch but you’re trolling for new church members.

While it is true that the early church had what they referred to as a “love feast” every week, that early pot-luck dinner was not used to draw sinners or non-members into the church, but rather as a way for church members to fellowship together and as a way to feed the poor members.  The early church understood something the modern church seems to have forgotten:  the church is a place for Christians to gather together; it is not a place you fill up with sinners.  That sounds counter intuitive.  We all want to win the lost, but that’s not the primary job of the church.  It is the job of the church to train its members to go out and engage in acts of evangelism, not necessarily to drag those sinners back to the church to let the church save them.  The church is the Body of Christ.  Why would a sinner want to be part of the it?  If church members are doing what they are supposed to be doing, they will go out, share their faith, lead sinners to Christ, then bring them to church as new converts.  Once there, these new believers will grow and mature in their faith through the preaching and teaching of the Gospel and through fellowship with other believers.

In case you think I’m wrong on this, check this out:

It was [Jesus] who gave some as apostles, some as prophets, some as evangelists, and some as pastors and teachers, to equip the saints for the work of ministry, that is, to build up the body of Christ, until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God—a mature person, attaining to the measure of Christ’s full stature.  (Ephesians 4:11 – 13  NET)

The phrase, “the work of ministry” is important.  It refers to, as Paul wrote, building up the Body of Christ – making new Christians.  We don’t do that by tricking sinners into coming into the church with McDonalds meals or movies or hip worship bands or whatever.

And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself.  (John 12:32  NIV)

That’s Jesus talking there, and  He’s referring to His crucifixion.  The death of Jesus, and ultimately His Resurrection and Ascension, unleashed the incredible power of the Holy Spirit within all believers, making them veritable soul-winning machines.  Trouble is, most Christians just don’t know the same power that raised Christ from the dead resides within THEM.

No church needs a McDonalds in it to make it relevant.  All things being equal, a church will be full of soul winners, doing “the work of ministry.”

I’m not against McDonalds.  I’m not even against churches investing in businesses as a way to be good stewards of what they have.  But I am against churches using worldly methods to “promote” themselves in the community.  If a church has to do that, it’s doing it wrong.

 

What’s Wrong With Worship?

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Worship is BIG business these days. There’s a LOT of money to be made in the Christian music industry with the release of a new worship CD. And the older an artist gets, the more worship music CD’s he releases. It’s a cynical view, that’s for sure. It’s hard not to be cynical, though, when money is involved. Not that making money is a bad thing, mind you. However, can worship occur while in pursuit of a dollar? Is worship all about the right music and lyrics?  For that matter, can you worship God without a worship leader, without raising your hands, and without a tingle running from head to toe?

There is a lot of misunderstanding regarding this part of the Christian life. Some people think you can teach people how to worship. Conferences are held to teach you how to be a “worship leader.” Books overflow Christian bookstore shelves detailing the ABC’s of worship. Todd Pruitt writes about a flyer he read advertising a worship convention:

Join us for dynamic teaching to set you on the right path, and inspiring worship where you can meet God and receive the energy and love you need to be a mover and shaker in today’s world…Alongside our teaching program are worship events which put you in touch with the power and love of God.

As Pruitt rightly observes, there’s something very wrong with that paragraph. It’s fraught with grievous theological errors. But at the same time it feeds a genuine need man has. Christians want to get to close to God and in our modern thinking, music is seen a means to that end. What Christians aren’t aware of is that’s a completely pagan thought – using means that appeal to the flesh to reach heaven. As Christians, of course we’d never use LSD or alcohol, but we think nothing of using music to help us touch the Divine.

There’s no way to avoid this verse, though:

For there is one God and one Mediator between God and men, the Man Christ Jesus…(1 Timothy 2:5 NKJV)

That’s right. There is only one way to get through to God, and that’s not using music or any other thing that appeals to the flesh. Jesus Christ is our conduit to the Father. There is no Scriptural merit for the idea that music lifts us to Heaven.

The worship problem

Despite the complete lack of a Scriptural mandate, worship has become THE major part of a typical Sunday service. In fact, we even call it “the morning worship service.” There are problems with that way of thinking, though. Here they are, as noted by Vaughn Roberts:

God’s Word is shortchanged. Worship services have become the main – or only – reason for a child of God to get out of bed on a Sunday morning. They’re long and loud and leave very little time for the preaching of the Word. If you look at the average evangelical church these days, you probably won’t see a pulpit. It’s vanished. The platform area probably resembles a stage, with amps and keyboards and all manner of music and sound equipment scattered around. The worship leader has replaced the Scripture reader and the worship band has replaced the preacher. And sermons have gotten shorter and shorter and in an effort to become more relevant, they have in fact become more irrelevant than ever.

Our faith is shaken. As the emphasis on worship on has gotten greater and greater, God’s presence has become associated with a certain style of music and a certain feeling that music evokes. But what if you don’t “feel” what you think you should feel? Is the indicator of God’s presence really as shallow as a feeling you may feel, brought on by an arrangement of chords and keys? Think about the modern Christian, looking for a church to call home. One of the primary concerns (after a good children’s program, but that’s a whole other problem) is that a church have a hip worship style, worship band, and things like that. It’s like they have no way to worship God without music.

Musicians become like priests. When music is elevated to heights not warranted in Scripture, worship leaders are given an almost priestly status. Why? It’s because they are seen as the ones who bring the people closer to God. Without them, worship can’t take place.  A good worship leader these days becomes an almost mystical figure.

Divisions are created. Worship should draw believers together, not drive them apart. But that’s exactly what’s happening in churches today. Larger churches have “modern” worship services and “traditional” worship services. That’s an artificial division that’s not healthy in a congregation. It’s selfish and self-centered, which is probably why this “split worship” has become so popular in our narcissistic society.

True worship

That’s what’s wrong with worship. In the Gospel of John, Jesus had a conversation with a Samaritan woman about where public worship should take place. The Samaritans thought God should be worshipped on Mount Gerizim, where their ancestors worshipped. The Jews believed God ought to be worshipped in the Temple at Jerusalem. When asked about this issue, Jesus’ answer is thought-provoking and very revealing:

Jesus replied, “The time is coming, ma’am, when we will no longer be concerned about whether to worship the Father here or in Jerusalem. For it’s not where we worship that counts, but how we worship—is our worship spiritual and real? Do we have the Holy Spirit’s help? For God is Spirit, and we must have his help to worship as we should. The Father wants this kind of worship from us. But you Samaritans know so little about him, worshiping blindly, while we Jews know all about him, for salvation comes to the world through the Jews.” (John 4:21 – 24 TLB)

Let’s back up for a second and look at why this woman and her people wouldn’t even consider the Jew’s position on where to worship:

“Sir,” the woman said, “you must be a prophet. But say, tell me, why is it that you Jews insist that Jerusalem is the only place of worship, while we Samaritans claim it is here at Mount Gerizim, where our ancestors worshiped?” (John 4:19, 20 TLB)

There was no spiritual reason for worshipping up on Mount Gerizim. It was just a tradition; nothing more. There was no reason for them to worship God from that location. In fact, it may well be that the Samaritans were hoping to recapture an event – a feeling – from the past. Mount Gerizim was where Abraham prepared to sacrifice Isaac and where he met Melchizedek.  Significant things happened on Gerizim, so that’s why they worshiped God up there.

Now, as to Jesus’ answer.  The first part is linked to the completion of His mission on earth.  Once His work on the Cross was finished, only then true worship could really take place. That’s what the phrase, “the time is coming” refers to; Christ’s finished work on the cross. The second part of Jesus’ statement has reference to the destruction of the Temple and much of Jerusalem in 70 AD and of the temple on Mount Gerizim a few years later. His point was that location wouldn’t be an issue because His work would do away with those concerns and, practically speaking, events would make the question completely irrelevant.

But what did our Lord mean when He said this?

…true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth… (John 4:23b NKJV)

To worship “in spirit” means that we yield our wills to God’s will. It means yielding our thoughts to His; our plans to His. True worship is not at all selfish. It’s not at all what we want – what we want to do or what we want to experience. Stop and think about that. That means that true worship takes place in the spiritual realm and has nothing to do with us in terms of where or when worship takes place or what it looks like.

The phrase “in truth” means that we are not worshipping an “image” of God that we create in our minds. This is a tricky thing that’s easier to say than to do. And herein lies the problem with modern worship: our music (old hymns and modern songs) is full of images of God. That doesn’t mean the hymn writers or song writers are trying to get you to commit idolatry. But it’s a normal result of the thinking process. A song puts an image of God into our minds and whether we are conscious of it or not, we worship that image.

The key word in that sentence, though, is “Father.” It is the Father we are to be worshipping. He must be the object of our worship and He must always be the One we are seeking. Which makes complete sense since He is seeking us!  God the Father is the Father of all believers, everywhere. That being the case, it makes absolutely no difference where worship takes place. This was Jesus’ point to the Samaritan woman, and the answer to her question. It wouldn’t make any difference where worship takes place because Jesus eliminated all those barriers of age, culture, location, etc. when He died and rose again.

His work literally unshackled the spirits of all believers and set them free to worship without any strings attached.

General remarks

Given what Jesus told the Samaritan woman, we can draw some conclusions that apply to our situation today. We Christians aren’t too far removed from the Samaritans of Jesus’ day. They weren’t Jews but they incorporated elements of the Jewish faith in their faith and worship practices. Unfortunately the other elements of their religion were purely pagan. No wonder the Jews hated them. Our worship today is all-too often a mixture of worldliness and genuine spirituality.

From what Jesus said, consider:

It doesn’t matter where we worship. Our worship doesn’t have to take place in church on a Sunday morning. There’s nothing wrong with corporate worship on the first day of the week; it is Biblical and the writer to the Hebrews admonishes his readers to participate in it. But we shouldn’t limit our worship of God to that one day, in that one place. Christianity is not Judaism. Christianity is a faith for the whole world. Wherever a believer finds himself is hallowed ground.

Public worship should be conducted according to the Word of God. It is not what man may think is important or impressive, but it is what is found in the Word of God. The Bible gives us clear direction and clear precedents in terms of our corporate, public worship. Here’s an example we should follow:

And those who believed Peter were baptized—about three thousand in all! They joined with the other believers in regular attendance at the apostles’ teaching sessions and at the Communion services and prayer meetings. (Acts 2:41, 42 TLB)

That’s what public worship looks like. It also looks like 1 Corinthians 13 and 14. When a congregation has mutual love and compassion for each other and as they allow the Holy Spirit to work through them, worship takes place.

Public worship is the duty and privilege of all believers. Public worship is a testimony to God’s grace in the world. Without it, the world wouldn’t know what grace looks like. Without worship that glorifies God, there would be no visible church and no witness in the world. That’s the duty bit. It’s a privilege in that proper worship is God’s gift to His children, for it glorifies Him and edifies them.

Public worship should be constant and regular. It should be constant in that our worship should be a way of life, and in the corporate sense it should take place whenever we get together. We shouldn’t be fair-weather worshipers.  Worship ought to be regular in the sense that we make an effort to show up at the “worship” service, on time, ready to worship.

Public worship requires preparation and right feelings. No child of God should show up unprepared. The opposite is usually true, though. We show up at church harried and full of thoughts and feelings that have nothing to do with God. We owe God time spent in prayer and preparation before we get to church. We should be ready to worship before we even set foot in the sanctuary.

Worship shouldn’t be big business. It’s serious business and it needs to be taken seriously. As frail human beings, we are totally unworthy to be in God’s presence and, honestly, God has no need for your songs and hymns. But He desires us to recognize His greatness in the face of our great need. Because of what Jesus did on the Cross, He has made a way for us to live continually in His presence and to testify to His greatness in the community. True worship is not about our feelings, but our subordinating our feelings to Him and allowing God the Father to minister to us as we minister to Him.

 

One More Kick At the Stewardship Can

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For the Christian, stewardship refers to the proper handling of what God has entrusted to us. And God requires all believers to be faithful stewards. In our final look at stewardship, we’ll look at the lessons learned by two men who were called to give an account of their stewardship.

Luke 12:16 – 21

Then he gave an illustration: “A rich man had a fertile farm that produced fine crops.” (Luke 12:16 TLB)

Jesus is about to tell a story. He did this often to help His listeners understand some point He was trying to make. This story of rich man, or more accurately, the rich farmer, is supposed to shed some light on this:

And He said to them, “Take heed and beware of covetousness, for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of the things he possesses.” (Luke 12:15 NKJV)

This single sentence states one of the most basic principles of the Christian faith. Yet, it is consistently ignored and bypassed from generation to generation in spite of the abundant proof of its truth. Every human being will eventually come to realize how unimportant “things” really are. It’s too bad that most of us figure it out only after we’ve lived a life acquiring them.

“Things” don’t make your life more valuable or full or rich. They are also incapable of making you happy or keeping you in peace. It’s interesting how phobic many wealthy people are. The abundance of “things” produces anxieties and discontent more often than they bring happiness.

It is this principle that Jesus told the story of the rich farmer to illustrate. The rich farmer ignored the principle, and as a result not only lost his soul but became for all time an example of the fool and one of the best illustrations of how NOT to live.

And he thought within himself, saying, ‘What shall I do, since I have no room to store my crops?’ So he said, ‘I will do this: I will pull down my barns and build greater, and there I will store all my crops and my goods.” ’ (Luke 12:17, 18 NKJV)

Talk about being self-centered! All those “I’s”! Here is a snapshot of the self-made man who had gathered all of his treasure on earth but had stored none in heaven. It brings to mind the famous epithath:

Here lies John Rackett,
In his wooden jacket.
He kept neither horses nor mules.
He lived like a hog,
He died like a dog.
And left all his money to fools.

So just what was wrong with the farmer, anyway? A lot of famers would want to be in this man’s position. Judging only by outward appearances, this farmer had done everything right. Outward appearances indicated this was one hard working, smart, honest, law-abiding citizen. He’s certainly not one to just “let things happen.” Here he was, making plans for the future, doing the responsible thing.

And yet there was something wrong with him. His abundant harvest was really God’s blessing – God’s gift to him. And because of that fact, the decisions he was about to make should have been spiritual ones. John Hagee once remarked:

Since my money is God’s money, every spending decision I make is a spiritual decision.

He’s right about that. The farmer was wrong in not realizing this. This abundant harvest was a test of this man’s character, the outcomes of which were eternal.

Let’s make note of the farmer’s shortcomings:

First, the farmer showed that he really didn’t know himself well at all. He failed to realize that he was mortal and that he wouldn’t necessarily be around to enjoy the fruit of his labors. He also didn’t take into account the fact that even though he had lots of crops, those crops did nothing for the health of his soul!

Secondly, in all of his “inner dialogue,” the farmer never once took into consideration how his wealth might help others in need. Certainly he didn’t appear to lack anything, but all around him were people less fortunate than he. What about them? Both in the Greek and in the NKJV, the “I’s” and “my’s” appear a dozen times. He could see nobody but himself. Poor schlub. He had no clue about the joy that results in giving to others.

Thirdly, the prosperous farmer neither thanks God nor glorifies Him. He never once mentions God or acknowledges Him in any way. The farmer is essentially an atheist.

‘And I will say to my soul, “Soul, you have many goods laid up for many years; take your ease; eat, drink, and be merry. But God said to him, ‘Fool! This night your soul will be required of you; then whose will those things be which you have provided?’ (Luke 12:19, 20 NKJV)

In verses 17 and 18, the farmer is seen as a selfish, inconsiderate miser-type of person. But in these two verses we see him for what he really was: a fool. Anybody who lives a life without consideration for others and for God is surely the most foolish person who every lived. The height of folly is thinking any kind of material comforts would benefit the soul in any way. In the Bible, the “fool” is anybody devoid of reason. The farmer, then, by God’s own estimation, was a complete fool for three reasons:

* He forgot God

* He forgot his own immortal soul

* He forgot others

He thought he had a lease on life; that he was going to live as long as his wealth could hold out. He couldn’t have been more wrong. What he didn’t realize was that his soul was not his own; that God, its true Owner, had called for an immediate reckoning.

It would do all of us well to recall the words of the psalmist:

The days of our lives are seventy years; and if by reason of strength they are eighty years, yet their boast is only labor and sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away. (Psalm 90:10 NKJV)

As for man, his days are like grass; as a flower of the field, so he flourishes. For the wind passes over it, and it is gone, and its place remembers it no more. (Psalm 103:15, 16 NKJV)

The final verse of the story is Jesus’ summation and estimation of  people who lives only for themselves and who do not figure on God.

“So is he who lays up treasure for himself, and is not rich toward God.” (Luke 12:21 NKJV)

The rich farmer was not a fool because of his wealth. He was a fool because he thought of his wealth only in terms of himself. He had no regard for God.

The fool has said in his heart, “There is no God.” (Psalm 14:1 NKJV)

Luke 16:1 – 13

Jesus now told this story to his disciples: “A rich man hired an accountant to handle his affairs, but soon a rumor went around that the accountant was thoroughly dishonest.” (Luke 16:1 TLB)

Here is a parable that a lot of casual Bible readers don’t get. Jesus in NOT commending crooked business practices. This particular steward is a crook, make no mistake about it. This crooked accountant was a man who followed the principles of the world. Christians aren’t supposed to be doing that.

The world would love you if you belonged to it; but you don’t—for I chose you to come out of the world, and so it hates you. (John 15:19 TLB)

Jesus is not wanting His disciples to be shady operatives like the steward is in the parable. But we are supposed to learn a lesson about stewardship from him.

“So his employer called him in and said, ‘What’s this I hear about your stealing from me? Get your report in order, for you are to be dismissed.’” (Luke 16:2 TLB)

As happens to all who take advantage of others, the dishonest steward got found out. The boss wanted a complete financial report. The manager was caught and his days were numbered. What would he do?

“The accountant thought to himself, ‘Now what? I’m through here, and I haven’t the strength to go out and dig ditches, and I’m too proud to beg. I know just the thing! And then I’ll have plenty of friends to take care of me when I leave!’” (Luke 16:3, 4 TLB)

He was in a pickle, that’s for sure. Too proud to dig and too ashamed to beg. But not above stealing. The man determined to use the few hours of employment he had left to win the friendship of some of his boss’ debtors, so that after he was dismissed he would have a few friends that would take care of him.

“So he invited each one who owed money to his employer to come and discuss the situation. He asked the first one, ‘How much do you owe him?’ ‘My debt is 850 gallons of olive oil,’ the man replied. ‘Yes, here is the contract you signed,’ the accountant told him. ‘Tear it up and write another one for half that much!’

“ ‘And how much do you owe him?’ he asked the next man. ‘A thousand bushels of wheat,’ was the reply. ‘Here,’ the accountant said, ‘take your note and replace it with one for only 800 bushels!’ (Luke 16:5 – 7 TLB)

What a piece of work this guy was! He was making his master’s debtors personally indebted to HIM by lowering their indebtedness. It’s the Godfather philosophy at work, “You scratch my back, I’ll scratch yours,” only in reverse. In other words, he was doing them a favor because pretty soon he would be asking something of them.

“The rich man had to admire the rascal for being so shrewd. And it is true that the citizens of this world are more clever in dishonesty than the godly are.” (Luke 16:8 TLB)

Obviously the rich man knew the books had been cooked and he knew what his now-former employee had done, so that makes this statement kind of shocking. It may well be that the rich man got rich using the same tactics his one-time manager had just used on him. According to the (low) standards of the world, the crooked manager did a shrewd thing. Remember, this is the same world that hates us Christians. The world makes up its own rules; it isn’t obligated to obey God’s rules. So, according to the way the world does things, this crooked former employee was pretty slick indeed.

But in paying a compliment to the rascally manager, Jesus was really saying something very uncomplimentary about His followers. What He essentially said was that unbelievers use their money more wisely than believers do. Or, stating it another way, in worldly matters worldly people often show more shrewdness than God’s people do in matters affecting their eternal salvation.

For unless you are honest in small matters, you won’t be in large ones. If you cheat even a little, you won’t be honest with greater responsibilities. And if you are untrustworthy about worldly wealth, who will trust you with the true riches of heaven? And if you are not faithful with other people’s money, why should you be entrusted with money of your own? (Luke 16:10 – 12 TLB)

The main point of story is that Christians are stewards of material things, since we are living in a material world. But, as believers we don’t actually own anything. God does, and we are responsible to Him for how we use His “things.” Jesus was dismayed that the non-Christians seemed to be better at that than we Christians are.

Jesus’ words slap us across the face. Sometimes we try so hard to be the kind of “Christian” we think we should be that we miss the obvious things we should be doing. Maybe Billy Graham’s thoughts can drive home Jesus’ teaching;

If a person gets his attitude toward money straight, it will straighten out almost every other area in his life.

Amen to that.

Parables of Lost Things

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Luke 15 is probably one of the most familiar chapters in the Gospels. Almost everybody knows the parables it contains, even if they don’t know they come from Luke 15. The Lost Sheep, The Lost Coin, and The Prodigal Son are all part of this amazing chapter.

Some background

Dishonest tax collectors and other notorious sinners often came to listen to Jesus’ sermons; but this caused complaints from the Jewish religious leaders and the experts on Jewish law because he was associating with such despicable people—even eating with them! (Luke 15:1, 2 TLB)

These “publicans and sinners,” as they are referred in older translations, were despised by most Israelites of Jesus’ day and generally ostracized. The religious leaders – the Pharisees and the teacher’s of the Law – would have nothing to do them in any way. In fact, these religious leaders didn’t even care about their souls and made no effort to reach out to them to bring them into their religious circles. So you can imagine how they felt when they saw Jesus eating and having fellowship with them, not once but on numerous occasions. They were shocked and scandalized. They complained about it and gossiped about it to the point where our Lord had to deal with them. He did so by telling three parables; the three parables everybody knows.

Or do they? Let’s see.

The lost sheep, Luke 15:1 – 7

In fact, there aren’t really three parables here, but one long one with three parts. So, let’s look at the first part, which deals with a lost, wandering sheep. Most people think this part of the story is about a lost sheep, but the focus of the story is not the sheep but the shepherd. Maybe a more accurate title for this segment of Luke 15 would be “The Seeking Shepherd.”

This story would have been an old, familiar one to Jesus’ listeners that day, for they all would have been able to picture the Oriental shepherd doing his job. We have no such picture today. Do you know a shepherd? You probably don’t. The care and concern the shepherd had for his sheep was well-known back then, if not today.

“If you had a hundred sheep and one of them strayed away and was lost in the wilderness, wouldn’t you leave the ninety-nine others to go and search for the lost one until you found it?” (Luke 15:3, 4 TLB)

“If you.” The fact is, because you’re probably not a shepherd and you probably don’t know one, you probably will just have to take Jesus’ word for it. But to His listeners, what Jesus said made all the sense in the world; they would have been able to completely identify with the shepherd of the story. Jesus also said this, which you can relate to:

Greater love has no one than this, than to lay down one’s life for his friends. (John 15:13 NKJV)

This is the idea behind the story of the lost sheep and the shepherd’s care and concern for it. Only a heart of love could lead a man to risk his very life in the dangerous, barren, animal-infested wilderness, at night, looking for a single sheep that foolishly wandered away from its pen.

And then you would joyfully carry it home on your shoulders. When you arrived you would call together your friends and neighbors to rejoice with you because your lost sheep was found. (Luke 15:5, 6 TLB)

This is the point of the story: the shepherd is thrilled and overjoyed that he found his sheep. He was so happy, he told everybody about it.

How do we relate this back to the questionable people Jesus ate with? They were Jews. They belonged to Israel just as much as the Pharisees did. Jesus, the ultimate Shepherd, wasn’t going to treat these “backslidden” Jews like others did. He, like the shepherd in the story He told, saw these men for what they were: Jews that needed to be brought back into the fold of the faith.

The lost coin, Luke 15:8 – 10

“Or take another illustration: A woman has ten valuable silver coins and loses one. Won’t she light a lamp and look in every corner of the house and sweep every nook and cranny until she finds it? And then won’t she call in her friends and neighbors to rejoice with her? In the same way there is joy in the presence of the angels of God when one sinner repents.” (Luke 15:8 – 10 TLB)

It may not seem like it, but this part of the story means exactly the thing as the first part. But this time, the focal point is the woman instead of the shepherd. If you can’t relate to a shepherd, then you can probably relate to this woman who lost a valuable coin. In fact, it wasn’t just a valuable coin, it was a valuable coin that probably had great sentimental value. More than one Bible scholar has noted that this coin was probably part of a set of coins that made up a headpiece signifying her marriage. Think of that coin like a very expensive, precious weeding ring. How would you feel if you lost it? Panicked? Scared? Would you feel like you let your spouse down? Well, that’s how this poor woman felt.

No wonder she was so thrilled when she found it. Thrilled, relieved, and overjoyed; all things she shared with her friends and family.

Once again, this story of the lost coin relates back to the shifty tax collectors and people of dubious reputation that Jesus was known to hang around. That coin was part of a set, just like the lost sheep was part of a group penned up, just like those “sinners” Jesus associated with were part of the Jewish nation. And just like the shepherd and the woman, Jesus was determined to reach out to those people who were being shunned.

The lost son, Luke 15:11 – 24

This is story is the crown jewel of stories. How many sermons and movies have been based on it? How many times have you heard (or maybe said) the phrase, “the prodigal’s come home.” Well, here’s the whole story.

“A man had two sons. When the younger told his father, ‘I want my share of your estate now, instead of waiting until you die!’ his father agreed to divide his wealth between his sons.” (Luke 15:11b, 12 TLB)

Now remember, Jesus is still trying to teach us something about His curious habit of dining with questionable people involved in questionable activities. You can’t divorce this story, or the preceding two, from that purpose. Obviously this parable is much longer and more complex than the other two, but its major point is the same.

This parable is actually made of two parts, each part focusing on the two sons with the main focus of each part on the father’s interaction with them.

The first son

A few days later this younger son packed all his belongings and took a trip to a distant land, and there wasted all his money on parties and prostitutes. (Luke 15:13 TLB)

The first son was not the bright one, obviously. He was selfish. He wasn’t interested in remaining part of a loving family. He wanted to go it alone; live life to the fullest, his own way. Old Blue Eyes himself gives us the best commentary on this lowbrow son, using the lyrics of Paul Anka:

And now, the end is near
And so I face the final curtain
My friend, I’ll say it clear
I’ll state my case, of which I’m certain
I’ve lived a life that’s full
I traveled each and ev’ry highway
And more, much more than this, I did it my way
 
Regrets, I’ve had a few
But then again, too few to mention
I did what I had to do,
I saw it through without exemption
I planned each charted course,
each careful step along the highway
And more, much more than this, I did it my way

That’s about it. It drones on for a couple more verses, and ultimately we get the picture of a guy who made a pile of mistakes in his life but kept on plugging ahead, living life his own way. Yes, it’s song for losers. And the so-called Prodigal Son was a total loser. He left his home. He left the security he had. He left his family. And for what? He wasted his inheritance and was left with nothing.

The boy became so hungry that even the pods he was feeding the swine looked good to him. And no one gave him anything. (Luke 15:16 TLB)

Actually he had less than nothing. He had no money. He had no friends. He had no hope. He had no prospects. So he did what any good son would do: he decided he should go back home.

So he returned home to his father. And while he was still a long distance away, his father saw him coming, and was filled with loving pity and ran and embraced him and kissed him. (Luke 15:20 TLB)

It’s the reaction of the father we’re supposed to be taking careful note of. Like the shepherd and the woman, this father was overjoyed that his formerly lost son was coming home. More than that, the father went to extreme to show his prodigal son how happy he was:

But his father said to the slaves, ‘Quick! Bring the finest robe in the house and put it on him. And a jeweled ring for his finger; and shoes! And kill the calf we have in the fattening pen. We must celebrate with a feast, for this son of mine was dead and has returned to life. He was lost and is found.’ So the party began. (Luke 15:22 – 24 TLB)

Love covered the sins of the prodigal with a blanket of the forgiveness. Sharp-eyed Bible readers have probably noticed that the father is slightly different than the shepherd or the woman. He didn’t leave home to seek out his son. He let the son go of his own free will. This father knew the son wouldn’t come back unless he wanted to. What we need to note is the father’s love for his son and the fact that the son never stopped being a son to his father. The prodigal knew he could come back home; that in some way he would find acceptance. And so God seeks those who have wandered away from Him. The backslider – the shady tax collector and notorious sinner – will always have a home with God if they come back.

The second son

In Act Two of this little drama, we meet the other son.

The older brother was angry and wouldn’t go in. His father came out and begged him, but he replied, ‘All these years I’ve worked hard for you and never once refused to do a single thing you told me to; and in all that time you never gave me even one young goat for a feast with my friends. Yet when this son of yours comes back after spending your money on prostitutes, you celebrate by killing the finest calf we have on the place.’ (Luke 15:28 – 30 TLB)

And who could blame him for feeling this way? He did everything right and his father never threw him a party! It is this second part of the story that drives home Jesus’ point. Without it, our Lord’s purpose in telling these stories might be lost or not clearly understood by His listeners. The first son, the prodigal, represents the outcasts of Jewish society – those “publicans and sinners” – all those who had been shunned. The other son represents the Pharisees, the teachers of the Law, and all the truly devout Jewish people who had never lost faith; who faithfully kept the faith no matter what.

Again, it’s the father’s response that’s the focal point:

“ ‘Look, dear son,’ his father said to him, ‘you and I are very close, and everything I have is yours. But it is right to celebrate. For he is your brother; and he was dead and has come back to life! He was lost and is found!’ ” (Luke 15:31, 32 TLB)

The father’s love for his son was not lessened by the return of the prodigal. Just look at how the father reacted when the elder son refused to go into the party: the father came out to the elder son.

The application of this great story is immediate yet far reaching. When combined with the other two stories, we get a clear picture of how God feels about those who appear to be no longer associated with the rest of His people. Specifically the infamous “publicans and sinners,” the kind of disreputable people Jesus rubbed shoulders with. Like the prodigal, though their sins may have been many and grievous, and though they lived on the outskirts of Jewish society, Jesus was reaching out for them, offering them forgiveness if they return to the family in true repentance.

The same thing is true of the backslider; the one who has appeared to leave the faith. God the Father never gives up on them. He seeks them out, ready and willing to take them back.


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