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Wednesday 4 January 2023

The Parable of the 99 Sheep

The parable of the lost sheep/good shepherd is very well known, especially in church circles.  I learned the parable in Sunday school, and I've heard sermons on it many, many times from many different preachers and teachers.  It's a reminder to the church that God, the Good Shepherd, wants to gather as many people into the church as possible, and it's frequently used as part of what might be called a recruitment drive - time to evangelise to neighbours, friends and family who aren't part of the flock.  After all, the sheep are all equally valuable, and introducing more sheep to the flock is a good thing.

Here it goes:

"Suppose one of you has 99 sheep, and you decide you want to increase your flock by one.  Would you not leave the 99 sheep in the open country, and go out to find a hundredth sheep, and bring it home on your shoulders with rejoicing?  In the same way, there is more rejoicing over one sinner who repents than over 99 righteous people who do not need to repent."


As you can see if you check your Bible, that's not what the parable says.  

But when it's read out in church, the message that often accompanies the reading is the 'recruitment drive'.  It's as if the parable says we need to get the hundredth sheep because the hundredth sheep is equally important to the 99 already safe in the flock.  And: we the church need to get the extra sheep.  I'm not saying that evangelism is unimportant (it's crucial), but there's another way of reading this parable:  what does Jesus say?

Then Jesus told them this parable: “Suppose one of you has a hundred sheep and loses one of them. Doesn’t he leave the ninety-nine in the open country and go after the lost sheep until he finds it? And when he finds it, he joyfully puts it on his shoulders and goes home. Then he calls his friends and neighbors together and says, ‘Rejoice with me; I have found my lost sheep.’ I tell you that in the same way there will be more rejoicing in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who do not need to repent.

Matthew 18:10-14; Luke 15:1-7; John 10

At the start of the parable, the shepherd already has 100 sheep in the flock.  And the truth is that sometimes, sheep wander off.  It's in their nature - they keep their nose to the grass, and they follow their instincts towards what they think is the next best grass... the next thing they know, they're not in the flock any more.  And we are just the same.  Yes we are.  We go to church every Sunday, we join house groups and we attend the prayer meetings.  We all think we're so clever, and we know what's going on in our lives, but we get comfortable, and then we get distracted from where we're supposed to be going.  And then suddenly, we're not sure where we are any more.

It happens.  Christians get criticised for being willing to identify with sheep, but we people aren't half as clever as we think we are, and we follow the crowd far more often than we'd like to admit. 

Sometimes, even members of the flock need to be found. And it's ok if that's you (it's been me).  If you read the parable, you'll notice that there is no blame attached to the sheep.  The sheep isn't berated or criticised, because sheep are sheep (that's why they need shepherds).  Also: it's the shepherd who goes to search and retrieve the 100th sheep, not some of the 99

The parable isn't described as the parable of the bad sheep, it's the parable of the good shepherd - who cares when a member of the existing flock wanders off and gets lost.  He doesn't shrug his shoulders and say, "Oh well, a 1% loss is acceptable for this year's performance, I still have the other 99 and that'll balance the books."  He's searching for even one who goes astray, just as much as for the ones who aren't yet part of the flock.