Posts Tagged Jesus Parables

Simple Truths: The Lost Sheep and Coin

I am currently teaching a series to the youth in our church called "Simple Truths". I am putting together this series based on my teachings of all of Jesus’ parables, and I am having a great time studying and making these teachings applicable to young people.

Tonight I will be sharing about the parable of the Lost Coin and the Lost Sheep from Luke 15:4-10. It stands to reason that a shepherd in biblical times was often a disliked, if not abhored individual to the upper class folks. A shepherd was considered one who could not be easily trusted, and their testimony was often disregarded in Middle Eastern court proceedings. So why did Jesus choose such a profession to illustrate the great love God has for His children?

Well, let’s first consider that Jesus was also called the Lamb of God, and the ultimate sacrifice for all mankind. I believe that the shepherd was often misunderstood in their own culture, and with every profession comes the few who ruin it for the bunch. Most of the reputation that shepherds possessed came from a simple class issue, they were often poor. Much like Christ was born in the poorest of conditions, so the illustration proves that godliness and God’s character have nothing to do with wealth.

If we, like sheep, go astray (Isaiah 53:6) from our relationship with the Good Shepherd we are choosing to abandon what is good. Just like a sheep, we will face dangers that would have better odds had we stayed in the shepherds protection. Wolves, snakes, and thieves perhaps would stalk the lost sheep, waiting for a moment to pounce on the solitary animal. When we decide to walk away from God, we face dangers that we are not prepared for. The great news is our Shepherd is always there to rescue us, if we just call out to him.


The shepherd will leave the 99 to rescue the one sheep who needs him. What we must realize in this passage is the job of a shepherd. When a shepherd must leave the herd to find the one who has gone off, he will often find the sheep and break it’s legs. Seems cruel, but sheep are dumb-minded and need a painful marker that reminds them not to walk off like that again. We should not despise the chastisement of the Lord, and when we walk away or choose to not follow God the time will come when we will call out to Him. When we do, God will humble us, bring us back and start a fresh work in our hearts. A new spiritually painful marker is set for us to never forget how good God is, and how much we need him.

The closing of each of these parables tells us that heaven rejoices when the precious lamb or the priceless coin of the woman is found. Even though we may go through a painful circumstance or living out a sinful direction for our lives… God is merciful! When we feel most broken before God, heaven rejoices.

A picture forus if I may… While we run to our own wisdom, addictions, and sinful desires that lead us away from God, Jesus ran to the cross and took it all on his own body, mind, and spirit. While were still sinners Christ died for us (Romans 5:8), and if we are Christians who decide to compromise our relationship because of selfish desires we are crucifying Jesus all over again (Hebrews 6:6).

Tears flow down my face as I recall what Christ did for me and you, and may we all choose to be in the protection of the Good Shepherd!

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Desperation Produces Reliance

As I write this I have just come from a powerful time of praise and prayer in my own home. In recent weeks I have started to preach a series to our youth that covers 57 of Jesus’ parables, and today I will preach the third parable, the bread of life from John 6:31-38. I have been pleading with God to give me fresh revelation and messages for these young people to see the God I serve is bigger than they had ever imagined. Do you notice when you pray that the answer or the given path is often not quite what you expect or thought could result in an answer.

My wife and i are expecting our fourth, and had great plans and were being good stewards financially with the knowledge we had of the costs of having our first and only son. We prayed so hard for a baby boy for years, and thought it could never happen but here we are at the closing of week 35. My wife is contracting and on moderate bed rest at this point and comes off bed rest next week. We had already paid the doctor $4,000 because our insurance does not cover maternity in Texas, and we were planning on paying $5,600 to MCA in Arlington for the C-Section and couple nights stay at the hospital according to their admitting department.

Yesterday I received a phone call from someone in our body who is expecting their first child, and were using the same medical staff and facilities because of the pricing. They went to go and be induced and the hospital turned them away becuase they did not have full cash for the hospital bill. Immediately I called the hospital only to find out that our bill will be $15,400 if we do not have $5,600 in cash the day of the surgery. Oh man, was I in distress! My plans, they were falling apart before my very eyes, and I had no control over my finances, or the medical care my wife would receive.

Today as I was finalizing the sermon I was weeping over the points I am about to teach to young people. I came home form the coffee shop and turned on Tommy Walker’s Breakthrough album, and just began to call out to God. God is so good. We would not have made the decision to have a baby had we known that the real price is triple the quoted price, and God knows that. He blessed us with an answer to prayer, and the God I serve will bless us with a solution to this issue as well. I am not ignorant to proper planning and being responsible, but I also know that God is bigger than my circumstances. It seems that my desperation has produced a stronger reliance on Jesus.

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