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SERMON BY: Pastor Lohn Johnson,  Good Shepherd Lutheran Church 
Text:  Luke 15: 3 So he told them this
  parable:  4 "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?  5
  And when he has found it, he lays it on his shoulders, rejoicing.  6
  And when he comes home, he calls together his friends and his neighbors,
  saying to them, 'Rejoice with me, for I have found my sheep that was lost.' 
 
INTRODUCTION:   
My dear friends in Christ, I’d like to
  introduce you to a friend this morning – his name was Bandit.   
He looks a bit like a bandit, doesn’t
  he. He was a gift to Felicia early in our stay in Saskatchewan.  She had
  had a husky before and loved them.  It seemed like an appropriate dog
  for Canada.  He rapidly became part of our family.  We even called
  him Danielle’s older brother.  He was a very good dog – good with
  children, gentle in spite of his wolf-like appearance.  But like most
  pets he had a flaw.  He wanted to run – he had to run.  I guess it
  was part of his nature.  Like Houdini he could escape almost any
  enclosure.  Once he ran and we found him under an overpass,
  shaking.  But the scariest escape happened after we moved to
  Colorado.  We were about to go on vacation and of course we couldn’t
  take Bandit.  We entrusted him to a family who lived out on a
  ranch.  We warned them that he must be chained.  He would run. 
  But they were used to farm dogs running free all the time.  One time,
  and it only took one time, they let him go free and he was gone.  We got
  home to disturbing news when we came home.  Bandit was lost.  They
  were very apologetic.  We looked, we looked.  He was gone for six
  weeks.  By then we had written him off.  Then someone found
  him.  He was skin and bones and the people who found him took him to a
  vet.  The vet recognized that he had been cared for, but only one tag on
  his collar was left.  But it was enough.  It was like a
  miracle.  The lost was found and we rejoiced.  Bandit was
  home at last. | ||||
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I. After
  reading our text for today I thought about Bandit.  How like Bandit we
  are.  No we don’t always have a nature to run, but we have a nature to
  sin.  It is our nature to be lost because of our sin.  Two examples
  give us a bit of an idea of our nature to be lost because of our sin. | ||||
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A.  
A bee flew into the car one day while
  the family was stopped at a traffic light. Try as they might to get it out
  through an open window, it insisted on buzzing blindly into the windshield.
  When the family got home, they tried again to get it to leave, but this only
  made the bee buzz angrily against the rear window. Again and again, the
  family tried to direct the bee outside through the open windows and doors.
  Yet, each time it evaded them. Afraid of injuring the bee by trying any
  further, the family left the car with the windows open and parked it next to
  a flowering vine, hoping this would entice the bee to freedom.  
Alas, the next morning they found the
  little creature dead on the back dash under the rear window, mortally
  exhausted from its desperate efforts. This poor bee was so sure it had the
  answer to its dilemma and so it buzzed with greater and greater intensity
  into the window. It stubbornly maintained that it could solve its own
  problem, when the truth was that the bee's way got it nowhere. All the bee
  had to do to reach the flowers outside the car was to fly out the
  window.  But it couldn’t get past what it thought was right.   
How often are we just like
  that little bee—locked into what we think is right so much it becomes our
  doom.  Just like that little bee we are lost and we can’t help
  ourselves.  | ||||
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B. Much is made of how men will not ask for directions
  when lost.  One TV show captured this for us.  [video: You Drive
  Me Crazy]  Tim could not admit his lost-ness.  Tim needed to be
  threatened to get him to realize he was lost.  God does a bit of this
  with His law – to show us our sin. | ||||
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1. We, like
  Tim try everything to maintain an illusion, a myth that God's
  search-and-rescue mission wasn't quite necessary. We're doing okay by
  ourselves, thank you very much. 
2. As much as we don't like to
  admit it, we fall into the lost category, too.  | ||||
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a. We don't like to hear this kind of
  message because we don't always FEEL lost. We haven't committed
  any of the BIG sins like murder or adultery or anything like that. We don't FEEL
  like sinners. 
b. In our judgment, our sins don’t seem
  so bad, but the consequence is always the same. Sin is sin and it always
  causes alienation and separation from God. One of the prerequisites for being
  a Christian is being brought to admit that we are sinners who need to be
  forgiven; and being brought to admit that we are lost and need to be found. | ||||
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II. What’s
  important to note is that the sheep was lost. And that meant someone else had
  to search for it. Likewise we are lost and someone has to search for
  us.  In a better way than we could search for Bandit.  As much as
  we like to use the phrase, we really can’t “Find Ourselves.” | ||||
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A. Fortunately for us, it is God’s nature to seek and
  find that which is lost. | ||||
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1.  
Henri Nouwen tells the story of an old
  man who used to meditate every morning under a big tree on the bank of the
  Ganges River. One morning, after he had finished his meditation, he saw a
  scorpion floating helplessly in the water. As the scorpion was washed closer
  to the tree, the old man reached out to rescue the drowning creature. As soon
  as he touched it, however, the scorpion stung him. Instinctively the man
  withdrew his hand. A minute later, though, he tried again. This time the
  scorpion stung him so badly that his hand became swollen and his face
  contorted with pain.   
At that moment, a passerby saw the old
  man struggling with the scorpion and shouted: "Hey, stupid old man,
  what's wrong with you? Only a fool would risk his life for the sake of an
  ugly, evil creature. Don't you know you could kill yourself trying to save
  that ungrateful scorpion?"  
Looking into the stranger's eyes the old
  man said calmly, "My friend, just because it is the scorpion's nature
  to sting, that does not change my nature to save."  
What
  a parable of the love and grace of God! Just because it is our nature to
  sin, does not change God's nature which is to save. 
2. God is willing
  to get His hands dirty to get that lamb home. That’s who God is. That’s how
  much God cares. One little lamb goes astray, and God is willing to go through
  the briars and the brambles until He finds that one lost lamb. It’s a
  beautiful image that every Christian should cherish. It is great comfort that
  God cares about those who have gone astray. | ||||
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B. The Good News
  is that we have a God who doesn’t forget about the lost. God doesn’t write
  them off as sinners unworthy of redemption. He’s not like we were when we
  began to write off Bandit.  God’s love is too big for that. | ||||
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1. And that’s
  where the greatest Finder of them all, Jesus, comes in. He, himself, said He
  was sent into the world to find the lost. I read about a courageous man
  recently. Robert "Bobo" Bonadies was president of
  Connecticut Parachutists Inc. As president of this club he had conducted
  thousands of jumps from airplanes, and had instructed hundreds of students in
  the art of skydiving. He had a reputation for giving confidence to even the most
  timid students. But in May 2002, one of his jumps went horribly wrong. Bonadies was jumping with a new student named Cindy Hyland. Hyland had successfully completed two jumps under Bonadies' guidance. But on this day, Hyland lost the rip cord to her parachute. To protect her, Robert Bonadies grabbed hold of Hyland and held on, stabilizing her so she could untangle her rip cord. He knew at some point that he would have to let her go if he were to save himself. With Bonadies' help, Hyland's parachute finally opened. But Robert Bonadies ran out of time. He died instantly in the fall. 
In 2003, the Carnegie Hero Fund
  Commission named Robert Bonadies as a recipient of their Hero Award. Robert
  Bonadies knew the challenges and risks of skydiving. He knew the choice he
  was being asked to make. And when the time came, he chose to give his own
  life to save the life of another.   | ||||
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a. And Jesus did an even greater thing
  for us.  He died on a cross in our place paying for our sin.   
b. Now He
  gives us His sacrifice in Word and Sacraments. So Salvation is a gift.
  Salvation is not something we can do for ourselves, but something that has
  been done in our behalf. | ||||
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2. We are not worthy but that’s beside
  the point because God offers us redemption anyway. | ||||
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a. Through the love of God and the
  Sacrifice of Christ we are offered both Forgiveness and Redemption. That’s
  called Grace. That’s the only thing that commends us to God.  We are all
  sinners saved by grace. 
b. A minister once asked a shepherd
  what images came to mind when he thought about the Lamb of God and the
  Good Shepherd. The shepherd replied, "Well, I’ll tell you, but
  it’s a bit graphic. Lambing time comes around every spring, and it’s the
  hardest time of year. We lose a lot of mother ewes and baby lambs during the
  birthing process. You would think that a mother lamb whose baby had died
  would look for a baby lamb to nourish. But that’s not what happens. The
  orphaned lambs will die if we don’t find substitute mothers for them. The
  good shepherd has only one choice: [to drain the blood] of the dead lamb and
  pour its blood over the orphaned lamb. When the grieving mother smells her
  baby’s blood on another lamb, she will accept the new baby lamb as her own flesh
  and blood. This is the baby lamb’s only chance for survival. That’s what I
  think of when I hear the words, ‘the Lamb of God and the Good Shepherd.’"
   
In our baptisms we are made His when
  we are washed in the Blood of the Lamb.  In a way the hand of God clutched us by the wooly scruff of the
  neck while we were clinging to a rocky crag of unbelief, and we're now safe
  in the fold.  | ||||
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C. Now we hear about God’s love in
  passages like our text and that changes everything like this: [Finding Nemo] | ||||
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1. As Nemo
  heard of the extent of his father’s love and is changed, we hear about the
  Father’s love, and what Christ has done, it changes us. | ||||
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a. Now we know we are loved. 
b. Now we can love – a little bit like
  He loves. | ||||
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2. And it even changes how we react
  when we feel a little bit lost, like this:  
One pastor told a story years ago about an elderly
  gentleman who was out walking with his young grandson. “How far are we from home?”
  he asked the boy. The boy answered, “I
  don’t know, Grandpa.” Grandpa asked, “Well, where are we?” Again the boy
  answered, “I don’t
  know.” Then grandpa kind of laughed and said, “Sounds to me like you are lost.”
  The young boy looked up at his grandpa and said, “Nope, I can’t be lost. I’m with you.” | ||||
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CONCLUSION: We are He is
  with us now.  He dwells in us.  We’re not lost anymore.  And we
  know we will live with him forever.  Yes, we are certainly found in a
  much better way than Bandit was found.   Amen. 
The peace of
  God which passes all understanding keep your hearts and minds in Christ
  Jesus.   Amen  | ||||
 


