Christ's Object Lessons
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 15: "This Man Receiveth Sinners"
Based on Luke 15:1-10
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As the "publicans and sinners" gathered about Christ,
the rabbis expressed their displeasure. "This man
receiveth sinners," they said, "and eateth with them."
By this accusation they insinuated that Christ liked to
associate with the sinful and vile, and was insensible to
their wickedness. The rabbis had been disappointed in
Jesus. Why was it that one who claimed so lofty a
character did not mingle with them and follow their methods
of teaching? Why did He go about so unpretendingly,
working among all classes? If He were a true prophet,
they said, He would harmonize with them, and would treat
the publicans and sinners with the indifference they
deserved. It angered these guardians of society that He with
whom they were continually in controversy, yet whose
purity of life awed and condemned them, should meet, in
such apparent sympathy, with social outcasts. They did
not approve of His methods. They regarded themselves as
educated, refined, and pre-eminently religious; but Christ's
example laid bare their selfishness. [p. 186]
It angered them also that those who showed only
contempt for the rabbis and who were never seen in the
synagogues should flock about Jesus and listen with rapt
attention to His words. The scribes and Pharisees felt only
condemnation in that pure presence; how was it, then, that
publicans and sinners were drawn to Jesus?
They knew not that the explanation lay in the very
words they had uttered as a scornful charge, "This man
receiveth sinners." The souls who came to Jesus felt in
His presence that even for them there was escape from the
pit of sin. The Pharisees had only scorn and condemnation
for them; but Christ greeted them as children of God,
estranged indeed from the Father's house, but not forgotten
by the Father's heart. And their very misery and sin made
them only the more the objects of His compassion. The
farther they had wandered from Him, the more earnest the
longing and the greater the sacrifice for their rescue.
All this the teachers of Israel might have learned from
the sacred scrolls of which it was their pride to be the
keepers and expounders. He not David written—David,
who had fallen into deadly sin—"I have gone astray like a
lost sheep, seek Thy servant"? Ps. 119:176. Had not
Micah revealed God's love to the sinner, saying, "Who is
a God like unto Thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth
by the transgression of the remnant of His heritage? He
retaineth not His anger forever, because He delighteth in
mercy"? Micah 7:18.
The Lost Sheep
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Lost Sheep Found.—Davis Collection. |
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Christ did not at this time remind His hearers of the
words of Scripture. He appealed to the witness of their
own experience. The wide-spreading tablelands on the east
of Jordan afforded abundant pasturage for flocks, and
through the gorges and over the wooded hills had wandered [p. 187] many a lost sheep, to be searched for and brought back by
the shepherd's care. In the company about Jesus there
were shepherds, and also men who had money invested in
flocks and herds, and all could appreciate His illustration:
"What man of you, having an hundred sheep, if he lose one
of them, doth not leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness,
and go after that which is lost, until he find it?"
These souls whom you despise, said Jesus, are the
property of God. By creation and by redemption they are
His, and they are of value in His sight. As the shepherd
loves his sheep, and cannot rest if even one be missing, so,
in an infinitely higher degree, does God love every outcast
soul. Men may deny the claim of His love, they may
wander from Him, they may choose another master; yet
they are God's, and He longs to recover His own. He
says, "As a shepherd seeketh out his flock in the day that
he is among his sheep that are scattered; so will I seek out
My sheep, and will deliver them out of all places where
they have been scattered in the cloudy and dark day." Eze.
34:12.
In the parable the shepherd goes out to search for one
sheep—the very least that can be numbered. So if there
had been but one lost soul, Christ would have died for
that one.
The sheep that has strayed from the fold is the most
helpless of all creatures. It must be sought for by the
shepherd, for it cannot find its way back. So with the
soul that has wandered away from God; he is as helpless as
the lost sheep, and unless divine love had come to his
rescue he could never find his way to God.
The shepherd who discovers that one of his sheep is
missing does not look carelessly upon the flock that is
safely housed, and say, "I have ninety and nine, and it will
cost me too much trouble to go in search of the straying one. [p. 188] Let him come back, and I will open the door of the sheepfold,
and let him in." No; no sooner does the sheep go
astray than the shepherd is filled with grief and anxiety.
He counts and recounts the flock. When he is sure that one
sheep is lost, he slumbers not. He leaves the ninety and
nine with the fold, and goes in search of the straying
sheep. The darker and more tempestuous the night and
the more perilous the way, the greater is the shepherd's
anxiety and the more earnest his search. He makes every
effort to find that one lost sheep.
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