Searching and sweeping until the thing is found.
The 17th Sunday after Pentecost
Proper 19 - Year C
Luke 15:1-10
At the outset of this week’s Gospel reading, the scribes and the Pharisees expressed unhappiness about all the "low-life" to be found among the followers of Jesus:
“This fellow welcomes sinners and eats with them”.
Listen to what Jesus says at the end of the reading:
“I tell you, there is joy in the presence of the angels
of God over one sinner who repents.”
If all we had were these two ends – the opening and the conclusion – we might conclude that some sinners work hard at this whole business of repentance and can overcome the stigma of their past behavior with a rigourous and athletic turnaround. These “deserving sinners” get cheered on by angels in heaven as they cross the finish line and join the righteous on the other side.
In fact, the intervening two mini-parables (the Lost Sheep and the Lost Coin) are no testament whatsoever to the ability of the lost sheep to climb out of a deep chasm and work its way out of the heather and return to the sheepfold or of a coin to hoist its own shiny edge up between the floorboards and catch the woman’s attention in order to get itself found.
God, says Jesus, is a shepherd. He will go to great lengths to find the one who is well and truly lost.
God, says Jesus, is a poor widow. She will sweep the lengths of her house repeatedly until she finds the thing she has set out to find.
The nature of the Good News that Jesus preaches is not that there now exists a novel way for men and women to work their way along the narrow path into the favor of heaven. The Good News is that God is at work looking for his children, energetically and relentlessly. The redeemed sinner is the handiwork of God and the fruits of God’s labour.
We need to agree to be found.
We need to rejoice with the angels when others are found as well.