The Lost Sheep and Repentance
What Luke 15 Actually Teaches About the Parable of the Lost Sheep Some passages of Scripture slowly become slogans. Luke 15 is one of them. Over time, the parable of the lost sheep has been reshaped into a story primarily about divine pursuit — Jesus chasing us through forests of rebellion, relentlessly leaving the ninety-nine to find the one. Songs celebrate it. Sermons center on it. Entire ministries build their identity around the image. But when we allow Jesus to interpret His own parable, something unexpected emerges. The story is not ultimately about pursuit. It is about repentance . The Context We Often Miss Luke 15 begins with a complaint. “This man receives sinners and eats with them.” (Luke 15:2) The Pharisees are scandalized. Jesus is welcoming the wrong people — sharing meals with those they consider morally and spiritually unclean. In response, Jesus tells three parables in succession: The Lost Sheep The Lost Coin The Lost Son And after the first story, He explains it...