If you wish to read the texts click on the texts: Isa 40:1-11; Mt 18:12 -14
The
Gospel text of today is taken from the fourth discourse in the Gospel of
Matthew, known as “The Community Discourse”. It is addressed primarily to
members of Matthew’s community and not to outsiders.
The
parable of the lost sheep is found also in the Gospel of Luke. The context in
Luke, however, is quite different from that in Matthew. While in Luke, it is
told as a response to the murmurings of the Pharisees because Jesus was eating
with tax collectors and sinners, in Matthew, it is part of the Community
Discourse.
Thus,
the concern in these verses in Matthew is clearly for members of the community
who stray. The point is pastoral care and sanctification rather than evangelism
and justification. The sheep that is lost is not more valuable than others, but
has strayed and needs to be brought back. The finding and the return of the
lost sheep cause joy. Every individual in the community is important and it is
the responsibility of the community to seek out those who stray and bring them
back into the fold. Mature disciples are to live their lives with the spiritual
welfare of others in view. There is no such thing as an individual Christian.
Every Christian is a Christian within community.
In
a world in which individualism seems to be the order of the day, and when each
is concerned only about him/herself, the parable of the lost sheep comes as a
breath of fresh air. It challenges us to get out of our comfort zones and our
selfish ways of living and live instead, lives that are other centered. It
informs us that we are, each of us, our brother’s and sister’s keepers; each of
us must accept responsibility for them. We are not individuals but one
community that must be a community of concern for the other and a community
showing this concern by reaching out in love.
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