The Parable of the
Lost Sheep
There are ninety-nine sheep safe in the fold. And one that wandered off. By any reasonable calculation, you stay with the ninety-nine. The math is obvious. The risk is obvious. The sensible thing is obvious. But the shepherd in this parable is not interested in the sensible thing. He leaves the ninety-nine and goes after the one — until he finds it. That is the God this parable reveals. And that changes everything about how you see yourself, the people around you, and what God is willing to do for the person who has wandered.
Jesus told this parable twice, in slightly different forms, for two different audiences. Luke 15 is directed at Pharisees who are disgusted that Jesus eats with sinners. Matthew 18 is directed at the disciples, teaching them how to treat the vulnerable and small within their community. Both versions carry the same thunderclap of an idea: God does not write off the one who wandered.
1Then drew near unto him all the publicans and sinners for to hear him. 2And the Pharisees and scribes murmured, saying, This man receiveth sinners, and eateth with them.
3And he spake this parable unto them, saying, 4What 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?
5And when he hath found it, he layeth it on his shoulders, rejoicing. 6And when he cometh home, he calleth together his friends and neighbours, saying unto them, Rejoice with me; for I have found my sheep which was lost.
7I say unto you, that likewise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons, which need no repentance.
10Take heed that ye despise not one of these little ones; for I say unto you, That in heaven their angels do always behold the face of my Father which is in heaven.
12How think ye? if a man have an hundred sheep, and one of them be gone astray, doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and goeth into the mountains, and seeketh that which is gone astray?
13And if so be that he find it, verily I say unto you, he rejoiceth more of that sheep, than of the ninety and nine which went not astray.
14Even so it is not the will of your Father which is in heaven, that one of these little ones should perish.
A Simple Explanation — What Is Jesus Actually Saying?
In Luke 15, the Pharisees are watching Jesus eat with tax collectors and people of bad reputation. They’re grumbling. Their complaint is theological: if Jesus were truly holy, he would keep himself separate from people like this. Jesus responds not with argument but with a story — and then immediately tells two more (the lost coin, the prodigal son). Three parables in a row, all saying the same thing with increasing intensity: God searches for what is lost. And when he finds it, he throws a party.
In Matthew 18, the context is a conversation about greatness in the kingdom of heaven — Jesus has just placed a child in the middle of the disciples as the model of kingdom values. He then turns to the treatment of “little ones” — the vulnerable, the overlooked, the easily dismissed. Do not despise them. Why? Because God himself goes after the one the world has stopped counting.
The central shock of the parable is the mathematics. A hundred sheep. One missing. Any shepherd would do a risk calculation: the cost of searching for one does not outweigh the danger to the ninety-nine left alone. Jesus doesn’t argue with the math — He just ignores it completely. The shepherd leaves all ninety-nine and goes after the one. Until he finds it. Not until he’s tried hard enough. Until he finds it.
And when he hath found it, he layeth it on his shoulders, rejoicing.
Luke 15:5 · KJV
Notice what happens when the sheep is found. It does not walk home. The shepherd carries it on his shoulders. A sheep that has wandered far enough to be lost is usually exhausted, possibly injured, certainly unable to find its own way back. The shepherd doesn’t point it in the right direction. He picks it up. That image — God carrying the found one home on his shoulders — is one of the most tender in all of scripture.
99 safe in the fold. 1 missing.
The sensible shepherd stays. The Good Shepherd leaves.
The Two Versions — Same Parable, Different Emphasis
The fact that Jesus told this parable twice — in Luke 15 and Matthew 18 — is itself significant. Each telling has a distinct emphasis worth understanding:
Are you the sheep that wandered — and need to know that someone is looking for you? Or are you one of the ninety-nine — and being challenged to value what God values, and to go after the one the world has already written off?
Real WorldModern-Day Scenarios — Where This Parable Lives Today
What This Parable Teaches — 5 Key Lessons
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1God’s pursuit is not proportional to our merit. The sheep wandered. It didn’t fall off a cliff through no fault of its own — it strayed. And the shepherd goes after it anyway, at personal cost, without waiting for the sheep to start moving in the right direction. God’s pursuit of the lost is not triggered by our improvement. It precedes it.
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2“Until he finds it” is one of the most important phrases in the parable. Not “until he’s looked hard enough.” Not “until a reasonable amount of effort has been made.” Until. He. Finds. It. There is a relentlessness in God’s pursuit of the wanderer that does not tire, does not give up the search, and does not return without the one who was lost.
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3The found sheep is carried, not directed. It is laid on the shepherd’s shoulders and carried home. A sheep that has wandered far enough to be lost cannot find its way back on its own. The return journey does not depend on the sheep’s navigation ability. The shepherd carries what cannot carry itself. This is grace in its most literal form.
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4Heaven celebrates proportionally to the lostness, not the greatness. “Joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons.” The greater the wandering, the greater the celebration of the return. This is the opposite of every human institution’s value system — which gives the most attention to the most successful. God’s attention goes disproportionately to the one who needed finding most.
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5This parable is a call to the ninety-nine, not just comfort for the one. In Matthew 18, Jesus is speaking to disciples — to the community of people already in the fold. The lesson is not just “God will find you if you wander.” It is also: “You, who are safe in the fold — share the shepherd’s values. Notice the one who is missing. Go after them.”
A Prayer Based on the Parable of the Lost Sheep
This parable calls for two kinds of prayer — one for the person who is lost and needs to be found, and one for the community that needs the shepherd’s heart for the one who has wandered. The full prayer holds both.
Shepherd, I have wandered. Not always dramatically — often just one step at a time, one distracted day after another, until I looked up and didn’t recognise where I was. I am not sure exactly when I drifted or how far. I only know that I am not where I was, and I am not where I should be, and I do not entirely know the way back.
This parable tells me You are already looking. That You have not written me off as a loss against the ninety-nine who stayed. That You left them — left what was safe and manageable — to come after me. That You are in the wilderness right now, where I am, and You will not return without me.
I cannot carry myself home. That much is clear. But this parable says You don’t need me to. You lay the sheep on Your shoulders and carry it. So I am asking You to do that — to carry me back to where I belong, because my navigation is clearly not reliable and my legs are tired and I have lost track of which direction home is.
For the people in this world who have been written off — by their families, their communities, their churches, themselves — remind them that they are still in Your count. That the search has not been called off. That “until he finds it” is still operative, still true, still personal.
And for those of us who are safe in the fold — give us the shepherd’s heart. Make us the kind of people who notice when one is missing. Who are willing to leave the comfort of the ninety-nine and go into the wilderness after the one. Who celebrate the return with the kind of joy that only makes sense to someone who understands how lost the lost really was.
Find me, Shepherd. Carry me home. Amen.
Amen.“Shepherd, I have drifted. I don’t know exactly how far. But I know You are already looking, and I know You carry what cannot carry itself. Find me. Carry me home. Amen.”
The number that matters in this parable is not 99. It’s 1. The shepherd doesn’t count and say “99% — that’s a good result.” He counts and says “one is missing.” That one sheep is not a rounding error. It is worth crossing the wilderness for. Worth the risk. Worth the search. Worth carrying home on his shoulders and throwing a party over. If you have ever felt like you were one of the lost — too far gone, too long absent, too tangled in the thorns to find your way back — the Good Shepherd has already left the ninety-nine. He is already on his way.