Jesus told of a shepherd who left ninety-nine sheep to find one lost in the wilderness. He didn’t scold the wanderer or demand promises. He lifted it onto his shoulders, called friends to celebrate, and declared heaven’s joy over one sinner found. This is your Shepherd—relentless in pursuit, extravagant in mercy. [39:58]
The lost sheep didn’t earn rescue. The Shepherd acted because the sheep belonged to Him. Jesus’ mission isn’t about deserving but owning: you are His. His cross proves how far He’ll go to claim what’s His.
When have you assumed God only cares for the “good” sheep? Hear His voice today: you’re worth leaving the ninety-nine. Where do you need to stop hiding and let Him carry you?
“What man among you, who has a hundred sheep and loses one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the open field and go after the lost one until he finds it? When he has found it, he joyfully puts it on his shoulders…” (Luke 15:4-6, CSB)
Prayer: Thank Jesus for pursuing you when you wandered. Ask Him to reveal areas where you still resist His claim.
Challenge: Write down one moment you felt “found” by God. Keep it where you’ll see it today.
The Lord leads through the valley of death’s shadow. Your Shepherd walks ahead, rod and staff in hand. His voice cuts through the echo of fear: “I am with you.” This isn’t a path you chose, but one He permits—and permeates—to prove His presence. [38:08]
Sheep panic without their shepherd’s voice. Jesus didn’t abandon you to life’s dark ravines. He entered death’s deepest gorge Himself, rising to guarantee His voice will always guide you home.
You’re in a valley now—of stress, grief, or doubt. Stop listening to the shadows. What lie about God’s character is the enemy whispering? How can you fix your ears on the Shepherd’s next word?
“Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me.” (Psalm 23:4, CSB)
Prayer: Ask Jesus to silence every voice except His. Name one specific fear His presence displaces.
Challenge: Text a friend in their own valley: “The Shepherd is with us. Let’s listen.”
The found sheep didn’t limp home. The Shepherd carried it, dirtied and exhausted, across His shoulders. Isaiah says we’re all wandering sheep; Peter says Jesus “bore our sins in His body on the tree.” Your rescue required His wounds. [41:36]
Strength isn’t the mark of Christ’s sheep—dependency is. Your Shepherd’s scars prove He’d rather die than lose you. His shoulders still bear you when you’re too weary to walk.
Where are you striving to “fix yourself” instead of resting in His grip? What burden do you need to transfer to His shoulders today?
“He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree; so that, having died to sins, we might live for righteousness. By his wounds you have been healed. For you were like sheep going astray…” (1 Peter 2:24-25, CSB)
Prayer: Confess one way you’ve resisted being “carried.” Thank Him for shouldering what you cannot.
Challenge: Tell someone today: “Jesus carried me through ________.” Be specific.
David praised the Shepherd who spreads a feast in enemy territory. Jesus fulfilled this at the Last Supper, offering His body and blood before entering His darkest hour. Communion isn’t a reward for the worthy—it’s sustenance for the weary. [22:53]
Your enemies—shame, sin, death—must watch as God nourishes you. The table declares your place in His family. No foe can snatch you from His hands.
What “enemies” mock you today? How does the Shepherd’s table redefine your identity in their presence?
“You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies; you anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows.” (Psalm 23:5, CSB)
Prayer: Thank Jesus for feeding you in plain sight of your struggles. Ask Him to deepen your trust in His provision.
Challenge: Set an extra place at your table today as a reminder: Christ hosts you always.
The risen Jesus kept His crucifixion scars. Thomas touched them and believed. Peter wrote that those wounds healed us. Your Shepherd’s scars aren’t shameful—they’re proof He entered your brokenness to pull you out. [42:18]
Sheep bite and kick when carried. Yet the Shepherd’s grip tightens, His scars pressing against your rebellion. His wounds silence your guilt.
What shame or sin makes you doubt His hold? How do His scars answer that doubt?
“Then he said to Thomas, ‘Put your finger here and look at my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side. Don’t be faithless, but believe.’” (John 20:27, CSB)
Prayer: Ask Jesus to press His scars against your deepest wound. Thank Him for healing what you cannot hide.
Challenge: Write the name of someone needing Christ’s healing. Pray over that name each time you wash your hands today.
The congregation affirms the faith with the Apostles Creed and reads Psalm 23 as a living declaration that the Lord shepherds his people. Prayer petitions move from local needs to global concerns, naming the vulnerable, the sick, grieving families, and the work of mission. Confession and absolution frame human failure honestly, then point to divine forgiveness received by faith. The Lord's Supper appears as a tangible foretaste of the eternal banquet and a present means of grace that strengthens faith. Children's ministry and communal singing punctuate corporate life, signaling formation across generations.
Scripture images reshape self-understanding by calling people sheep rather than self-made heroes. The description of sheep highlights human weakness, prone wandering, panic, and dependence. The parable of the lost sheep shows a shepherd who leaves the ninety-nine to rescue the one, rejoicing as the found sheep rests on his shoulders. That rescue costs the shepherd dearly because he bears the wounds of the flock, taking sin into his own body and rising victorious over death.
The text insists that false voices promise autonomy but deliver emptiness, anxiety, and guilt. True life comes when the shepherd speaks and the sheep hear his voice in the Word, in baptism, and at the Lord's table. Baptism names and claims each person as belonging to God, while the Lord's Supper gives real sustenance and assurance. The early church model of devoted teaching, breaking of bread, and prayer exemplifies how the shepherd gathers and sustains his flock.
The sermon calls for active mercy: the gathered people must go outward with courage, care, and truth to neighbors and nations. Practical compassion, protection of children, caregiving for the sick, and honest lament for the grieving become visible signs of the shepherd's rule. The closing prayer ties these threads together by reaffirming the shepherd who enters the valley, carries sinners home, and promises to lead them into everlasting life. The blessing sends the gathered out under the shepherd's care to live in the peace, mercy, and guidance that flow from Christ the Good Shepherd.
By his wounds, you have been healed. The shepherd becomes the lamb of God who will take away the sin of the world as John the baptizer describes him. He is the one who leads the sheep, but in leading the sheep, he chooses to lay down his life to bring back his lost sheep. In that, we see this good shepherd is not just a god who yells yells directions from a distant. He's a shepherd who walks into the valley, into your sin, into your suffering, into your grief, into your death.
[00:42:12]
(38 seconds)
#ShepherdWalksIntoSuffering
And he does not come out uninjured or unscathed. He comes out crucified, his body still bearing those marks even to this day in heaven, but yet death does not defeat him for he rises from the grave. See, what this means for us is that that psalm that's so near and dear to so many, that psalm 23, it's not just poetry that sounds pretty, it's the present reality we live in right now that the lord is my shepherd, which means I shall not want.
[00:42:49]
(32 seconds)
#RisenShepherdPsalm23
Dead sinners here and they're made alive. Lost sheep here and there and they're found. Not because they wanted to be found. No. But because the shepherd came looking for them. A shepherd who still comes to you with his gifts. See, Jesus, when he talks about sheep in general, he also gives you some specific ways where you can know that that he is for you, that you are that one that he has called by name and made you a part of his flock.
[00:44:54]
(28 seconds)
#ShepherdSeeksAndSaves
In fact, he calls his friends and neighbors together. He has a party because that which was lost has been found. That which had wandered away on its own power, on its own strength, thinking and following its own direction has been brought back home by the good shepherd. But the price of bringing that sheep back home is is incredibly great. So great that Peter tells us in the first letter he writes, first Peter chapter two, that the shepherd himself bore our sins in his body on the tree.
[00:41:37]
(34 seconds)
#CostlyRescue
And he did that for you in the waters and the word of your baptism, where in the name of the father, son, and holy spirit, you were named and claimed as a beloved son, as a chosen daughter in whom god was well pleased, not because of anything you could have done for him, but because the good shepherd is carrying you on his shoulders, and he knows the way home.
[00:45:22]
(22 seconds)
#BaptizedAndCarried
And despite that truth about us, the promise doesn't make change. You have a good shepherd, and he does not lose his sheep. Not one. Not ever. Because he's already gone through the varkest valley of the shadow of death, and he's come out on the other side, and he's brought you on his shoulders. So even now, you can say, the Lord is my shepherd. Not because I'm strong, not because I found my way, but because he he found me. He found me, and he he's gonna bring me home.
[00:47:48]
(45 seconds)
#NeverLoseASheep
That all word is is inclusive. It means the person sitting next to you, the person sitting in front of you, and, yes, even your kids and grandkids. We didn't just wander away accidentally and somehow got lost. We're turned in on ourselves. We're we've chosen wrong. We've rebelled. And the truth of the matter is if we are like all sheep that have gone lost and that are astray, we can't find our way back. We need help.
[00:38:53]
(33 seconds)
#AllNeedRescue
Good shepherd, you are the lamb of god who takes away the sin of the world. You are the one who transforms our darkness into light, who brings us out of lostness into the family. You prepared a feast before us with your son's body and blood to assure us that we belong, not because of anything we've done, but because of everything you've done. You are the good shepherd, and you found us as your sheep. Forgive us for the times we ignore your word. Forgive us for the times we wander and amaze us that you're right there, ready to welcome us, carry us back home.
[00:48:37]
(37 seconds)
#GoodShepherdForgives
They led and heard the word. They shared together the meal of the Lord's Supper, and they prayed together because in this world, they would have trouble, but they had one who overcome the world that they could talk to, their good shepherd. The good shepherd still gathers his sheep as he has here this morning, not by force or fear, but by speaking. And here's the thing, when the good shepherd speaks, his word accomplishes something every time.
[00:44:23]
(31 seconds)
#ShepherdsWordWorks
or or or live your best life. Just be true to yourself, and it sounds so good, but it's so deceiving. We follow and we seek after success and approval and comfort and power. Even religion can be something where we simply try to climb up to to be good to God, trying to be better than other people, so that somehow God might think of us strong. But Jesus says these voices these voices don't give life. They actually steal it.
[00:37:09]
(35 seconds)
#VoicesThatStealLife
Help us never to forget this, especially in the dark days of our lives where we wonder and we know that we're not enough. Help us know that you are always more than enough. For you are the good shepherd who has called us by name, who will one day carry us home into your presence for all eternity. So until that day, keep us in this truth, guard us in this grace, and lead us home. In your name, Jesus, we pray. Amen.
[00:49:14]
(29 seconds)
#GuardedByTheShepherd
because that sheep, that person belongs to him. And when he finds that lost sheep I love that that Jesus tells us he does he doesn't scold it. He doesn't give it a good whipping or a good talking to or make it walk on his way home because it made the shepherd walk so far and do so much in order to find him. No. What does a shepherd do with that lost sheep? Puts it on his shoulders, carries it home, not begrudgingly, not unwillingly, but rejoicing.
[00:41:05]
(33 seconds)
#ShepherdCarriesWithJoy
If you know sheep, you know sheep are not really the most impressive of animals. They're not strong in the sense of physical ability. They're they're strong in the sense of their head. They're very headstrong. You know that they're prone to wander. They're not the most clever of animals. They don't have sharp teeth or claws like a bear. They get lost. They they startle. They they they panic easily. And honestly, on their own, they don't make it very long in this world.
[00:35:08]
(29 seconds)
#SheepProneToWander
The shepherd willing to go to extreme lengths for just one sheep. He doesn't look at his fold and says, well, I got 99. I'm doing pretty bad. Just one lost sheep. No. That one lost sheep matters. That one lost person matters. Not because that sheep promises to do better next time, promises not to get lost, tries and gonna try harder to do better, or deserves it somehow. No. The shepherd goes for that lost sheep, that lost person,
[00:40:33]
(32 seconds)
#OneSheepMatters
We could have just said, I've had a sheepish sheepish week. We'd be true about who we are. But yet in the stead and by the command of Jesus, the good shepherd, as your under shepherd, as your pastor, I declare over you that your sins are forgiven, not because I have that power, but because Christ alone has that power. And if we doubted that word, he came to us with real food, not just bread and wine, but the good shepherd feeding you with his body and blood as his words and promises declare,
[00:46:06]
(32 seconds)
#ForgivenessInChrist
But sheep, not people who are impressive, not people who are self made or leaders, but people who are lost, who need rescue, who need deliverance, and who need to come with the realization that you are not the shepherd of your life. In John chapter 10, we heard Jesus warning about thieves and and robbers and voices that call out that that promise that promise so so many good things. I mean, it sounds so good. People think say things like, well, just just follow your heart
[00:36:30]
(39 seconds)
#BewareFalseVoices
You know, you look at that picture on the screen, and it and it looks kinda good, doesn't it? A little sheep out to pasture, all peaceful, standing tranquil, looking like an idyllic scene out of, you know, like all creatures great and small, something like that. You know, and and you look at that for a little bit, and you see it's nice, it's sweet, and well, there's something that I don't know, doesn't actually like that image. If you know sheep, you know sheep are not really the most impressive of animals.
[00:34:40]
(33 seconds)
#NotSoIdyllic
But yet the scripture over and over again, Old Testament, New Testament, doesn't matter where you look, it calls people, you, me, sheep. You are straying like sheep, Peter says. Jesus says, my sheep hear my voice, and and we said it together that that most famous psalm in all the Bible that the lord is my shepherd. And if the lord is my shepherd, that makes me the yeah. How do you feel about that?
[00:35:53]
(31 seconds)
#IAmTheSheep
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