Sunday, February 17, 2013

Lost and Found Luke 15: 1 - 10


           Lost:  One summer when they were younger, my daughters and I visited my mom near Houston, TX for several days.  While we were there a distant cousin died, and we drove to Pasadena—a city that bumps up into Houston like Kansas City, MO bumps up into Kansas City, KS—for the visitation. I used this new-fangled Google Maps for directions to the funeral home.  But I also had a Houston city map in my car—which included Pasadena.  Lots of extended family from multiple generations were present. As with many visitations, it was an opportunity to renew family connections, and we stayed quite a while.  We decided to leave as dusk approached. 
            From the funeral home and I started backtracking—thinking I could reverse the directions I used to get there to return home.  But we encountered a problem—some kind of waterway—a bayou, a ditch, I don’t remember exactly what. The waterway interrupted the route and we couldn’t return to the interstate the way we had come.  Now I needed to get on the interstate to get back to my Mom’s house. In our backtracking we drove under the interstate, but there was no access back onto it.  So I had to keep traveling west on the not-very-well maintained Pasadena city road.  Thinking I could travel just a ways and I’d find some other north/south road that would parallel the freeway, I kept driving west.  But that old Pasadena city road twisted and turned and before long, I was beyond back-tracking.  We were lost.  What’s worse, we were in an industrial-looking part of town, a little on the run-down side.  There weren’t many people out and about and those who were didn’t appear welcoming.  I asked my mom to get the Houston city map out of the glove box and figure a way back to the interstate.  But she needed a magnifying glass to see the streets on the map, and I had none.  Neither of my daughters had learned to read a map yet.  As we continued driving, I was getting more and more anxious.  It did not seem safe to be traveling here and it certainly did not seem safe to pull over and stop so that I could look at the map.  It was now getting dark, and I was afraid.  As Sarah called out the names on the street signs, Mom heard a street she remembered from years ago—driving to Gulfgate Shopping Center—near Pasadena.  We turned down that street and in a short while found ourselves near an access road to the interstate.  We knew where we were.  Lost—I’ve been geographically lost.  And I was afraid. 
            Lost:  The Paola Chamber of Commerce coordinates Chamber coffees each Friday—held in different businesses around town with those owners hosting the coffee.  The first chamber coffee I attended, I did not know a single person there.  I had absolutely no connection with anyone there—no visual recollection of anyone, no name sounded familiar, no connection. Standing all by myself, I felt alone.  Have you ever walked into a party where everyone knew each other and had already mapped out who was conversing with whom, had already staked out “their” territory?  Have you ever been the new student in class, the new kid on the block?  If so, then you may know what it feels like to be relationally lost; lost in a crowd; alone—feeling invisible and insignificant. 
            Lost: When I was pregnant with Sarah—in my last trimester, one evening I decided to make pizza for supper—from scratch.  I mixed and kneaded and pressed out the dough.  I spread the tomato sauce.  I sliced mushrooms and pepperoni.  I chopped onions and green peppers.  I grated cheese.  And I carefully placed all the ingredients on the pizza and put the pizza in the preheated oven.  When the timer went off, I opened the oven door, grasped the pizza pan, lifted it off the rack and pulled my arm out of the oven.  As I closed the oven door, I dropped the pizza on the floor.  In that moment, I lost it.  I slumped down on the kitchen floor and burst into tears.  Kevin came running into the kitchen.  Are you okay?  What’s wrong?  Why are you crying?  Look—I pointed at the mess on the floor.  It’s okay, he said, it’s just a pizza.  But I spent all evening making it. It’s okay, he said, it’s just a pizza.  No, it’s everything.  It’s a metaphor for my life. I couldn’t hold onto the pizza, and I can’t hold onto everything in my life—my teaching job, our relationship, my church responsibilities and now becoming a mommy. Hormones in pregnancy may have intensified my feelings that evening, but I felt like I was drowning in a sea of emotions.  Lost—I’ve been emotionally lost—and felt despair.
            Have you ever been lost?  Geographically, relationally, emotionally, spiritually lost?  Have you been afraid, alone, confused?  Have you felt like you were invisible and insignificant?  Have you despaired?  If so, you might see yourself in today’s parables.
            Jesus tells 2 parables in today’s text—2 “lost” parables.  In the 1st parable, a sheep nibbles herself away from the flock.  Spying what looks like a tasty bush of berries over there and then some luscious clover over here and then some fragrant flowers over yonder and all of a sudden she looks around and she is all alone.  She is confused.  How did I get here?  She is agitated.  Where is the flock?  She is lost.  Fear sets in and grows with each new, unfamiliar sound.  Time passes and despair takes over.  She is convinced she will never be reunited with the flock. And then, she feels the vibrations of footsteps; she hears a familiar voice; she sees the face of her shepherd; and relief washes over her.  She is gently scooped up into the shepherd’s arms, and as she rides on his shoulders, she marvels that she is so treasured by the shepherd.  Treasured, for he left all the others to search for her!  Treasured—for he risked everything—his job, even his life—for her.  Lost and found—the sheep’s emotions move from overwhelming fear to immense gratitude; from despair to joy.
            Jesus tells 2 parables in today’s text, and in both—the parable of the lost sheep and the parable of the lost coin—the shepherd and the woman carefully and thoroughly search for that which was lost.  In both parables, the lost is treasured.  It is valued; it is held very dear.  And so, in both parables, the seeker throws a party when finding what was lost.  Both the shepherd and the woman invited their families and friends to come celebrate with them the recovery of their lost treasures—sheep and coin. 
            Perhaps you’ve never been lost, so you don’t see yourself in the role of the lost one. There is still a place for you in these parables.  For you can be one of the celebrants—friend and family rejoicing over the recovery of that which is treasured, that which had been lost.  Can you see yourself in that role?—a friend of God, invited to join in the festivities surrounding reconciliation, redemption, or recovery?  In these 2 parables, Jesus conveys “the joy of finding is so abundant that it cannot be contained; one person alone cannot adequately celebrate it.”[1]  This is God’s joy when finding any one of us ready to receive God’s grace.  “This joy is the heart of the gospel.”[2]
            Can you see yourself as one, like God, for whom finding and restoring gives pleasure?  Can you see yourself as one, who like God, will not give up but who will search, leaving no stone unturned to seek out those who for whatever reason find themselves separated from God or separated from others? Can you see yourself as one, like God, who will take risks to light the way for others to see God’s love?  As we journey through Lent, may we all find ourselves in these parables.  Lost and found; loved and treasured; living, loving, and serving; celebrating with Christ.


[1] Fred P. Craddock.  Luke in Interpretation:  a Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching series.  Louisville: John Knox Press, 1990. p. 186.
[2] Fred P. Craddock.  Luke in Interpretation:  a Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching series.  Louisville: John Knox Press, 1990. p. 186.

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