Twenty Fourth
Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C
Perhaps, one of Christianity’s best loved hymns and
top ten choices for funerals is Amazing Grace. There is one particular line in
this hymn that resonates with our readings today, “I once was lost but now I’m
found.” In fact, the words of the hymn were a summary of the life of John
Newton, the man who wrote those beautiful lyrics. Many would find his choice of
wording strange and inappropriate. “Lost” is often regarded as an empty and
hopeless word when used in reference to things or to animals, but it’s
especially bleak when referring to people.
In one sense, the hymn declares that “lostness” is not
just the condition of the author of the hymn, but also endemic to humanity,
since Adam and Eve lost their way in the garden. Since then, the story of grace
is the story of God’s relentless pursuit of the lost and wayward children.
Lostness has many faces and creates many detours in our life. We are all lost.
The Bible is full of stories of people lost and then found. The children of
Israel were lost in Egypt until God found them. But even on their track to the
Promised Land, this condition continued to plague them – they were lost in the
wilderness for forty years; apparently Moses needed a compass more than a
staff. And having finally found their way to the Promised Land, the new home
which God had prepared for them, the Israelites, ironically, could even get
lost here. Exile after exile, Israel continues to spend more time lost than
found.
Getting lost does not seem too difficult for us to do.
What does it mean to be “lost”? “Lostness” can be a deliberate choice but more
than likely it is incidental to the human condition. We don’t mean to do it but
we can’t help ourselves. We get lost in relationships, in our careers, in our
life, in our faith, and some of the ways we get lost have not even been
invented yet. It all begins because we think we know the way. “Me, lost? Of
course not.” Being lost seems inevitable as it is often accompanied by personal
pride which refuses to admit that one is lost and thus do not see the need to
ask for directions or assistance. Maybe getting lost is natural because since
Adam and Eve, pride has been man’s perennial condition. That is why the most common
cause for getting “lost” without people even realising it, is “sin.” Sin always
takes you farther than you want to go, keeps you longer than you want to stay,
and costs you more than you want to pay. And, the most insidious power of sin
is that it blinds you to its destructive effects.
But the good news is that we are not condemned to a
perpetual condition of being lost, but we now have an opportunity to be found.
The paradox of this is that we must recognise we are lost before we can allow
ourselves to be found. Repentance is always the first step to being found.
Unrepentant sinners remain lost until they realise that God has already found
them. The Bible gives us this consoling picture of a God who is not contented
with us staying lost. After the Fall, and Adam and Eve’s exile from Paradise,
God did not condemn them to stay lost – He didn’t say, “Get lost” and “Don’t
come back!” In fact, the whole of salvation history testifies to this amazing
truth that God would not want us to be lost. On the contrary, He wants us to be
found.
Lots of young people often protest against what they
believe to be parental nagging and control:
“Mom give me some space I’ve got to find myself.” We hear that a lot
these days. The problem is that most people remain lost even when they’ve grown
out of adolescence. They still can’t find themselves even after having
attempted to reinvent themselves over and over again. The result is that people
use this as an excuse to live any way they please. But the truth is that it is
hard to find ourselves, in fact, it is impossible. As much as we want to find
ourselves, our Lord had to find us. Being found is not so much as us stumbling
into God, as it is God pursuing us.
This is where St Luke comes in with three wonderful
parables of lost and found. I’ve decided to read the shorter version which
omits the third parable of the Prodigal Son. We’ve already considered the story
of the Prodigal Son on the Fourth Sunday of Lent. The focus of each of these
stories, the real protagonist, is not the lost sheep, the lost coin, or the
lost son. Yes the sheep that wanders, the piece of silver that is lost, and the
prodigal son who wastes his inheritance in riotous living makes good
story-telling. But no, these are not the real protagonists of the three tales.
The clue to understanding these parables is not that they are about losing
something or someone, but all three parables are about finding. The parables
would be pointless and each ending would remain a cliff-hanger if the shepherd
did not go in search of the lost sheep in the wilderness until he found it, the
woman did not sweep the house until she recovered it, and the forgiving father
did not keep vigil, watching for his son’s return, and until he finally
embraced him. Each of these three characters point to the real hero, which is
and can only be God. It is He who takes the initiative, not us, the lost ones.
Yes, if “lostness”
is facing our inadequacies, then being found is coming face to face with God’s
sufficiency. We would always remain lost as long as we depend on ourselves.
Trusting ourselves is a prescription for being lost. Only God can find us. You
can be found but you just can’t find yourself, you just need to allow yourself
to be found by God.
Getting lost is natural being found is supernatural.
If you are saved, you know that it is not because you sought after God, but
because God sought after you and kept seeking until He rescued you from your
sin. He has, and He will continue to pursue you to the ends of the earth, the
deepest depths of the ocean, the furthest corners of the universe. There is no
place where you can hide from Him. There is effort and intentionality with God
seeking us out; for the shepherd explores until He finds the sheep,
the woman searches carefully until she recovers her coin, and the father waits
until his son returns. This is the heart of the gospel – God goes to great
lengths, sending us His Son, the eternal Word into our world in the flesh in
order to seek us and save us. And finally, our Lord Jesus died on the cross for
the forgiveness of our sins so that our “lostness” may be exchanged with
“foundness.” As Luke 19:10 tells us “for the Son of Man came to seek and to
save what was lost.” St Augustine reminds us: “God loves every person as if
there was no one else to love.”
What is even more important
is that God seeks us, finds us, and then “rejoices” over finding us. All three parables end with a party. If only finding
God was as much a priority for us. If only we rejoiced over finding Jesus like
He rejoices over finding us. Just like the
three protagonists, many of us find no cause for celebration as long as
something or someone remains missing. And just like them, it is only when we
find what we want, that we are able to call in our friends and neighbours to
rejoice with us. We rejoice not only because we have been found, but because we
have found the answer to our deepest longing – we have found “the hidden
treasure”, “the pearl of great price”, “the fatted calf.” If that has been missing in your life, be
assured, you have found Him. The last parable of the Prodigal Son tells us that
the father instructs his servants to slaughter the “fatted calf” to celebrate
his son’s return. Jesus is that fatted calf sacrificed for the sins of humanity
so that we who are lost may be found. At every Mass, we dine once again in the
heavenly banquet prepared for those who were once lost but now found, as we
feast on the “fatted calf,” “the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the
world.” “Happy are those who are called to the supper of the Lamb.”
Great word... Beautifully told. Helps my message... DEAD or ALIVE
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