How easy it is to get stuck in the maintenance mode. We start to believe that everything is about me. Church—it’s about me. Jesus—he’ll make it all better for me. Children—they give meaning to my life.
I stated last Sunday that Jesus’ hometown crowd slipped into that maintenance mode very quickly (Luke 4). After hearing Jesus’ inaugural vision, they were thrilled—our hometown boy has returned to take care of us. I know the text doesn’t say that explicitly, but it’s implied in the conversation. Notice how Jesus confronts them. He anticipates their line of reasoning, saying, “Doubtless you will quote to me this proverb, ‘Doctor cure yourself!’” This proverb was used in antiquity to suggest that one ought to care for his own first. The hometown crowd was thinking, in essence, Jesus has returned for us, to make it all better for us. The maintenance mode.
Jesus doesn’t stay there however. He reminds the crowd with two offensive stories that he will be on the move. He’s going to keep moving, reaching out, blessing people the powers-that-be don’t really like. He will heal the sick, embrace the outcast, and call the sinner to repentance.
Why? Because God is like that—God has a heart for the missing. It’s this thought that comes to expression in the parable of the lost lamb (Luke 15). Jesus asks the question, “Which one of you, having a hundred sheep and losing one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the wilderness and go after the one that is lost until he finds it?” The answer to that question is not many—not many would leave the ninety-nine in the wilderness. In a sheep-pen? Yes. With another shepherd? Yes. But not in the wilderness. Which is the point of the parable: when it comes to the father’s love, we’re not talking about playing it safe but about extravagant love. Love beyond reason. God has a heart for the missing, so Jesus won’t get sucked into the maintenance mode vortex.
All of this poses a great challenge for the church. Do we have a heart for the missing? Does our heart beat with a love for our neighbor? If we have faith—an active faith, the faith of mustard seed—then surely our church should have a heart that beats for those who do not yet know that they belong to the Father. Peace.
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