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When he comes home, he calls together his friends and his neighbors, saying to them, `Rejoice with me, for I have found my sheep which was lost!`
Verse Takeaways
1
God's Joy is Shared
Commentators note that the shepherd doesn't rejoice alone; he actively calls his friends and neighbors to celebrate with him. This illustrates a profound truth about God's character: His joy over a repentant sinner is not a private feeling but an explosive, communal celebration. Scholars explain that the Greek word used implies mutual joy, emphasizing that finding the lost is an event for the whole community of heaven to share.
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Book Overview
Luke
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8
Rejoice with me (συνχαρητε μο). Second aorist passive of συνχαιρω, an old and common verb for mutual joy as in Php 2:17f. Joy dema…
19th Century
Bishop
He calleth together his friends and neighbours.—The recurrence of the two words so soon after Luke 14:12 is suggestive. T…
Preacher
What 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…
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For the phrase “suppose one of you,” see comment on 14:5. The situation Jesus describes was a common one. One hundred sheep was a normal-sized floc…
17th Century
Pastor
And when he comes home The house, or home, to which Christ comes and brings thither his lost sheep on his shoulders …
Minister
The parable of the lost sheep is very applicable to the great work of man's redemption. The lost sheep represents the sinner as having departed fro…
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