While leading a weekly devotion meeting today using the
latest weekly topic from The Wired Word that
was dealing with the lost flight 370 incident, in the questions at the end,
this multi-part question was raised:
What does the Bible mean when it speaks of
"the lost"? In what way, if any, does that term relate to people who
are missing? Some Christians use the term "lost" to describe people
who don't (to their knowledge) have a relationship with Christ. Is that a
useful or accurate term? If so, in what way is it possible to be
"lost" from God?
The question resonated with me because only a couple months
earlier I had preached a message on the parable of the Prodigal son that had
touched on this area of thought, so I quickly pulled out a few quotes on the
topic to share with the group. Here are those thoughts, which make a pretty
good stand-alone article:
While it has become a common practice these days to call
all non-believers “lost” – that is not how the term is used biblically for the
few times the term is used. One of the key passages that use the term is Luke
19:10 - For the Son of Man came to seek and
to save the lost. So, what was lost that he came to save? Most today
would say the lost are everyone outside of Christ. But let us put that
statement back in context, as the above verse is actually the end of sentence:
Today
salvation has come to this house, since he also is a son of Abraham. For the
Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost. (Luke
19:9-10 ESV)
Hmmmm, so what does him being a son of Abraham have to do
with this topic of the lost? Well, everything actually. A key problem with many
in the modern church is that they focus too much on the New Testament, and fail
to comprehend or connect it with the Old Testament story.
The New Testament is actually the final chapters of a long
story that contains many promises that were being consummated finally. Honestly,
without a firm grasp on the depths of the Hebrew Scriptures, a true
understanding of the New Testament will be impossible. Gospel means “good news”
and that news is only good when you understand how bad the first two-thirds of
the story were, and the promises that were connected with it.
So, let’s look back and a very, very brief overview of who
were lost that Jesus came to save. It starts with knowing there were the 12
tribes, and that they previously split into two separate nations. The two
tribes of Judah and Benjamin were considered the Southern Kingdom, and together
they were referred to as the house of Judah.
The other ten tribes made up the Northern Kingdom, and they
were designated commonly by the house of Israel.
In the book of Hosea, we see that Hosea is told by the Lord to take a wife of
whoredom and have children of whoredom which is connected symbolism with the
tribes. These children are named names that represent the tribes in various
ways. The first son was named Jezreel:
Call his name Jezreel, for in just a
little while I will punish the house of Jehu for the blood of Jezreel, and I will put an end to the kingdom of the
house of Israel. (Hosea 1:4 ESV)
So, here we are told the ten tribes referred to as the
house of Israel will be brought to their end – Jezreel means that God has sown
– as in the sowing or scattering of seeds. Then we are told the next child was
a daughter named No Mercy:
Call her name No Mercy, for I will no more have mercy on the house of Israel, to forgive them at all. But I will have mercy on
the house of Judah, and I will save them by the LORD their God. (Hosea 1:6-7
ESV)
And then another son came:
When she had
weaned No Mercy, she conceived and bore a son. And the LORD said, "Call
his name Not My People,
for you are not my people, and I am not
your God." (Hosea 1:8-9 ESV)
So, here is what we are told.
These children will be the end of the kingdom of the house of Israel, they will
be scattered and sown, and they will be called ‘no mercy’ and ‘not my people.’ But
in verse 11 the promise to them is made:
And the
children of Judah and the children of Israel shall be gathered together, and
they shall appoint for themselves one head.
(Hosea 1:11a ESV)
This one head
they will under is of course the Messiah. So, the promise is that although they
are no longer a nation and will be scattered away from the covenant, one day they
will be brought back and reconciled unto God through the Messiah.
Now, we jump
to Ezekiel where the prophet is taken to a valley, shown old dry bones, and
they are given flesh and brought back to life with the Spirit of God. This is
understood as resurrection imagery looking to the day when the people are
restored to life in the land of promise. The story is followed by a second, the
two sticks story.
Son of man,
take a stick and write on it, 'For Judah, and the people of Israel associated
with him'; then take another stick and write on it, 'For Joseph (the stick of
Ephraim) and all the house of Israel associated with him.' And join them one to
another into one stick, that they may become one in your hand. (Ezekiel
37:16-18 ESV)
So, we have
two sticks, each representing the kingdom groups of Northern and Southern
kingdoms as we’ve already discussed. He says they will be one day brought back
into one stick. When inquired as to what this means, we are told:
Thus says the Lord GOD: Behold, I will take the people of
Israel from the nations among which they have gone, and will gather them from
all around, and bring them to their own land. And I will make them one nation
in the land, on the mountains of Israel. And one king shall be king over them
all, and they shall be no longer two nations, and no longer divided into two
kingdoms…My servant David shall be king over them, and they shall all have one
shepherd. They shall walk in my rules and be careful to obey my statutes.
(Ezekiel 37:21-24 ESV)
What we have here is a promise
of restoring the people of Israel who had been scattered among the nations - to bring them back and merge them with Judah
so that there are no longer two kingdoms, but one. And that one kingdom shall
be ruled by David – which we understand to be Jesus, the Messiah, the
descendant of David.
They shall be ruled by him,
and they shall have one shepherd. Hopefully, the idea of shepherd here is
something you have come across frequently in the ministry of the Messiah, who
called himself the shepherd, tying it right into to Ezekiel. He stated:
I am the good
shepherd. I know my own and my own know me, just as the Father knows me and I
know the Father; and I lay down my life for the sheep. And I have other sheep
that are not of this fold. I must bring them also, and they will listen to my
voice. So there will be one flock, one shepherd. (John 10:14-16 ESV)
Again, we see the Messiah as
shepherd, going forth to find the sheep not of the current fold to bring them
in and make one flock under one shepherd. Another time, in responding to the
pleas of the Caananite woman, Jesus plainly states he is there for one
particular and main focus in his ministry:
I was sent
only to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel. (Matthew 15:24 ESV)
Here is the mention of those
lost, scattered people of the house of Israel. This is who the Messiah was
first interested in retrieving as promised in Hosea and Ezekiel. Earlier in
Matthew, when Jesus was sending out the Apostles to preach, he plainly told
them to be on this mission too:
These twelve
Jesus sent out, instructing them, "Go nowhere among the Gentiles and enter
no town of the Samaritans, but go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. (Matthew 10:5-6 ESV)
Their mission
for that time was not to be unto anyone except these lost sheep of the house of
Israel, again, in fulfillment of promises in Hosea and Ezekiel. So, the main
focus of Christ’s work was to retrieve those lost sheep of Israel.
This is
further seen as being the case when we can jump over into 1 Peter, where we see
he is writing to these same dispersed people, the house of Israel:
Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ, To those who are elect exiles of the Dispersion in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia… (1 Peter 1:1 ESV)
And what does he say to these
dispersed people of the house of Israel? He goes through the rest of chapter
one showing them some of the plan of God in salvation, and then we get to chapter
2:
But you are a
chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own
possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of
darkness into his marvelous light. Once you were
not a people, but now you
are God's people; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy. (1 Peter 2:9-10 ESV)
Remember, in Hosea the
children’s names, referring to the house of Israel were called no mercy and not a people, so Peter is directly addressing the promise of Hosea
here with this same language. He states later in that same chapter to those
same people:
For you were straying like sheep, but have now returned to
the Shepherd and Overseer of your souls. (1 Peter 2:25)
There is so many more areas we could
cover to see this, but let this be an introduction to show that technically, the term “lost”
as it is used in Scripture is used as a focus to the ending of the story of
the restoration of the ten tribes that had been lost from the covenant. They
were previously cast out and dispersed among the heathen nations – but the good
news is, the time had come where under the early ministry of the Jesus and the
Apostles, they were being brought back in to the fold, into the new covenant,
under their shepherd Messiah. The remnant from all twelve tribes were being brought
back into one new tribe which was later combined with the entrance of people
from the heathen nations, and now, as Gal. 3 tells us, in this new people in
Christ, there are “neither Jew
nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for
you are all one in Christ Jesus.”
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