This is so very good and true.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Carleeta Manser 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2009 11:51 PM
  Subject: {dbilg} Finding the lost Sheep


  Finding the Lost Sheep 

  And if so be that he find [the lost sheep], verily I say unto you, he
  rejoiceth more of that sheep, than of the ninety and nine which went not
  astray. Matt. 18:13. 

  Jesus would impress upon the hearts and minds of His disciples the value of
  the human soul. He demands cooperation on the part of His followers in
  rescuing lost sinners. There is one lost sheep, the very least that could be
  numbered; and yet He represents the shepherd as leaving the ninety and nine,
  and going into the mountains to seek that one lost wanderer. Then why is it
  that the sons and daughters of God are so cold of heart, so indifferent to
  the souls that are perishing around them? Why is it that the members of the
  church are so willing to let the whole burden rest upon the shoulders of the
  minister? How great a mistake is this, since every subject of grace is to
  have a part to act in saving those that are lost. 

  To every man Christ has given his work, and personal efforts must be put
  forth to save the perishing. The worker must be much in secret prayer; for
  this work requires great wisdom in the science of saving souls. Christ said,
  "I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in
  darkness, but shall have the light of life." He said also to His disciples,
  "Ye are the light of the world." He made the church the depositary of sacred
  truth. He left His church a stewardship of sacred truth, and it is the work
  of the church to carry forward His mission of saving the world. He is the
  Sun of Righteousness, who is to impart bright rays to His followers; and
  they, in turn, are to shed His light upon others. They are to be His
  representatives to the world. Believing in Christ as their personal Saviour,
  they take up the work where He left it. "Without me ye can do nothing," said
  Christ; but with Him we can do all things. There is a large, a very large
  number of straying and lost sheep that have perished in the wild deserts of
  sin, simply because no one went after them, to search for them and to bring
  them back to the fold. Jesus uses the illustration of a lost sheep to show
  the need of seeking after those who have wandered from Him; for a sheep once
  lost will never find its way back to the fold without help. It must be
  sought for, it must be carried back to the fold. 

  All heaven is interested in the work of saving the lost. Angels watch with
  intense interest to see who will leave the ninety and nine, and go out in
  tempest and storm and rain into the wild desert to seek the lost sheep. The
  lost are all around us, perishing and sadly neglected. But they are of value
  to God, the purchase of the blood of Christ. . . . We are to seek to save
  those that are lost. We are to search for the one lost sheep, and bring him
  back to the fold; and this represents personal effort (Review and Herald,
  June 30, 1896). 

  >From Lift Him Up - Page 210


  

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