🐼 Proper 19

Shadows, Sheep, and Coins

Good morning from Albany, Oregon. Today’s readings come from Exodus 32, Psalm 51, 1 Timothy 1, and Luke 15. At first glance, Moses arguing with God in Exodus and Jesus’ parable of the lost sheep in Luke don’t seem to belong together. But I think they do—like a thing and its shadow.

A shadow isn’t a “thing” in itself; it’s simply the absence of something else. Cold is the absence of heat, darkness the absence of light. Shadows and echoes aren’t evil; they just aren’t the thing itself. They can help us see by contrast, but we can’t confuse them with the real thing.

That’s where today’s readings connect. They invite us to see the echoes and shadows in our own thinking, and how God uses them to draw us toward the real.

Shadows and Value

In Luke 15, Jesus tells two stories: the lost sheep and the lost coin. To his Jewish listeners, shepherds and sheep were a central symbol of their imagination and faith. A good shepherd never abandons even one sheep. To others shaped by Greco-Roman values, he shifts metaphors: coins. Everyone understands the value of money.

Both stories press the same point: every life has value.
If you are a shepherd, one sheep matters. If you are a merchant, one coin matters. So how much more do God’s people matter?

Jesus meets his hearers where they are—using the pastoral imagery of Israel’s past for some, and the economic imagery of the empire for others. Either way, the message is the same: You are not expendable. You are worth seeking out.

Arguing With God

Meanwhile in Exodus 32, Moses argues with God. This might feel odd to us, but in the Hebrew imagination, this was not only allowed—it was expected. Abraham did it, Job did it, and Moses does it here.

The Greeks imagined gods who were powerful but ultimately indifferent. You could reason with them, but they didn’t really care. The Hebrews imagined something different: one God who created everything and could be persuaded. Why? Because God’s own character, reputation, and promises mattered. Moses reminds God: “What will the Egyptians say?” and God relents.

This is a vision of relationship—of a God who listens, who is responsive, who is not trapped in divine aloofness. It raises a good question: Why don’t we argue with God anymore?

The Hebrew and the Greek

Here’s what fascinates me: the Hebrew Bible and Greek philosophy both search for truth, but they do so differently. The Greeks pursued explanations—geometry, logic, order. The Hebrews pursued meaning—stories, law, prophecy.

Both are “true enough,” but the Hebrew way insists that the moral meaning of things precedes our explanations. Jesus draws on both traditions. He can speak as the shepherd-king David would, but also as a teacher who knows that some will only understand through the coin in their hand.

Finding Ourselves in the Stories

These passages remind us:

  • Every person has value, whether you think in sheep or in coins.

  • God listens and can be persuaded. Like Moses, we are invited to wrestle with the divine.

  • Our symbols matter. They aren’t the thing itself, but they help us approach what we can’t fully grasp.

The Bible remains compelling because it speaks in both echoes and substance. It holds up a mirror to humanity while revealing something greater than ourselves. In it, we find not just shadows, but glimpses of the truest thing humanity has ever said about itself and its Creator.

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