"Rejoice, for the Lord Brings Back His Own!"

Narrator: Chris Genthree
 •  4 min. read  •  grade level: 4
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But all through the mountains, thunder riven,
And up from the rocky steep,
There arose a glad cry to the gates of Heaven,
“Rejoice, I have found My sheep!”
And the angels echoed around the throne,
“Rejoice, for the Lord brings back His own!
The song came ringing out on the frosty air of the late October morning, and the hills sent back a triumphant echo.
Around a bend of the road appeared the singer, tall and strong, carrying in his arms the sheep he had spent the hours of the night seeking. The animal was trembling with cold. The man looked at it with a smile, saying, “You poor sheep, why did you wander away? Did you think the rocks and stones on the bare hills were more nourishing than the green grass in the valley? Did you think you were safer among the wolves than with your friends at home? Why did you turn your back on your shepherd who never turned his back on you?”
Here he paused as he discovered a man standing near one of the buildings, a young man—a stranger.
He looked him over, and then asked: “Who are you?”
“Who? Me? I’m nobody.”
“Where are you from?”
“Everywhere.”
“Where are you bound for?”
“Anywhere.”
“Where do you belong?”
“Nowhere.”
“Do you want a job?”
“I would be glad of a job, if I could only get away from my present boss.”
“Who is your boss?”
“Satan.”
“Does he pay good wages?”
“Good wages? No. But big wages, yes.”
“What kind of wages?”
“Hunger enough for a dozen men. Rags, desolation, shattered nerves, ruined character and a burning appetite for the thing that brought about my ruin.”
The shepherd stood for a moment in deep thought and said to himself: I’ve spent half the night in trying to rescue a four-legged sheep. Dare I drive this two-legged one from my door and make no effort to save him?
Looking up, he said to the tramp: “You look to me as if you could eat some breakfast. How about it?”
The young man straightened up and said, “Thank you, sir. I’m very hungry, but I don’t deserve anything.”
“Young man,” was the reply, “I never turned a hungry man from my door, and I never will, by God’s grace.”
After putting the sheep with the others, the shepherd led the young man up to the house where his wife stood in the doorway. His coming she had known when she heard, a half hour before the welcome news, “Rejoice, for the Lord brings back His own!” ringing out throughout the valley. After both men had washed, they sat down to the table to eat the bountiful breakfast. Robert West, the shepherd, very reverently asked the Lord’s blessing on the food.
While West gave his wife an account of his search for the lost sheep, their guest ate as only a hungry man can. Plainly, he was thinking as well as eating, and thinking with a purpose.
When the meal was over the host read, from the fifteenth chapter of Luke, the parables of the Lost Sheep and the Prodigal Son and offered up an earnest prayer for all wandering ones. During this prayer the young man, kneeling with the others, was deeply moved. At the close when the Wests sang together, “Rejoice, for the Lord brings back His own!” the wanderer burst into tears.
“Friend,” he said, “for nearly two years I have wandered over the country with the shadow of my wretched self falling on the path ahead of me. This morning, bowing here, I acknowledged my sin and put my trust in the Lord Jesus. Sir, the shadow of myself is behind me since I have turned my face and heart to the light, and I ask your prayers and help that God will strengthen and keep me till journey’s end. It was His will that you should bring back this wandering sheep, as well as the one you brought back earlier this morning.”
With joyful tears the three could now sing together, “Rejoice, for the Lord brings back His own!”