Jesus tells three parables of lost things found— sheep, coin, son—revealing God’s joyful pursuit of sinners and the heavenly celebration over one repentant heart.
Explore the true cost of discipleship in Luke 14:25-35—loving Christ supremely, bearing your cross, and counting all as loss for His sake.
In a divided world, embrace the second great commandment: love your neighbor as yourself, as Jesus teaches through the Good Samaritan. Eternal life flows from Christ’s mercy.
Jesus’ parable of the great banquet reveals God’s urgent invitation to sinners: reject excuses, accept grace, and feast eternally in His Kingdom.
Scripture Reading: Luke 13:18–30 And then he said, what is the kingdom of God like? And to what shall I compare it? It is like a mustard seed which a man took and put in his garden, and it grew and became a large tree, and the birds of the air nested in its branches.…
Jesus teaches that the Kingdom starts small like a mustard seed and leaven, yet grows to fill the earth. Strive now to enter the narrow gate before the door is shut forever.
Jesus warns that tragedy is a call to repent, not to judge others. Like the barren fig tree given one final year, we live in a season of grace.