www.EverythingYouKnowAboutJesusIsWrong.com
Leaving the 99 — The people who think they’re safe might be the ones missing the point.
“Good. Found. Fine.”
That’s how the ninety nine saw themselves.
That’s how they believed the story worked.
But when the Shepherd walked away from the crowd that felt secure… everything was exposed.
In this chapter, we explore one of Jesus’ most misunderstood teachings — not just a comforting story about a lost sheep, but a confrontation with the illusion of being “found.” Because the real tension isn’t about the one who wandered off… it’s about the ones who never realized they were lost.
And Jesus shifts the perspective entirely — not asking why the one wandered, but why the ninety nine think they don’t need to be found at all.
🔍 In This Video You’ll Discover:
Why Jesus told the story of the ninety nine in response to religious criticism
The hidden irony behind the “righteous” who don’t think they need repentance
What it really means that the shepherd leaves the ninety nine behind
Why spiritual comfort can actually distance us from God
How identifying as “fine” might be the most dangerous place to be
What it means that we are all the one — whether we realize it or not
🌱 Themes We Explore
The illusion of being spiritually “good enough”
The tension between religion and repentance
Comfort vs. desperation in our relationship with God
Jesus’ relentless pursuit of the lost
Humility as the gateway to being found
Breaking out of the safety of the “ninety nine” mindset
🧠 Questions for Reflection
Do you see yourself as someone who needs to be found… or someone already “fine”?
Where have you built fences to feel safe instead of following where Jesus leads?
Have you mistaken familiarity with faith for true dependence on God?
What would change if you fully embraced your own lostness?
Are you willing to leave comfort behind to follow the Shepherd into uncomfortable places?
📘 About This Series
Everything You Know About Jesus Is Wrong is a chapter by chapter journey into the life of Jesus that cuts through politics, pop culture, nostalgia, and religious varnish. Each episode peels back assumptions to reveal the historical, human, disruptive, compassionate Jesus who didn’t just rescue the lost — He exposed who was still pretending to be found.
If you’re ready to rethink Jesus — not as someone who rewards the comfortable, but as someone who pursues the desperate — you’re in the right place.