4th Sunday of Easter: The Good Shepherd and Abundant Life

 

Introduction

         Good morning dear friends. I’m Fr. Morgan Reed, the Vicar here at Corpus Christi Anglican Church. The fourth Sunday of Easter is called Good Shepherd Sunday where we focus on Christ’s good shepherding, listening to his voice, and following him into abundant life. 

         I was thinking back this week to 2008. Ashley and I had just gotten married, she had finished school, and we packed up a moving truck to drive across the country and move into a new apartment in downtown Chicago. We made it through California, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, Nebraska, and then made it half-way into Iowa. That year the  Mississippi river flooded and halfway through Iowa we started seeing more and more towns under water along the highway. We came to a sign that said I-80 closed ahead. About half of Iowa was closed along I-80 and this was before Google Maps existed. We were tired and so close! We pulled off the highway and went to a truck stop to buy another paper map and figure out our way. As we sat down and were figuring it out, a trucker came by and said, “you all can follow me across the Illinois line.” It was so kind, but also risky. We drove through very narrow farm roads through corn fields behind this truck and it felt like it would never end! Finally there was a break in the corn fields and we finally saw a main road again. We crossed into Illinois and were only a few hours from Chicago. I’m so grateful to that kind trucker! He was a reminder that God was watching over us.

         Even in getting to Chicago, we had to start over making friends and connections, we had no car, no jobs, and we were processing a lot as a couple who was still in their first year of marriage. We may not know why God’s taking us along certain paths, and we may wonder if we’re ever going to get there, but Jesus is our good shepherd who will lead us and guide us into pleasant places of peace and abundance even when the journey involves dark valleys. Perhaps you can remember times when it felt like a risk to trust Jesus. Maybe you’re on the cusp of a moment like that right now.

         We do go through deserts, trackless wastelands, and deep dark valleys — but we do not go it alone. We go through it with the one who knows the way out. There are many voices of false shepherds who will prey on our fears of scarcity. They may even promise shortcuts through the valley of deep darkness, but they do not have what is best for us in mind.

         Jesus, our Good Shepherd, calls us into abundant grazing lands, but it takes recognizing his voice and following him into the place of abundance rather than scarcity. As we look at our Gospel passage this morning, let me pray for us. “In the name of God, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, Amen. Lord, may the words of my mouth and the meditation of our hearts be always acceptable in your sight, O Lord, our rock, and our redeemer. Amen.”

 

A. 1-5 Hear and recognize the voice of the shepherd

         Jesus tells a parable in verses 1-5 about his sheep who are in a sheep pen. Hearing his voice, they follow him. This follows the story of Jesus healing the blind man in chapter 9. The blind man, like Israel, was looking for the tender shepherding of God. But just like Ezekiel 34, the people were encountering religious leaders who only wanted to consume them and exploit them. But Jesus is the Messiah and Good Shepherd.

          Our lectionary helps us see Jesus’s shepherding here through the lens of Psalm 23. He is the one who creates the scenario of safety in which his sheep can lie down in the grass beside running water. Hebrew writers in the Old Testament didn’t make the body/soul distinction that we find in later hellenism. Rather than “he restores my soul,” the idea is “he brings me back.” In those times that we are prone to wander, to believe the lies that people have told us, to turn from God in our desire for self-sufficiency, when we wonder where we have gone wrong and if there is ever a way back, Jesus will tenderly bring us back. He suffered and died for us, and has risen to conquer death and sin for us. He has entered the dark valleys with us to show us the way out. By the resurrection, the dark valleys become the places of redemption where we become more acutely aware of our need for the shepherd’s presence.

         I would love for this to be a place and community that points people to the good shepherd. As people are formed in worship together, do Formation Groups, enjoy cookouts together, and rest with one another, I would love for this community to be a place of safety where you exhale as you walk in on a Sunday and your nervous system can calm down.

         Listen for Jesus’s voice in prayer, scripture, in the testimony of the ancient church, the sacraments, and in the spirit’s work in this fellowship. His voice is heard through others who help us see the goodness of Jesus’s shepherding and what he’s bringing us into. Knowing Christ’s voice means being able to cut through the distractions and distortions of the voices of thieves and robbers: pushing back against theological error and heresy, naming, working through, and rejecting the lies that those close to us have cursed us with, and resisting the temptation to shift the blame when an acute sense of guilt might otherwise produce works of repentance. Jesus wants to bring us back to abundant grazing lands and we need to listen for his voice.

 

B. 6-10 Follow the shepherd into the pastureland and find abundant life

         After hearing his voice, we follow him. In following him, we will come into the green pastures of abundant life. 

         In verses 6-10 Jesus explains the parable, which his followers don’t seem to understand. Jesus contrasts himself with robbers who exploit and do not do what is best for the sheep. They steal, kill, and destroy. Jesus says “I came that they may have life and have it abundantly.”

         As we think about abundant life, we should consider what life looks like when we follow Jesus into good pasturelands. I watched this show once where cattle ranchers had to take their cows on a perilous journey between one of two pastures depending on the time of year and where grass is available. They had to get a herd to go across rivers, through valleys, along beaches, and ward off predators to get the cows to the places of pasture. The journey is far from fun...in fact it is unsettling and sometimes terrifying for the cows. The rancher’s presence is necessary for defense, comfort, and guidance.

         We are always in need of Jesus’ defense, comfort, and guidance as he brings us from pastureland to pastureland. Walking with Jesus as a good shepherd means that we will encounter hardships. And those hardships become the opportunities to build a deeper trust in the care of our Lord. The alternation of Jesus’s presence through the dark valleys and into the green pastures is a portrait of a growing follower of Jesus.

         Following Jesus as our good shepherd also encourages us to live in the abundance of the pasture rather than the scarcity of our grass patch. There is a word in this for pastors, but I think it is also a word for all of us because it is a disposition for any vocation. There are pastors and leaders who make decisions based on keeping specific people, especially if they give a lot of money. Prayerful vision and discernment aren’t driving the ship— instead they’re worried about staying in their little patch of grass rather than risking to see what pasture might be there for them if they’d just let Jesus lead.

         There is another scarcity lie people fall into. When someone says “I’m not going to be like my parent” or “I’m not going to be a manager like my old manager” or something similar. This limits us from the unique ways we are made and the gifts we’ve been given. Instead, we can begin with using some stories of harm experienced under a family member or boss and begin to name what happened accurately. Share those stories with safe people: a therapist, spiritual director, priest, or trusted friend. As you name accurately what happened, and Jesus begins to heal your wounds, you will begin to be more fully yourself to be the parent or manager, baseball coach, or whatever else you are called to be. This is abundance.

         Following the good shepherd into abundance will give us the courage to risk doing what is right because our fears are rightly aligned. We risk engaging in productive conflict because we fear someone not knowing the goodness of abundant life in Christ more than we fear losing a relationship. If we are parents, our longing is for our children to experience the goodness of God even if it means getting upset with us. Sometimes we have to put up healthy boundaries “Your hands were made for kindness, not hitting”. Sometimes we have to give consequences “If you break this expensive thing then I’ll be garnishing your allowance for some time.” And while we hold space for our children’s anger, we continue to help them understand that we love them when they’re angry and they’re receiving consequences. They’re anger and our fear of breaking the relationship cannot be the guiding principle of parenting. We won’t do it perfectly, but when we mess up, will we metabolize our guilt and embarrassment and risk apologizing to repair the relationship? We engage in abundance when we give thought and intention to how our children experience the world and us. We have to risk spending time to do our own internal work because what our kids experience of us will inform what they experience of Jesus. There is too much at stake to just coast along unreflectively in our brokenness.

         We all need the healing and abundant life that is beyond the borders of our little grass patch, but we often don’t want to leave our dwindling grass patch because we don’t see the pasture and we don’t know how to get there. Trust the Good Shepherd, listen for his voice, and follow him.

 

Conclusion

         On this Good Shepherd Sunday, some of us are in the middle of two pastures: wandering in trackless waste lands or dark and frightening valleys. Some of us might be doing the hard work of healing and we are on the edge of the valley where the sun is starting to rise on the meadows in front of us. Some of us are holding way too tightly to our little patch of grass and afraid to go on the journey with Jesus because we don’t know what challenges await us. Remember that Jesus is the good shepherd who wants to lead us to abundant life. Listen for his call in the scripture, in his saints, in the places of encountering his presence thoughtfully each day, in the sacraments, and in the voices that speak hard truths for our welfare — even if we don’t like the tone of that voice. Don’t be deceived by thieves who want to exploit and consume us — nice voices whispering platitudes that will ultimately distort our loves and ways of understanding the world and the God who made it — and make us less human. And when we hear the voice of Jesus, let’s follow him into the places that are hard because where he is taking us is a place of rest that we long for so deeply.

Let’s pray: “O God, whose Son Jesus Christ is the Good Shepherd of your people: Grant that, when we hear his voice, we may know him who calls us each by name, and follow where he leads; who, with you and the Holy Spirit, lives and reigns, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.”

 

 
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Third Sunday of Easter