April 25, 2021 "The Other" Rev. Dal McCrindleMany churches toady are celebrating Good Shepherd Sunday. Of those, many will read or sing the 23rd Psalm and they’ll hear a portion of “Jesus-the-Good-Shepherd” from Chapter 10 of John’s Gospel.According to the passage, in herding terms of the first century, Jesus describes himself as a good shepherd. And of course, since the economy of region depended on herding, all of his listeners, whether shepherds or not would have been able to identify with his image or at least understood it.The downside of this metaphor is that we, his listeners are identified with the sheep, who tend not to be on the upward side of the intelligence scale. For the most part, sheep are pretty stupid; cute cuddly and soft especially when little, but stupid just the same. Sheep, on the whole are dependent upon their owners and require enormous amount of care. Without extending the metaphor too far, at least on the intelligence scale, we can understand many of the points Jesus is making.Like God, Jesus is the shepherd of the people: “The Lord is my Shepherd” was written by the youthful David about his understand of God, a very long time before God was revealed in Jesus. Any casual observer would know how good and poor shepherds operate. Under a good shepherd, sheep thrive and flourish. Under a poor one they struggle and even starve. Good shepherds take their job seriously and do what 's expected of them. Hirelings are simply that, employees who may not always approach their job as earnestly as would the owner of the flock or a family member entrusted with the task.Shepherds open the pens for the sheep for the night so that they be protected and secure. The shepherd leads the flock where they must go, so the sheep know the way. They know because they hear the shepherd’s voice calling to them. Others may call and call but sheep don’t respond because they know who their shepherd is.Jesus pledges to be this kind of shepherd of the people. Sheep take an excessive amount of time and attention, so much so that a shepherd really does have to give up his life and lay it down. Jesus is the one who would not abandon them as had bad leaders in the past whom he likens to thieves and bandits. If you were a sheep what kind of shepherd would you want? That’s obvious isn’t it? One, just like Jesus.Israel used the image of sheep and shepherds for centuries to speak about God’s care for the people. Ezekiel; the prophet writes, “You shepherds, listen, says God, my sheep have been attacked by wild animals that killed and ate them because there was no shepherd. Those shepherds did not find the sheep. They were taking care of themselves and not the sheep. I the Lord, will take my sheep away from you and never again will you be their shepherds.”The crowds would have known exactly the image that Jesus was referring to and the tradition which he alludes. There have been poor shepherds but he, Jesus is committed to the shepherding. Even in face of danger Jesus says, he will not run away. When danger comes, hirelings save themselves; good shepherds stay and ward off the danger, even to the point of risking their life cause every one of those sheep is important. We are important! And the Good Shepherd doesn’t protect the sheep because of their economic value. No, the shepherd knows his sheep, their names.Then in a moment of great courage when challenged by others who were listening, he said that they were not of the flock, for they were not prepared to listen to his voice. Their response was to try to arrest and stone him, but Jesus escaped from the hands.Even though we know very little about sheep, we like to hear this story. We like to read the 23rd Psalm. It’s comforting and pastoral. We like to hear how Jesus stands up against the dangers of life to protect us; how Jesus wards off the thieves and the bandits and how he is the gate to the sheep fold: Jesus is the one who knows us. He is the one who will ensure that we get inside the fold for the night. Thank God, we have a good shepherd, a caring shepherd, a diligent and life-risking shepherd. It makes us feel safe, secure and loved.Then as we are basking in apparent comfort of Jesus’ tending to our needs, in an overlooked phrase Jesus says, “I have other sheep that do not belong to this fold. I must bring them also and they will listen to my voice.”Just when we were feeling that we are almost the most important thing possible, the focus of Jesus shepherding attention, he’s off looking for someone else. Who are these others? Sounds like an science fiction episode on TV: THE OTHERS!This call of Jesus in John’s Gospel led Missionaries throughout the centuries to go and preach the Gospel to the four corners of the earth. Through some of those efforts to reach out to “the Others” persecution, injustice and hatred have sometimes been the result. Ethnic and religious cleansing wars have been waged – terrible atrocities have been committed in the name of the Good Shepherd, the Prince of Peace, the Gate Keeper of safety.Studies indicate that newcomers and visitors to a church usually decide within the first 12 minutes of their arrival whether they will even return to that church again. Those studies also suggest that when a newcomer has arrived, it is a miraculous event which should be honoured as such.The typical Canadian household today is a madhouse. Parents are up at 5:30, breakfast prepared and on the table for kids by 6, pick up kids at after-school-care, off to a meeting, evening activities, fall into bed by 10:30, 11, or 12. Next day all over again. Many parents have to hold more than one job just to make ends meet financially and spend much of their waking hours getting their kids to all the opportunities that are designed to keep their children on the straight and narrow as well as making them well-adjusted citizens. Music lessons, sports, socializing opportunities, extra tutoring so they won’t fail or at least they’ll have some chance of getting into the local community college. By the time Sunday rolls around, it’s the first day in the last 6 when they could sleep in. And one of them, out of the blue says, “let’s go to church!” Whatever sparked that idea; whatever flash from heaven struck them to consider such a trek is nothing less than miraculous. These could be some of the others: these are some of the ones Jesus is calling and they do in fact hear – somehow.How will they be welcome. Will it feel like they’ve found safety, home, a sheepfold? People hear the shepherd’s voice in a variety of ways. The 23rd Psalm speaks of a valley of the shadow of death. There are many shadowy valleys through which people must travel. None are trivial. Whether the valley be one of endangered health, a brush with death, a loss of something: a job, friendship, family disruption, marriage disillusion, as struggle with addiction, a threat from another: each of these can be as traumatic and fear-filled as any other. While these ‘others’ encounter their terrifying walk through the valley of the shadows, they sometimes hear a voice, maybe a still small voice; maybe a memory from the past which urges them to venture into a place like this one to seek the shepherd, to seek safety; to seek comfort, to seek a place that somehow makes life bearable.Oh! But what about those who don’t believe? Or believe something quite radically different? Doesn’t Jesus say there is only one way, his way? “No one comes to the Father but by me!” Does this mean that no one can find God unless listening to the voice of the shepherd calling from Galilee? Or does this mean that no one can find God unless nudged by God to seek for God? If we believe that Jesus is the incarnation of God, then God speaks as the shepherd, through nature, as one’s conscience; however, God may nudge us. No one shall come to me, says God except by my initiative. Kind of throws a special curve on those who show up one morning and says let’s go to church. Once heard, the sheep will follow.There are others, some will come, some will go elsewhere but God seeks them, just the same. We have responded and we have arrived here, part of this sheepfold. We know that there are others: others of the community, others of the future – the next generations. As followers of the voice of Jesus we are called to do no less than good sheep-herding, certainly better than hirelings; those whom Jesus condemned for not caring. “Little children writes John. Let us love not on word or speech but in truth and action.” And when we love one another, we know and others know that God abides in us by the spirit that God has given us. At least that’s the way I see it!
St. David's United Church, West Vancouver