Sunday, April 30th, 2023 – Good Shepherd Sunday
Philip’s Reflection: “The Shepherd and the Sheep” (Jn. 10:1-11)
It might surprise you to know that sheep are one of my favourite animals and I’ve always felt they get rather unfair treatment – one of the reasons I like sheep is that, for over 200 years, my father’s family have been members of the Worshipful Company of Clothworkers, in the City of London (England), and this membership has been passed down to me through the generations and now you too have a connection with the Clothworkers, who used to derive their income from supplying sheep’s wool to the textile industry in Britain – for clothing and yarn and of course for the knitting that I know that some of you enjoy. As a Clothworker, you can apply to receive the Freedom of the City of London and you might like to look afterwards at this Certificate, that I received in 2006, granting your Minister this Freedom. And lest you think that this reeks of privilege, you might like to know that, as far as I’m aware, the only right granted to a Citizen and Clothworker of the City of London is the freedom to lead a flock of sheep across London Bridge!
When I think of sheep I also think at this time of year of the sound of the sheep and the little lambs in the fields around my mother’s home in the west of England. If you’re out walking, you hear the sheep before you see them and you hear the mother sheep, known as the ewes, calling out to their lambs and the lambs calling back in their distinctive and high pitched voices. And in the evening you see the shepherd arriving to feed and water the flock, a couple of collie dogs rounding them up and into the sheepfold; the shepherd knows and calls to them and, yes, the sheep really do seem to respond, they know the shepherd, they recognize the Shepherd’s voice and when the Shepherd opens the gate to lead them into a different, greener field, the next day, they trust the Shepherd and know it’s safe to follow. In fact, it seems, sheep aren’t at all the “dimwitted” animals they’re often unfairly portrayed – in the spectrum of animal intelligence sheep are in “mid-range”, their intelligence has been measured and is similar to all cattle. I read that they’re almost as smart as pigs and that’s saying something! Sheep are capable of problem-solving, can find their way through a maze, and yes, they do recognize a human face or voice and won’t follow a stranger.
Sheep re gregarious, they prefer company, recognizing that for their safety it’s better to stay in a flock, less likely to get picked off (as we heard in the Gospel reading) by a thief or a bandit.
And of course they’re environmentally friendly: for any of you who have walked through a
sheep pasture, you’ll know that they provide copious amounts of nutrients for the soil, they’re
vegetarian, and one sheep on average produces around 8 lbs. of wool each year – about 80
miles of yarn per sheep – and, even better, it’s all biodegradable!
But having done my bit to rehabilitate sheep, I don’t want to mislead you. These “sheep
facts” might give you the impression that today’s gospel reading is only about sheep but I’m
not sure how many of you would be here today if we called it “Sheep Sunday” – we call it
“Good Shepherd Sunday” not just for marketing reasons! Is our gospel reading about the
sheep or is it about the shepherd? It seems that those who first heard Jesus telling them
about the sheepfold and the gate, and the gatekeeper and the shepherd and the sheep
were also wondering – we’re told that “they did not understand what he was saying to them”
(Jn. 10:8) and, importantly, that “Jesus used this figure of speech with them” (10:6). So we
first need to be careful and, for all us who push back at being identified as sheep, however
smart they might be, we need to understand, as is often the case, that Jesus uses an
extended metaphor, he talks in poetic terms – using a metaphor that would, of course, be
much more familiar in 1st century Palestine than perhaps it is for some of us today.
How are we to understand Jesus as the Good Shepherd? First he tell us who he is not – he does not climb into the sheepfold furtively “by another way” – like the thief or bandit who doesn’t care about the sheep but only for their own gain; the good shepherd enters by the gate; he is recognized both by the gatekeeper, who “opens the gate for him”, and by the sheep who know his voice. When he calls the sheep, they follow him, and he leads them out to
know the voice of strangers” (10:5).
And then, when Jesus sees that his listeners don’t understand his “figure of speech”, he now adds another metaphor “I am the gate for the sheep”, the gate that keeps the sheep
together in the sheepfold during the night, safe from predators; and the gate that opens in
the day so that the sheep can go out, following their shepherd, “I am the gate. Whoever
enters by me will be saved and will come in and go out and find pasture.” (10:9).
Sounds familiar? And of course it is because these words about shepherd and sheep echo
the Psalm (23) also appointed for today – who is the shepherd? – the psalmist tells us -
“The Lord is my shepherd:
I shall not want.
He makes me to lie down in green pastures...” (Ps. 23: 1-2)
And now I think we can understand what Good Shepherd Sunday is really about – it’s
not about being a better shepherd or even perhaps about being a better sheep. It’s
about the relationship between the shepherd and the sheep. For “the Lord is my
shepherd” and, particularly for those of us in positions of leadership, whether in ministry
or in lay leadership roles, as many of you are, it’s a caution not to become so intent on
being shepherds that we no longer listen as sheep to the voice of Jesus. The religious
authorities, who Jesus is challenging, think they’re in charge, they’re the shepherds.
Jesus tells them that it’s he, not them, who is the true shepherd, and that they need to
listen to his voice, a voice that challenges their world, their power, with the new vision
proclaimed in the kingdom of God. This is the challenge that Jesus puts before us too,
you and me: to be God’s sheep, not shepherds; to be become better followers rather
than better leaders.
The Good News is that the relationship between the shepherd and the sheep that Jesus
describes is the life of faith, one that he promises offers abundant life. It is to trust one’s
life to the tender and watchful care of the shepherd. To listen to the shepherd’s voice,
the shepherd who knows us and calls us by name; the shepherd who enters the
sheepfold by the gate, guarding against all that threatens; the shepherd who opens the
gate and leads out the sheep, who goes in front of them, leading them on the right path
towards green pastures and still waters – the shepherd who cares equally for each
sheep in the flock, and together for the safety of the whole flock; the shepherd who
restores and saves.
Friends in the faith, to be God’s sheep is to learn to listen to the shepherd’s voice, to
follow where the shepherd is leading and to receive the gifts that the shepherd has
promised. The gate is now open and God is calling you – follow the shepherd and then
“surely goodness and mercy shall follow [you] all the days of [your] life and [you] will
dwell in the house of the Lord forever.” (Ps. 23:6). May it be so. Amen.