Sunday, May 8th, 2022 – Easter 4
Philip’s Reflection: “The Shepherd and the Sheep” (John 10:22-30)
Today is a day when I think particularly of my own beloved mother, Rosemary, now 92,
living in a little village in the west of England. She was born Frances Rosemary and
when she married my father, and became Frances Francis, she became known as
Rosemary, and I’m looking forward to seeing her in just two weeks’ time and I hold her
in my heart this morning. And whenever I hear of Jesus talking about shepherds and
sheep I instinctively think of the family home, in the heart of the English countryside,
where at this time of the year the fields are full of – you guessed it – flocks of sheep
and, particularly now, the ewes and their lambs. You can hear them before you see
them, and often I stand at a gate, looking into the green fields, in a morning or evening,
and watch as the shepherd arrives to feed the sheep – it’s a familiar scene that has
been repeated for hundreds of years – as the shepherd calls to them and fills their
feeding troughs, and they hear his voice, and they come to him, and he counts that
they’re all there, calling them by name, checking that all are well, feeding and watering
them. And every few weeks, the shepherd and the sheepdog round up the flock and
lead them into a nearby field, where they can graze on fresh grass – and they go where
he leads them, they trust him – but only him – for if I enter the field all the sheep run off
in the opposite direction – no risk that they will be snatched away from their shepherd!
The shepherd, who feeds and waters them, who cares for each one and knows them by
name, and leads them into green pastures, sheep who “hear my voice. I know them,
and they follow me.” (Jn 10:27). Sound familiar? – well yes, it is – and I apologize if,
particularly today, it sounds a bit sentimental and we must be careful not to stretch the
analogy too far because we all know, particular those of us who are not meat-eaters,
that there is also a shadow side to this familiar pastoral scene.
And we recognize of course that shepherding in “England’s pleasant pastures” of
William Blake’s famous hymn (“Jerusalem”) is surely very different from what it was in
the subsistence farming of first century Palestine and even today – where the sheep are
reared for their milk for cheese, and their wool for clothing and warmth. We must be
careful not to romanticize and many us will also push back at identifying with these
woolly subjects of children’s nursery rhymes.
But let’s listen again to today’s gospel reading – the religious authorities come up to
Jesus in the temple – and in frustration, they ask him “How long will you keep us in
suspense? If you are the Messiah, tell us plainly.” (Jn 10:24). And Jesus answers them
“I have told you, and you do not believe” – you do not believe me “because you do not
belong to my sheep”. And then he tells them what it means to be one of his sheep – “My
sheep hear my voice. I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they
will never perish. No one will snatch them out of my hand” (10:27-28).
And we hear in Jesus’ tender words, the heart of the gospel message: to be Jesus’
sheep is to be led to life, safe, sheltered in the palm of God’s hand. It is to be known
and counted by him, to follow where he leads; to trust the sound of his voice and to hear
the voice of God who speaks through Jesus’ words. For, as we’ve sung today in Psalm
23, “The Lord is my shepherd” who “makes me lie down in green pastures; he leads me
beside still waters; he restores my soul [and] leads me in right paths for his name’s
sake.” (Ps 23: 1-3). To trust in Jesus is to trust in God; it is the safety of the shepherd’s
hand that assures us the safety of God’s hand, because as Jesus says, “the Father and
I are one.”
And then this promise – “I give [my sheep] eternal life, and they will never perish” – it is
the same promise we memorized in Sunday School “For God so loved the world that he
gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have
eternal life “(3:16) – “eternal life” as in the quality of life, abundant life, here and now, a
life blessed by an eternally loving God, rather than measured by the length of our
earthly lives or the promise of heavenly bliss in an eternal afterlife. Abundant life, eternal
life, says Jesus, depends on belonging to him – that his sheep are known to the
shepherd; and that the sheep hear his voice and follow him.
For much of my professional life I’ve been guided by an understanding of leadership
that “a good leader is one who creates more leaders rather than more followers. A good
leader, by this definition, is one who mentors, trains, leads by the example of good
working habits, recruits, encourages, grows new leaders. And I have just spent four
years in seminary being taught what is meant by “good leadership” in the church and
the attributes that might make someone a good leader in ministry – listening skills,
empathy, humility, vision, vulnerability, adaptability and, of course, self-care and
work/life balance, and yes, you’ll be thinking, Philip still has a lot to learn in all of these
departments! And you’ll realize, as I do now, that much of this teaching, and the long
hours spent in the class room, and the field education, the Greek and the Hebrew, and
the term papers and exams etc. have more to do with becoming a professional
shepherd, literally a “pastoral leader”, than they do about being a good sheep!
Today’s Gospel reading offers us a different understanding: “my sheep hear my voice. I
know them [says Jesus] and they follow me.” (10:27). And all of us, I suggest, can
surely learn to become better sheep – to hear and recognize the shepherd’s voice, in
the most unlikely places, and in the most unlikely people, and to follow where the
shepherd’s voice is leading; and, in following, to receive the gifts that the shepherd has
promised – in green pastures and beside still waters. And this is as true for each of us
individually, as it is for the Christian Family of St. David’s – for if we listen for the voice
of the shepherd, and follow where the shepherd is leading, through the power of the
Holy Spirit, then “surely goodness and mercy shall follow [us] all the days of [our] life”.
Friends, may we learn to live as God’s sheep; and may we let God be the shepherd! For
“even though I walk through the darkest valley, I [will] fear no evil; for you are with me;
your rod and your staff – they comfort me.” (Ps 23:4). May we love the shepherd; and
may God bless the sheep. Amen.