Good Shepherd Sunday
May 8, 2022
Psalm 23
+ Today is a special day.
Yes, it’s Mother’s Day of course.
But, it is Good Shepherd Sunday.
It’s Good Shepherd Sunday because of this wonderful reading we
have in our Gospel reading for today, as well as our reading from Revelation,
and, of course, the very familiar 23rd Psalm
But, every year we celebrate Good Shepherd Sunday without really
thinking about it.
How many times in our lives have we heard the 23rd Psalm?
How many funerals has it been said or sung?
For the most part, we just don’t even really think about it.
After all, shepherds are just not a part of our modern lives.
Yet, when we really think about this image—of God being our
shepherd—it still, weirdly, resonates for us.
We kind of get it.
And we are comforted by it.
And it still does have meaning for us.
God as Good Shepherd.
It’s a great image for God.
In it, we encounter the compassion of our God.
Certainly, for the people of Jesus’ day, this image of the Good
Shepherd is probably one of the most perfect images Jesus could have used.
They would have understood what a good shepherd was and what a bad
shepherd was.
The good shepherd was the shepherd who actually cared for his
flock.
He or she looked out for them, he watched after them. The Good Shepherd guided the flock and led the
flock.
He or she led the flock to a place to eat.
It’s a wonderful way to try to describe God’s goodness to us.
This image implies that God really—legitimately—cares for us and
loves us.
This is an important aspect of the role of the Good Shepherd.
The Good Shepherd didn’t just feed the flock.
Rather the good shepherd led the flock to the choicest green
pastures and helped them to feed themselves.
In this way, the Good Shepherd is more than just a coddling
shepherd.
He or she is not the co-dependent shepherd.
The Good Shepherd doesn’t take each sheep individually, pick them
up, and hand-feed each one of them.
Rather, the Good Shepherd guides and leads the sheep to green
pastures and allows them to feed themselves.
The Good Shepherd also protects the flock against the many dangers
out there.
He or she protects the flock from the wolves, from getting too
near cliffs, or holes, or falling into rivers or lakes.
She or he cares for the
flock.
And that’s VERY important.
Let’s face it, there are many dangers out there.
There are many opportunities for us to trip ourselves, to get
lost, to get hurt.
If we follow the Good Shepherd, if we allow ourselves to be led by
him, we realize that those pitfalls are difficult, yes, but they don’t defeat
us.
Of course, the journey isn’t an easy one.
We can still get hurt along the way.
Bad things can still happen to us.
There are predators out
there, waiting to hurt us.
There are storms brewing in our lives, waiting to rain down upon
us.
But, with our eyes on the Shepherd, we know that the bad things
that happen to us will not destroy us, because the Shepherd is there, close by,
watching out for us—caring for us.
We know that in those bad times—those times of darkness when
predators close in, when storms rage—he will rescue us.
This is what we are looking for in our lives—a savior, a
protector.
We are all longing for someone who will comes to us and rescue us
from all the bad things of this life.
And not just Superman who sweeps down from the skies and pulls us
out of danger, and then just nods to us and flies away.
We long to have this protector, this defender who knows us and
genuinely cares for us.
That’s what makes the Good Shepherd so special.
The Good Shepherd knows
his flock.
If one is lost, he knows it is lost and will not rest until it is
brought back into the fold.
This is the kind of relationship we have with our Good Shepherd.
We know God because God knows us.
God knows us and calls us each by our name.
And loves us for just who we are—no matter who we are.
The Good Shepherd reminds us that we don’t have some vague,
distant God.
We don’t have a God who lets us fend for ourselves.
We instead have a God who leads us and guides us, a God who knows
us each by name, a God who despairs over the loss of even one of us.
All these are important images, vital images to explain the
relationship God has with us and we with God.
I just came across this great quote from Chad Bird
We have a God whose goodness and mercy chases us and seeks us out.
A God whose goodness and mercy follows us wherever we go and in whatever
we do.
But the Good Shepherd’s role doesn’t end there.
This isn’t just about me as an individual and God.
The image of the Good Shepherd must be taken and applied by us.
Any of us who follow Jesus are called to be good shepherds in turn.
We must love and love fully those who around us.
We must care for those people who walk this path with us.
We must look out for our loved ones and even our enemies, we must
respect the worth and dignity of all people, and we must shepherd them in whatever
ways we can in our own lives.
Again, this is not easy, especially when it seems we are lost at
times, when we are falling into the traps life sets before us, when our
alleluias during this Easter season feels cold and lonely.
But, that’s the way God works, sometimes.
Sometimes, God’s works through our brokenness and helps us to
guide others in their brokenness.
Sometimes the best Good Shepherd is the one who has known fully
what a lost sheep feels like, who knows the coldness and loneliness of being
that lost sheep.
So, on this day in which we celebrate the Shepherd who leads and
guides, whose goodness and mercy chases us, let us not only be led, but let us
also lead.
On this day that we look to the Shepherd who guides, let us be guided
and let us guide others.
And let our alleluia on this Good Shepherd Sunday, even if it is a
cold and lonely Alleluia, still be an Alleluia nonetheless.
Let it be the sound we make, even in the cold and lonely places we
sometimes find ourselves in.
And let us, in that place, know that, even there, we are still
experiencing the amazing glory and all-encompassing love of our God.
Let us pray.
Good Shepherd, you are our guardian and our guide, you know us
and call us each by name; be with us as we journey through this world and seek
to serve so that we may be good shepherds to those around us; we ask this in
Jesus Name. amen.
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