Your Shepherd will never lose you and calls you to shepherd all Christ’s sheep with the same insistent passion and care.
Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Fourth Sunday of Easter, year B
Text: John 10:11-18
Beloved in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen
The problem with the hired help is they don’t have the same investment.
The owner of a business has their whole livelihood bound up in that business, so everything about it matters deeply to the owner. Their employees are paid to do their jobs. They can walk away or be fired. But the owner is in it completely.
So, Jesus is right. The shepherd of the sheep cares for all of the sheep because the sheep belong to the shepherd. Their whole lives are in the shepherd’s hands. If wolves attack, there’s no choice but to defend the sheep. If sheep get lost, the shepherd has to find them. If they’re hurt, the shepherd must help them. The shepherd’s life is bound up in caring for the sheep.
Those who are paid to care for the sheep don’t have a reason to lose their lives keeping the wolves away, or climbing down a cliff to rescue them. At some point, they’ll abandon their job if the risk is too great. Jesus knows what he’s talking about.
Because there are plenty here who’ve been abandoned by Jesus’ hired hands.
Abandoned to the wolves by others in the Church, the hired hands (even though they’re not actually paid). Maybe you’ve been told to leave by someone Jesus asked to love you. Or marginalized by those supposed to care for Jesus’ flock. Things got challenging and you were left out and alone.
For decades this congregation has been a sanctuary for those kicked out of other sheepfolds, rejected both by leaders and members of the flock. What you’ve found here is this good news: Jesus the Christ, God-with-us, is your Good Shepherd, and no one can snatch you out of his hands. No matter if the hired hand is the pastor, or the bishop, or the person in the community ignoring you, or telling you you’re not acceptable to God, the Shepherd’s voice reigns over all. You belong. You are loved, and worthy.
But many of us have also been the hired hands.
How often have some of us disappeared in the face of adversity, leaving some of our fellow sheep, our neighbors, exposed and alone? How often have we decided we were the gatekeepers to the sheepfold, as if we knew whom God loved and didn’t? How often have we looked the other way when other sheep were unheard, ignored, patronized, or pushed to the side? Especially if they weren’t part of our own flock.
There’s also good news here for you if you’ve been such a hired hand. Your Good Shepherd still loves you and loves me. Being a bad hired hand is forgivable.
But the Shepherd still has a powerful word today for us to hear clearly.
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. So there will be one flock, one shepherd.”
That means this sheepfold we know as the Church isn’t the whole flock. There are many other sheep, and Jesus knows and will find them. All God’s sheep belong to Christ, who gives his life for them.
So, Jesus clearly says here we hired hands don’t have a vote over who are Christ’s sheep and who aren’t, over who is loved by God and belongs to God. Only God does. And God’s word, repeatedly given by the Son of God, but also the prophets and the martyrs, is “all are mine. I won’t lose a single one. I will draw all people, all things, to myself, into my love and life.”
The Triune God is the only one with a vote. And the vote is: all are to be found and kept safe and loved.
Since we’re not the Shepherd, we don’t naturally have that kind of instinct, investment. But what if we did?
If you belong to Christ the Good Shepherd, and are cared for, and loved, and no one can snatch you out of the Shepherd’s hands, which is true; and if you are now called to care for the other sheep, whoever they are, which is also true; here’s the question: can you grow into the same investment Christ has? To be willing to do whatever it takes for any of Christ’s sheep, like Jesus?
Isn’t that what Jesus meant by “love one another as I have loved you?” That you and I actually love as God loves in Christ? Not caring for others because someone told us to. Not looking out for our neighbor because we think it’s expected. Not welcoming all, or setting aside our privilege, or changing how we think about another person because that was what we were required to do. No – because our heart was changed into Christ’s and it was the only thing to do.
Love as I love, Jesus said. Stop being a hired hand and become one of my shepherds.
This is the new heart we pray God gives us in the Spirit.
That you are transformed into someone who loves as passionately and as deeply and as committedly as the holy and Triune God. So that you never run away when someone is in need because they are yours, you love them, and it would be unthinkable. You never think or tell or treat someone as if they’re outside God’s embrace because you can’t imagine a situation where anyone would be.
The Good Shepherd needs other shepherds to help, not hired hands, because all God’s children need to be cared for and protected. Especially – and hear this clearly – especially the ones outside the sheepfold of the Church. We are called to love all with the same unbreakable, unstoppable love you and I have from God in Christ.
Now, the Good Shepherd will bring everyone into God’s love. Jesus says so. There will be one flock, and one Shepherd. You can count on it. But what if, because of your Spirit-transformed heart and love, and mine, all could experience and know that right now? If every heart knew the love of the Shepherd for them, and beat to the rhythm of the Shepherd’s heart themselves, what could this world look like?
Well, God has a good idea – but you are needed for it to become reality.
In the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen