While gates and doors provide protection and security, they are the means for entering and leaving a place. In today’s Gospel (John 10:27-30) Our frame of reference for a shepherd does not likely fit with the image of the shepherd in the time of Jesus. Is there any more powerful artistic depiction of Jesus the Good Shepherd in our Christian heritage? For me it is the famous painting of Jesus with the lamb draped over his shoulder that was hung on the wall in one of my grade school classrooms, and was one of the stained glass windows in the church. Yet, when Jesus lived and John writes his Gospel, shepherds were among the most disreputable and mistrusted outcasts of society. We might consider replacing the image of the loving guardian strolling peacefully in the sunshine among his flock, with the marauding motorcycle gangs of our century or cowboy outlaws of the 19th century. Shepherds were drifters with no fixed address and as a result of their unwholesome occupation, they were perpetually unclean and, in violation of Jewish law. These outcasts are the very people John’s gospel is talking about.
Needless
to say John shocks his audience by comparing Jesus to a shepherd and then later
calling this very shepherd “good.” He challenges his listeners to look
past their assumptions of where God is located and who God belongs to and who
can belong to God. We and the people of John’s time are asked to see God
in those who are outsiders, who exist on the fringe of the community, who are
despised and even a little feared. The readers of John’s story are told
to look for God among the despised.
When Jesus proclaims that “My sheep hear my voice; I know them, and they follow me” he characterizes his role as a loving protector. We are told that there was no actual gate in sheep-folds and that the shepherd would stand, sit or lie down in the opening which allowed entry and exit. In this way the shepherd could serve as protector of his sheep. He knew his sheep and they knew him. John purposely contrasted Jesus, the Good Shepherd, with disreputable religious rulers of his time who exploited their congregations.esus clearly spells out his role as the Good Shepherd and his Father’s steward when he says I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish. No one can take them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all, and no one can take them out of the Father’s hand. The Father and I are one
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