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abundant, community, Easter, faithful, Good Shepherd, Jesus, life, love, nurture, parenting, resurrection, Sermon, serve, sheep
As a parent of young children, I often found that I mourned when certain stages ended. One of the harder transitions was when I was no longer physically able to manhandle my children. Before then, if a kid was refusing to move, or was throwing an epic tantrum, I could just swoop them up and manage their outburst physically. But once I could not long hold their weight or battle those strong little arms, I realized my parenting technique was going to need a dramatic change – I was going to have to give up some control and figure out how to help both of us verbally work through what was going on in the moment. Of course, that probably was the way I should have been parenting from the beginning, but sometimes a good swoop sure did feel good and gave me the illusion of control.
When I see images of Jesus the Good Shepherd – the biblical image we celebrate today – I find a similar sense of disappointment. If Jesus is the Good Shepherd, I am metaphorically that helpless, probably not too bright, albeit cuddly sheep draped over Jesus’ shoulders. That kind of image has always made me feel a little disempowered. But this week I stumbled on a Byzantine icon[i] of Jesus Christ the Good Shepherd which shifted things for me. Instead of a sheep draped over Jesus’ shoulders, the icon has a person draped over Jesus’ shoulders. Their eyes are closed, their body is limp, but Jesus, complete with the nail scars in his hands and feet, seems to effortlessly be carrying this person out of the wilderness. The image did not necessarily make me feel empowered, but the image did humanize this metaphor for me. I could easily imagine an adult who has been walking through the valley of the shadow of death, exhausted from suffering or grief. Or I could imagine a protective Jesus who has swooped someone out of harm’s way. And I can definitely imagine an adult who has worn themselves out with their own tantrum.
In John’s Gospel today, Jesus is shepherding the crowd through all those scenarios. You may remember back in Lent we got that long story from John’s gospel about the blind man Jesus heals, only to have the religious community freak out about Jesus healing on the sabbath and not believing the man had actually been blind in the first place. Well after the blind man proclaims his desire to follow Jesus, Jesus then turns back to the community of faith and offers this explanation of his healing the blind man. His teaching in John is actually much longer than what we hear today – in fact, Chapter 10 of John’s gospel is usually divided into three sections – all about the Good Shepherd – but a different section is appointed for each liturgical year. In year A, we get the “I am the gate,” or door, portion of Chapter 10. We are told that when we pass through the gate, the “good shepherd,” tends to us so that we will have life, and have life abundantly.
This passage is the “so what” of Easter. If you remember, people have been running around, demanding proof of Jesus’ resurrection, taking whole walks with Jesus before realizing who the resurrected Jesus is. And so, Eastertide is a celebration of the resurrection, and we spend seven weeks trying to figure out what resurrection means. The “so what” today then is that Jesus came, died, and rose again so that we might have life, and have that life abundantly. And if that abundant life means Jesus has to carry us out of trouble, hold us when we cannot walk on our own, or haul us over his shoulder when we are just too stubborn to accept his gift of abundant life, that is what Jesus the Good Shepherd will do. Jesus’ resurrection matters because his resurrection reminds us of the gift of abundant life.
But that story is only part one of our “so what” today. The rest of the “so what” of resurrection happens in our lesson from Acts today. Since Easter we have been reading in Acts about the beginnings of the church community. We have heard two parts of Peter’s sermon after the great day of Pentecost, where he gathers the first mega church of over 3000 people. Now we hear the “so what” of Jesus being the gate. You see, when Jesus becomes the gate, the door through which we pass into the protected sheepfold, you know what that gathering of the sheep looks like? We are not disempowered, limp bodies, lying under protection. When we pass through Jesus’ resurrection, we join a community – a community of action.[ii] The text from Acts says of that growing body, “They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.”[iii] As the community grows, they share in economic justice, sharing their wealth and caring for all equally. They spend time together, eating with glad, generous hearts, praising God, and tending to the goodwill of all. Jesus doesn’t just carry our limp, weary selves, and then deposit us into the world to try again. Jesus brings us into a fold – a community of study, fellowship, communion, and prayer.
That is the beginning of your “so what” of Easter today. We are an Easter people because Jesus gave his life so that we might have life and have that life abundantly. As Easter people we are gifted that abundantly life so that we can enter the sheepfold of faithful community. Your invitation today is hop off Jesus’ shoulders, walk through the gate of Jesus, and come into to a community of faith where we will study God’s word, develop meaningful relationships, come together around the common table, and pray. When we gather in that kind of community, when we are fed mentally, physically, and spiritually, then we fueled for the rest of the “so what” of Easter. Once nurtured in that generous, abundant community, we are led back out through the gate that is Jesus, better able to love and serve the Lord out in the world. Thanks be to God!
[i] As found at https://www.etsy.com/listing/856250878/hand-painted-byzantine-icon-of-jesus?gpla=1&gao=1&&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=shopping_us_a-home_and_living-spirituality_and_religion-other&utm_custom1=_k_Cj0KCQjwgLOiBhC7ARIsAIeetVDhfiQo66BpPPH4Bg02sff293o0Q8_YqIhIUuxfVbEDRA8-6wbArd0aAg3OEALw_wcB_k_&utm_content=go_12559942249_120251207180_506897847531_pla-302895540136_c__856250878_122003557&utm_custom2=12559942249&gclid=Cj0KCQjwgLOiBhC7ARIsAIeetVDhfiQo66BpPPH4Bg02sff293o0Q8_YqIhIUuxfVbEDRA8-6wbArd0aAg3OEALw_wcB on April 29, 2023.
[ii] The idea of what life is like in the sheepfold is articulated by Matt Skinner in “Sermon Brainwave: #901: Fourth Sunday of Easter (Year A) – April 30, 2023,” April 23, 2023, as found at https://www.workingpreacher.org/podcasts/901-fourth-sunday-of-easter-year-a-april-30-2023 on April 29, 2023.
[iii] Acts 2.42-47.