The Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ According to John 10:1-10
Very truly, I tell you, anyone who does not enter the sheepfold by the gate but climbs in by another way is a thief and a bandit.
The one who enters by the gate is the shepherd of the sheep.
The gatekeeper opens the gate for him, and the sheep hear his voice. He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out.
When he has brought out all his own, he goes ahead of them, and the sheep follow him because they know his voice.
They will not follow a stranger, but they will run from him because they do not know the voice of strangers.”
Jesus used this figure of speech with them, but they did not understand what he was saying to them.
So again Jesus said to them, “Very truly, I tell you, I am the gate for the sheep.
All who came before me are thieves and bandits; but the sheep did not listen to them.
I am the gate. Whoever enters by me will be saved, and will come in and go out and find pasture.
The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.”
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Since what has been named the 2026 Iran War, originally ‘ a military operation’
Information – trusted information is scarce. False information is aplenty.
There are many examples of this, including the original forecast of the expected duration of the war – two to eight weeks, or as some forecast – three to four days.
As of today, no-one knows when the war will end.
Trust has been destroyed, lives lost or ruined, as the duty of care has been discarded like so much trash.
Jesus tells his listeners to be on the look out for those who can’t be trusted – thieves, robbers, wolves – predators.
Predators!
With so much duplicity in our world, where do we turn? To whom do we look?
” At me’ Jesus says.
” I am the shepherd. The sheep know my voice. I am the gate for the sheep,” he says, using an example people would understand.
The sheepfold at that time would have only three complete sides. The shepherd would be there, at the fourth side, checking the sheep as they came in, slowing them down with his rod, so he could check them for injuries. And when all were safely in he would lie across the entrance so that anyone wanting to come in to do harm would have to deal with him first. .
The shepherd had a heavy wooden rod with which to beat off any lion or wolf or bear that might try to attack the sheep. The staff was used to rescue lambs from thickets or crevices where they might have fallen into danger. The rod was the protection.
Thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.
He might also have a slingshot.
A famous shepherd by the name of David fought off a lion and more with a slingshot, didn’t he?
When you care about your charges, you will fight ferociously to protect them won’t you?
You won’t exploit them.
Who is being a shepherd?
And who is being a wolf?
There are plenty of stories about governments wasting our resources – not safeguarding what belongs to the people.
There are many who are only interested in their own welfare? Some of those who manage major corporations seem more interested in lining their own pockets rather than worrying about their shareholders, and their employees. And their customers.
Some who claim to represent us are in the pockets of other interests.
Financial analysts have given so-called independent advice, which later was found to be just a come-on for stocks they were actually selling.
We should do what Will Rogers suggested when investing. He said, “ Take your money out of your savings, invest it in a stock, and when it goes up, sell. If it doesn’t go up – don’t buy it!”
It looks like no-one is out there looking after you, doesn’t it?
So what do we do?
I think the only answer is to look elsewhere for protection, for guidance, for an example in how to live.
I think you have to look to someone with good references; someone who has proven to be a good friend; someone who has delivered what he promised to deliver; someone who is a good shepherd.
Someone you can follow.
Like Jesus.
The early disciples, and those who joined them chose to follow Jesus. And to live as he would.
We read in Acts that in the early days of the church, no one wanted for anything. The reason was that those who had much, gave so that those who had less could eat. Those who could, helped those who couldn‘t. Those who could work helped those who were too sick to work.
A few years ago, such people would have been called communists – those who had much, sharing with those who had nothing, and all property held in common.
But it was just that the followers of Jesus were trying to live as he might have.
Simply put, we have to try and live as Jesus did. We have to share with those less fortunate. We have to see that no brother or sister goes hungry.
We have to try each day to be more and more like him; loving others; putting him before wealth and power; and looking after our neighbour rather than preying on him, or her.
We have to show the world that we are God’s people, spreading his word where we can, and encouraging and exhorting those in positions of power to serve rather than to exploit.
And if we are chosen to lead, leading as a shepherd would – protecting and watching over those for which we have been given responsibility.
This might sound idealistic.
Naïve.
People say you have to look after yourself first, and last. The wolves are out in front, winning at every turn. Money makes money. And that is good for everyone they say, even those who somehow don’t get the chance to share.
It is good that some people are rich and powerful.? The system somehow takes care of people? Isn’t that what they say?
Don’t believe it.
In 1923 at the Edgewater Beach Hotel in Chicago, Illinois, eight of the most powerful money magnates in the world gathered for a meeting. These eight, if they combined their resources, and their assets, controlled more money than the US Treasury. The group included such men as Charles Schwab. He was the president of a steel company. Richard Whitney was the president of the New York Stock Exchange, and Arthur Cutton was a wheat speculator. Albert Fall was a presidential cabinet member, personally a very wealthy man. Jesse Livermore was the biggest bear on Wall Street in his generation. Leon Fraser was the president of the International Bank of Settlements. Ivan Krueger headed the largest monopoly.
Quite an impressive group of people wouldn’t you agree? .
But take a look at that same group later in life. Charles Schwab died penniless. Richard Whitney spent the rest of his life serving a prison sentence in Sing Sing. Arthur Cutton, the great wheat speculator became insolvent. Albert Fraser, the president of that big international bank? He committed suicide. Seven of those eight great big money magnates had lives that were disasters before they left planet earth.
Where did they go wrong?
They went wrong by thinking that what they had and controlled actually belonged to them. That they were deservedly gifted with knowledge and power and had no sense of responsibility towards the thousands who depended on them to make good business, and good moral, decisions.
I guess to be charitable towards them we might characterize them as bad shepherds – very bad shepherds.
Jesus is the good shepherd. The one who cares for his sheep.
In fact dies for his sheep.
That’s right – dies for his sheep!
Jesus died for his sheep!.
He died to save his sheep from dark sinful, shameful, empty lives, and to give them new life, new hope, new reason to live.
He was the only one who could do that. He was the only one with the right credentials.
He didn’t sin.
He did His Father’s will.
He put us first and himself last. Everything he did was to benefit others.
He spurned riches, spurned power, lived as an itinerant, slept out in the open.
He was what today is called ” a low overhead” sort of guy.
He wasn’t making off with the company profits; wasn’t making himself rich and others poor.
No, he put himself last.
As should we!
