30 April 2023
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Easter 4 / Good Shepherd Sunday Vienna, VA
“The Door of the Sheep”
Text:
John
10:1-10; 1 Peter 2:19-25; Acts 2:42-47
Alleluia! Christ is Risen! [He is risen indeed! Alleluia!] Alleluia!
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
One of the most important things about John
chapter ten is that it comes after John chapter nine! How’s that for a
revelation? Thank you, Captain Obvious. But I mean that, with all sincerity.
The chapter divisions in the Bible were not not part of the original text. They were added later
to help make it easier to look things up. So instead of saying: the teaching
of Jesus about Himself as the Good Shepherd is in John. Where? Uh, about half way through.
You say: chapter ten. That’s helpful. BUT . . . these divisions were not
always put in the most helpful places. And today, with the separation of
chapters nine and ten, is one of those times.
For when Jesus says (in verse one of chapter ten,
as we heard today), Truly, Truly, I say to you . . . that’s not
coming out of the blue. He is responding to what has just happened. In chapter nine. And what just happened at the end of
chapter nine is that the man born blind that Jesus healed - which caused no
small amount of commotion - had gotten thrown out of the synagogue. Because he wouldn’t deny Jesus. Because he
wouldn’t call Jesus a sinner. Those demanding that answer, they
were the gatekeepers, and this man, they said, could no longer come in.
Now, on the one hand, there was some truth to
that. The priests of the Old Testament, for example, were gatekeepers.
They were tasked with distinguishing the holy and the common, the clean and the
unclean (Leviticus
10:10). They
were to protect the holiness of God, so that the holiness of God wouldn’t hurt
the people, and the uncleanness of the people wouldn’t defile the holy places
in the Temple. So that God dwelling among His people - which
is what the Tabernacle and the Temple were for - would be for their
good. You see this in the New Testament when after healing lepers, Jesus tells
them to go show themselves to the priests (i.e., Luke 17:14). So the priests could do
their job and declare them clean.
Now with the rise of the synagogue - a place not
of sacrifice, but of teaching - it is the Pharisees (the really smart,
educated, lay people among the Jews) who were acting as the gatekeepers here.
The problem was they were not being faithful. They were not teaching in truth.
Maybe they thought they were, but they were not. They were, in fact, as Jesus said, thieves and robbers. For they were all
about the Law, all about rules, instead of being all about the One who
all those Laws and rules pointed to, and were supposed to be preparing the
people to receive. So when Jesus came along, instead of recognizing Him as the
Messiah, they saw Him not as the fulfillment, but as a threat. A threat which must be eliminated. Which,
as we remembered a few weeks ago, they did.
God had spoken through the prophet Ezekiel about
this (chapter
34). He
calls out the so-called shepherds of Israel. They have been abusing the sheep.
They have only been feeding themselves. He says of these so-called shepherds: You
eat the fat, you clothe yourselves with the wool, you slaughter the fat
ones, but you do not feed the sheep. The weak you have not strengthened, the
sick you have not healed, the injured you have not bound up, the strayed you
have not brought back, the lost you have not sought, and with force and
harshness you have ruled them (Ezekiel 34:3-4). And then God says through Ezekiel,
because of all this: I Myself will rescue [or
save!] my flock; they shall no longer be a prey. . . . And I will set up
over them one shepherd, my servant David, and he shall
feed them: he shall feed them and be their shepherd (vs. 22-23).
Now when Ezekiel said that, David, King David,
had already been dead for hundreds of years. He was not talking about that
guy . . . he was talking about the promised Son of David, the one who would sit
on David’s throne forever, the one David was a pointer to, a picture of - the
Messiah. The one, who would be God Himself. And that
one is, of course, Jesus.
So when Jesus says, I am the Good Shepherd,
He is saying that He is the Son of David, that He is the Messiah, that He is
God. And when He says, I am the door (or sometimes that is
translated as gate), He is saying that He is the gatekeeper, the
one who opens and closes - not the door of the Temple or Tabernacle, or the
door of the synagogue, but the door of heaven. His sheep enter through Him.
Trying to get in any other way, like through keeping the Law and being good,
makes you a thief and a robber - trying to get something that doesn’t belong to
you. Because the kingdom of God is not something you can “get” - it can only be
given to you. By Jesus.
So when the man born blind is thrown out of the
synagogue, Jesus, the one who healed him, becomes his Good Shepherd. Jesus searches
for him and finds him and takes him up and brings him into his fold. Jesus came
that this man have life and have
it abundantly. And now he not only has his sight, but what is even
better: He has eternal life. And the Messiah He sees now with new eyes, he will
see forever with risen eyes.
As will you! For Jesus has come that you have
life and have it abundantly. He wants you to have life and eyes
to see now, yes, but even more, to have eyes to see eternally. He doesn’t want
you to only have a nice, big, beautiful house now, but a mansion forever (John 14). He doesn’t only want to
feed you now and care for you now, but for you to have a seat at His heavenly
wedding feast that has no end. And so He is your Good Shepherd, meaning
He has searched for you and found you and taken you up and brought you into His
fold, His Church. You didn’t do any of those things - He did. For you
couldn’t, no more than a man born blind could give Himself sight. He
baptized you. He sent His Word to be read and preached to you. He
gave you parents and friends to do so. He sent and put a pastor here.
That you hear His voice and know His voice and follow His voice. And have life.
But one more thing was needed for Jesus to be the
door: He had to open the door of the grave, the grave that will
one day shut us all in. Without that, we have life for a while - 60, 70, 80, 90
years or so - but then it’s all over. But for a Good Shepherd,
that’s not good enough. So He came not just to open the door of the
grave - that sounds too nice and easy! He came to kick it down. To
obliterate it, so that there’s no way for it to hold us in, and we need
have no fear of it.
So as your Good Shepherd, who searches for you
and finds you . . . how to say this? When He does, He doesn’t find a nice,
clean, obedient, innocent, gentle little lamb. He finds you! All
dirty and filthy and disgusting with the sin you’ve been rolling around in
again this week, disobedient, rebellious, disrespectful, going your own way,
not wanting to listen, wanting to tell God what is good and true and the way He
should do things, focusing and spending your time and energy on the things that
really don’t matter, instead of the things that do. Wandering off . . . how
often?
But a Good Shepherd doesn’t turn His back to you
or brush you off - He loves you. So when He finds you, He cleans you off,
washes you in baptism. He gives you a new heart and mind and Spirit (cf. Ezekiel 36). And He takes you up and
brings you into His fold, the Church, so that you can continue to receive His
care and washing and teaching and feeding and Spirit. And He says: all that
disgusting dirt and filth you had when I found you, all your rebellion and
disobedience, I’ll take care of that. You are free. Free from all that. So that
you can live, live not weighed down by your past and regrets and
failures and mistakes, but live a new life. For I have come that you may
have life and have it abundantly.
And Jesus did take care of all that by going to
the cross for you. He paid for what you did and gives you what He did. He dies
your death that you have His life. And then as we celebrated three weeks ago,
He kicked down, obliterated the door of death and the grave, and rose to life
again. And His sheep will follow Him. Death will not be the end for you. Life
will. Life from the dead. So that like that man born
blind who would see Jesus not just for a while, in this life, but forever, in
eternal life, we who hear our Good Shepherd now will hear Him not just
now, for a while, but forever. With not just a new
heart and mind, but with a risen one.
Peter, as we heard earlier, put that truth this
way: [Jesus] himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we
might die to sin and live to righteousness. That we live not the same
old life, but a new life. By his wounds you have been healed. For
you were straying like sheep, but have now returned to the Shepherd and
Overseer of your souls.
And then, as we heard in the reading from Acts: They
- [the Christians], the ones Jesus found - devoted themselves to
the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking
of bread and the prayers. Which is to say: they devoted themselves to
Jesus. To their Good Shepherd who was first devoted to them. Because to be devoted to the apostles’ teaching is their
teaching about Jesus. To be devoted to the fellowship is to be
devoted to the Church, which is body of Christ. To be devoted to the
breaking of bread is to be devoted to the Supper of Jesus’ Body and Blood.
And to be devoted to the prayers is to be living in Jesus’ flock,
listening to Him, and speaking to Him. It’s all about Jesus. They
were all about Jesus because He was all about them.
So that’s the key for us, today, too. If we
really knew and believed that Jesus was all about us and always doing good for
us and is our one and only Good Shepherd and the true Door to heaven, would we
live as we do? Would we despair as we do? Would we keep looking for life in
other people, places, and things? Would we worry so much about what doesn’t
really matter, and worry a bit more about what does? Could it be said of us
that we devoted ourselves to the apostle’s teaching and fellowship,
to the breaking of bread and the prayers? If that’s true for you, praise
God! If not, repent. Because your Good Shepherd is here for
you. To wash you and forgive you and feed you and
speak His Word of life to you. He is devoted to you even when we’re not
always devoted to Him. He is truly good, truly life, truly for you. And not partly or at times, but always and completely. From manger to cross to grave to life.
So what a joy Good Shepherd Sunday is! To hear this once again. And to sing it! That for the
sheep the Lamb had bled (#463, v. 2). That the King of love my Shepherd is
(#709). That I am Jesus’ little
lamb (#740). And
that Jesus is the Lamb upon His throne . . . who died eternal life to bring
and lives that death may die (#525, vs. 1,
4). That in His flock and with His care we have nothing to fear,
not even death itself, for Christ is risen! [He is risen
indeed! Alleluia!] So you, too, have a chapter ten! You are not on your
own. And even if the world throws you out, for you, too, the door, the gate, is
open!
In the Name of the
Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.