Title: Follow The “Good Shepherd”
By Pastor Lohn Johnson
|
|||||
Text: John 10: 22 At that time the Feast of Dedication took place at Jerusalem. It was
winter, 23 and Jesus was
walking in the temple, in the colonnade of Solomon. 24 So the Jews gathered around
him and said to him, "How long will you keep us in suspense? If you are
the Christ, tell us plainly." 25
Jesus answered them, "I told you, and you do not believe. The works that
I do in my Father's name bear witness about me, 26 but you do not believe
because you are not part of my flock. 27
My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. 28 I give them eternal life, and
they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand.
INTRODUCTION: My dear friends in Christ, The animated film
Robots gives us an beginning to understand our text.
The main character heads out to Bigweld Industries to become an
inventor like Mr. Bigweld. In the process, discovers a plot to take over the
company and do away with antiquated Mr. Bigweld.
Video [In the board room of Bigweld industries, the voice of Mr.
Bigweld tells his audience, "So,
remember, whether a bot is made of new parts, old parts, or spare parts --
you can shine no matter what you're made of."
Ratchet, a shiny new robot, steps
up and, with his voice dripping with sarcasm, remarks about Bigweld's "remarkable legacy" of his
concern for everyday robots. "You
don't come across old-fashioned values like that anymore, friend,"
he tells the employees, "and for
good reason. THERE'S NO MONEY IN IT! Hello?
Memo to Bigweld: “We're not a
charity!"
Ratchet says that this is why
Bigweld no longer sits in the big chair, "he's a relic!" Ratchet makes fun of the people who keep
crying for the good old days, and when an employee stands up for Bigweld,
Ratchet presses a button and has him ejected from the room. "Now, let's get down to the business of
sucking every loose penny out of Mr. and Mrs. average knucklehead."
Ratchet presses a button and asks where the money comes from, "Upgrades, people, upgrades. That's how we
make dough. Now if we're telling robots that no matter what they're made of
they're groovy, how can we expect them to feel crummy enough about themselves
to buy our upgrades and make themselves look better?" Ratchet says
he has invented a new slogan for the company, "Why be you when you can be new!" Ratchet says he finds the
new idea "brilliant" then
asks the remaining "employees" what they think. Frightened of being
ejected, they all laud the idea. Obviously Ratchet has no concern for his custumers
or his employees.
|
|||||
I. And because of his overbearing ways the
employees were acting like sheep. And,
we too are so often like sheep in the worst ways.
|
|||||
|
A. This morning we can start by
focusing on characteristics that we human beings share with sheep, especially
when were are faced with a “leader” like Rachet.
|
||||
|
1. Many
people consider sheep to be rather dumb animals. But, sheep are not dumb because
they are unintelligent, but sheep are dumb because they have a herd instinct
that becomes stronger than their reasoning and intelligence. If one sheep goes over a cliff, the whole
herd will go over the cliff as well. Do you know that is literally true?
2. Likewise, we as human beings, often suffer when our herd instinct becomes stronger
than our intelligence. I would like
for you to play a game. It is kind of fun. It is to think of illustrations in
ourselves as human beings where our herd instinct overrules our intelligence.
An
example: early in the morning, driving to work on an icy cold morning, you
pass a school bus stop. standing on that corner, waiting for the school bus,
is a group of older children, half of whom are wearing skimpy t-shirts, even
though it is cold outside. Right?
The herd instinct dominates over intelligence and we do rather dumb
things. And I’m sure you can think of
more examples.
|
||||
|
B. Sheep are vulnerable. Left to themselves sheep have a very limited
life span. Their lives depend on following the shepherd’s lead.
|
||||
|
1. They
wander off, eat poisonous weeds, become lost and exhausted, and have no way
of rescuing themselves.
2. It is an
apt description of us too, isn’t it?
What happens when people try to find their own way through life? They
end up lost and hopeless. Or it can be worse like
this: While on a guided tour of the Holy Land the passengers on the bus had
been told time and time again that the shepherd never drove the sheep like
cattle but always walked in front, leading them.
As the bus came around
a curve they looked out the window and saw a herd of sheep being driven by a
man. The tour guide was clearly flustered and stopped the bus. He went over
and had an extended conversation with the man driving the sheep. He returned
to the bus with a triumph smile on his face as he announced to the tourists,
“He’s not the shepherd. He’s the
butcher!” Not unlike Rachet; not unlike so many who drive us in the wrong
direction.
|
||||
II.
In our text the people of Jesus’ day were
so caught up in following the butcher that they reject the Shepherd they were
really looking for.
|
|||||
|
A. They refused
to be part of His flock, they refused Him as their shepherd.
|
||||
|
1. The people
of that day should have recognized Jesus.
John
emphasizes two elements that should have given them the message.
|
||||
|
a.
The time is the festival of Dedication, or Hanukkah (v. 22) — the
Jewish celebration of the rededication of the Temple after Antiochus
desecrated it while trying to force Greek religion upon them.
b.
The place is the portico of Solomon
— the only remaining relic of Solomon’s sacred temple which still
stood, and the place where the Jewish king would make judgments and exercise
justice. Jesus is doing this in the
very place where God’s kings had always spoken to God’s people.
c.
So there’s no suspense. They know exactly what he is saying because of
when and where he is saying it.
|
||||
|
2.
We’re considerably more polite. Crucifixions are a thing of the past and
wouldn’t pass muster today because they are cruel and unusual punishment.
|
||||
|
a.
We’re more inclined to ignore Him, and marginalize Him. Leave
Jesus safely on a shelf somewhere. Out of sight, out of mind.
b.
We’re more inclined to turn our attention on our needs, we’re looking out for #1 (meaning me).
Jesus’ call to follow Him is drowned out by what seems to be more urgent
calls.
|
||||
|
B. But Jesus really is our Good Shepherd from God.
We know this because His Word tells us
He is:
|
||||
|
1. • Someone who works
in the “Father’s name.”
• Someone whose sheep “hear his voice.” • Someone who “knows the sheep.” • Someone who “gives to his followers eternal life.” • Someone who “defends his sheep, because no one will snatch them out of my hand.” • Someone who is “one with the Father.” So He is nothing like Ratchet, nothing like a butcher. |
||||
|
2.
WE can summarize who this shepherd is this
way:
There is an amazing story that
comes from the Wycliffe Bible Translators.
This story concerns a tribal people
in Cameroon called the Hdi. Translator
Lee Bramlett, working with the Hdi people, discovered that verbs in the Hdi
language consistently end in one of three vowels: i, a, or u. Even more
interesting, the ending vowel determines the true meaning of the word. This
appears to be true of every word in the Hdi vocabulary except for one the
word which means love. When it comes to the word love, the Hdi people use an
“i or a,” for the last letter. However, no word for love ends with “u.” In
other words, the two words for love are dvi, d-v-i and dva, d-v-a. There is
no dvu, d-v-u.
Lee Bramlett asked the Hdi people
for help in understanding this discrepancy concerning the word love. He
asked, “Could you ‘dvi’ your wife, [d-v-i]?” “Yes,” they said. That would
mean that the wife had been loved but the love was now gone.
Then he asked, “Could you ‘dva’
your wife, [d-v-a]?” “Yes,” they said. That kind of love depended on the
wife’s actions. She would be loved as long as she remained faithful and cared
for her husband well.
Then Lee Bramlett asked the
question that truly puzzled him, “Could you ‘dvu’ your wife, [d-v-u]?”
Everyone laughed. “Of course not!”
they said. “If you said that, you would have to keep loving your wife no
matter what she did, even if she never got you water, never made you meals.
Even if she committed adultery, you would be compelled to just keep on loving
her. No, we would never say ‘dvu.’ It just doesn’t exist.”
Lee sat quietly for a while,
thinking about John 3:16, and then he asked, “Could God ‘dvu’ people?”
There was complete silence for
three or four minutes; then tears started to trickle down the weathered faces
of these elderly men. Finally they responded. “Do you know what this would
mean? This would mean that God would keep loving us over
and over, millennia after millennia, while all that time we rejected His
great love. He is compelled to love us, even though we have sinned more than
any people.”
Do I need to tell you that the word
dvu was added to the Hdi translation of the Bible to express God’s love for
all the people of the world?
|
||||
III.
Jesus dvus
his sheep. Jesus dvus us. He keeps
loving us over and over, millennia after millennia, even when we reject his
love. He is compelled to love us, even
though we continue to cling to our own ways.
|
|||||
|
A. He makes you one of His sheep. In His Word He
comes to us. We are baptized. We are made his sheep. And Christ knows his sheep by name. For
you, His sheep there
is a promise. “I give them eternal
life, and they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand.”
|
||||
|
B.
Those cross-scarred hands of Jesus hold your
life in a way that you cannot.
|
||||
|
1. Your hold on your
life is a tenuous hold at best. One
day, you will lose your grip on your life. We all eventually will, like it or
not.
2. But Jesus holds your
life wholly and entirely, in a way that you cannot.
a. He’s got the whole world
in His hands. He has your life in His hands, and nothing can ever snatch you
away from Him.
b. You see, it’s not
about your grip on Jesus, but His grip on you. It’s the grip of your Baptism
by which you were buried in Jesus and joined with Him in His death and life.
|
||||
CONCLUSION:
So I have the privilege of proclaiming Jesus to you. He is your Good
Shepherd, who has laid down His life on the cross to redeem you, and who has
taken up His life again for you. He has suffered the guilt of your sin, and
so He declares you forgiven. He has promised faithfully to deliver you to
heaven. And where no one else can deliver you from death. He declares to you, "I
give you eternal life, and you will never perish; neither shall anyone snatch
you out of My hand." The promise is for you and it is sure, for it
comes from your Good Shepherd.
|