I know nothing about herding sheep.
Nothing.
I’ve heard
what feels like hundreds of sermons
on the good shepherd.
I’ve heard sermons
that ranged from
what sounded like a doctoral dissertation
in ancient near eastern husbandry,
to what should have been articles
in the Farmers’ Almanac.
Often,
sermons about the good shepherd
require so much explaining
of the cultural context
in which the gospels were written
that the analogy
can leave you with that feeling
of trying to understand an inside joke,
“I guess you just had to be there.”
When I first read through the lectionary for this week
I couldn’t help but feel like these texts
were better suited
for a funeral
than the fourth week of Easter.
In our first reading,
a beloved disciple
and pillar of the community
has died.
She is surrounded by her loved ones,
a chosen family of widows,
who have washed and prepared her body
according to their customs.
But,
what is this community of believers
in a God-raised-from-the-dead
and coming back any minute,
supposed to do with a dead body?
If Jesus is coming back soon,
what about those who have died
in the meantime?
How soon
is “soon?”
So,
they send for an apostle
to tell them what to do next.
Psalm 23,
with its irenic imagery
and pastoral scene
accompanied by
“yea, though I walk through the valley
of the shadow of death,”
has been such a stock reading for funerals
it has almost become trite,
a cliché on par with the Footprints poem.
Then comes our reading from Revelation,
where the author invites us to imagine
a time after judgement has ended,
and the white-robed saints sing praises
and wave palm branches
around the heavenly throne
where God will wipe every tear
from every eye.
Then comes our Gospel,
where Jesus promises
eternal life,
where the sheep who know this shepherd’s voice
shall never perish.
With all this talk of death,
it’s kinda hard to remember
that this is a season about resurrection,
the defeat of death,
about Jesus’ victory over the grave.
But maybe this is exactly the week we need it.
For some of us,
this season of resurrection
and new life,
has itself felt out of place.
Maybe your health has declined
or just hasn’t gotten any better.
Maybe you struggled to make ends meet
or had to go further into debt
to cover your expenses last month.
Maybe you lost an important relationship
and you’ve struggled to know how
or if
you should work to make things right again.
Maybe you have just been keeping up with the news
and you are struggling to make sense of it all
and find your place in it.
The overwhelming vastness
and brokenness of the world
can certainly feel like
the valley of the shadow of death.
Sometimes,
this one hour on Sundays
can feel like pie-in-the-sky,
Pollyanna nonsense
in the face of such pain and loss.
But I think that’s the point.
I think what we are invited to do
is hope
in the face of hopelessness.
Hope
as an act of rebellion
against this present darkness.
Hope
as an act of resistance
to the systems that made
and keep
the world the way it is.
Hope
as an act of defiance
when so much death and destruction
demand our allegiance.
I don’t mean the kind of hope
that hopes it doesn’t rain tomorrow.
I mean the kind of hope that
though I walk
through the valley of the shadow of death
I will fear no evil.
I mean the kind of hope
that believes in resurrection
even while washing and preparing
the dead body of a loved-one.
I mean the kind of hope
that believes that God is bigger
than all our fears,
and worries,
and concerns;
bigger than war,
bigger than poverty,
bigger than patriarchy and misogyny,
bigger than nationalism,
bigger than death itself.
Beloved,
The hope of the resurrection
is not some distant,
pie-in-the-sky,
Pollyanna nonsense
about the end times
or life after death.
The hope of the resurrection
is guerilla warfare
against sin, death, and the forces of evil.
The hope of the resurrection
is a clear and level path
out of the valley of the shadow of death.
The hope of the resurrection,
is a holy fist
shaken in the face of systems that oppress
and marginalize
and demand we worship
the idols of security
and scarcity
and fear.
The hope of the resurrection
is placing our trust
in the God who wipes every tear
from every eye
in this age
and the next.
I may not know anything about sheep
or shepherds
but I know
The Lamb is our Shepherd,
and we shall not want,
The Lamb will guide us
to the springs of the water of life.
The Lamb has already gone through
the valley of the shadow of death
and knows the way out.
Surely goodness and mercy
will follow us all the days of this life
and we will dwell in the house of the Lamb forever.
Amen.