My work as a pastor is—
I imagine—
pretty much what you’d expect.
I study the scriptures,
I counsel people about spiritual
and emotional concerns,
I prepare for meetings,
I attend meetings,
I schedule meetings,
I run meetings,
I summarize meetings.
I also make visits,
share meals
and tears,
and hold the hands of the dying,
and the grieving.
I rejoice with those who rejoice,
I encourage and support.
I prepare for worship,
weekly and seasonally,
and I prepare a sermon
to proclaim the gospel
that the congregation might receive it
and be set free by it
to go out and change the world.
And this week,
this meant it was my job
to study sheep.
We get these texts every year.
I have heard countless sermons
and bible studies
on the Good Shepherd.
I have heard many a well-meaning pastor
cure the congregations’ insomnia
with sermons that sounded much more like
veterinary lectures
or agricultural seminars
than expositions of scripture,
let alone a proclamation of the gospel.
And yet,
as I prepared to preach,
as I talked to other pastors,
consulted commentaries,
even just scrolling social media,
everyone seemed to be talking about sheep.
Some of the claims seemed a bit dubious,
some irrelevant,
some comical.
I learned that sheep,
like turtles,
can roll over
and become stuck,
unable to roll themselves over,
and if the stay that way overnight,
they will die.
So the shepherd has to flip the sheep over
so they don’t die.
This is one use of the rod and staff,
to get the leverage needed
to roll a sheep back on its feet.
I also learned that flocks of sheep
are mostly female,
with the lambs and elder sheep
in the center of the flock,
and the stronger sheep on the edges
to guard against predators.
The rams are often too aggressive
to remain with the flock,
forming bachelor herds instead.
But often,
there is so much infighting,
literal headbutting,
that they actually kill each other
or are driven off to other flocks.
Now, before y’all starting counting sheep,
let’s look at the readings for today
to see what any of this
has to do with us.
In the first reading,
we hear that the crowd’s response
to Peter’s preaching at Pentecost
was such amendment of life
that they lived together,
creating a parallel society
in which no one needed anything
because everyone sold their possessions
and shared the profits equally
in this new community.
Then we hear from Psalm 23,
which the lectionary sets up
as a response to the first reading.
So,
we sing,
“The Lord is my shepherd,
I shall not be in want.
He makes me lie down in green pastures,
and leads me beside still waters.”
I Peter tells us
not to run off like rams,
but to stay close to the flock
and the shepherd.
And in the Gospel,
Jesus says,
“I am the good shepherd.
The only way to join the flock,
is through me.
I am the threshold,
a gate held open.
I have other sheep,
in other folds,
but there is one flock,
one shepherd.”
Now,
we could talk about sheep
and shepherds,
we could talk about ovine socio-psychology,
about 1st century Palestinian husbandry,
or wax poetic in pastural imagery
for the great beyond,
but I think we would lose the thread.
It seems to me that the lectionary
and the scriptures that make up our readings today
want us to talk about how we ought to live
in light of the Resurrection.
After the day of Pentecost,
the gospel led the first followers of Jesus
to center the vulnerable in their community
and the more powerful
took their place at the margins
to protect the community.
Those who sold everything
and shared the profits in common with the community
did so because they trusted
the Lord was their shepherd
and they would not be in want.
The community to which
I Peter was written
was being tempted to scatter,
to run off like rowdy rams.
They were tempted to butt heads
with the forces that opposed the followers of Jesus,
and the writer of this epistle
encourages them to return to the shepherd
and guardian of their souls,
who is preparing a table for them
in the presence of their enemies.
And in the Gospel,
Jesus is that Shepherd Lord,
gathering the flock,
leading the flock,
even laying down his life for this flock.
Jesus leads this flock
through green valleys with still waters
and the valley of the shadow of death.
Jesus is the open gate,
the trampled threshold,
where sheep are free to come
and free to go,
because there is only one flock
and one shepherd.
We are free too,
to make such a community
that centers the vulnerable
and calls the powerful to the margins.
We are called to trust that
no matter what we give away,
money, power, privilege—
even our very lives—
we shall not be in want.
We are social creatures,
like sheep.
We are built for the flock
and not for rugged individualism,
to be members of a society,
not laborers in an economy.
God in Christ saves us
by calling us together,
not by being our personal savior.
There is no private salvation.
God in Christ
is the One Shepherd
of the single flock.
And God in Christ
is the gate by which we enter this flock.
But Christ Jesus
is a gate held open.
We can be like the ewes,
like the old and the young,
and stay with the flock,
hearing the Shepherd’s voice,
following his word of love and peace
through valleys green
or valleys deadly,
grazing safely in the presence of our enemies,
with our heads anointed
and our cups overflowing.
Or we can butt heads
with everything and everyone in the world
until it kills us
or leaves us alone and vulnerable.
Beloved,
stay with the flock.
The gate is wide open.
If you have run off like a rowdy ram,
the gate is wide open.
If you have been run off from the flock
by wolves in sheep’s clothing,
the gate is wide open.
If you have believed
that is was your job
to find green pastures and still waters all by yourself,
the Shepherd is calling you,
and the gate is wide open.
And if you can’t stay with a flock
that welcomes sheep
that don’t look like you do,
don’t vote like you do,
don’t love like you do,
can’t give what you do,
can’t serve like you do…
well then beloved,
the gate is wide open.
There is one flock
and one shepherd.
I don’t think it takes a PhD
in Ancient Near Eastern ovine husbandry
to understand the metaphor.
God in Christ
is saving the Church
and calling us to be part of it.
But there is only one Savior
and only one humanity.
Christ is calling us to center the vulnerable
and calling he powerful to the margins,
calling us to give of our time and our money,
to give away the power that money brings,
and to trust that
when we do
we shall not be in want.
Suffering is a given.
There are many poor and vulnerable people.
We will have enemies.
Many voices will try convince us
that we don’t need each other,
they will make “sheep” an insult.
But the Holy Spirit,
the voice of the Good Shepherd,
leads us to build a community
that centers the vulnerable
and calls the wealthy and powerful
to the margins,
a community with the gate wide open
to all who hear the Shepherd’s voice,
a community that fears no evil,
a community that feasts in the presence of our enemies,
until we have no enemies.
The Gate is wide open.
The table is prepared.
The Shepherd is calling.
Amen.