The
familiar image of Jesus the Good Shepherd, is a very popular one – even in our
modern, urbanized society, in which most of us are not shepherds and know next
to nothing about sheep. What we do know is that the luckier sheep live to
provide us with wool, while the less lucky sheep become lamb chops.
And
that may be precisely the point – precisely what makes Jesus so special as a
shepherd. Jesus the Good Shepherd lays
down his life for the sheep – a totally unexpected reversal of
roles, one which brings about a totally new kind of relationship between the
shepherd and his sheep.
In
most ancient religious understandings, what distinguished the pagan gods was
their much envied freedom from death in contrast to our inescapable mortality.
But by becoming one of us and experiencing our human predicament by dying,
Jesus overcame this separation between God and us, and so reversed not just the
traditional job description of shepherd, but also the pagan idea that human
beings exist, like sheep, simply to serve for the satisfaction of the gods.
It
turns out, in fact, that God actually takes satisfaction precisely in this
reversal. This is why the Father loves
me, Jesus says, because I lay down my
life in order to take it up again. So an age-old separation has been
overcome, and something new has happened in our world. A brand new connection
has been created between God and us by the Good Shepherd, who accepted the
limits of our mortal life in order to bring us with him to something new beyond
those limits.
Now
that’s all well and good, but didn’t it happen such a long time ago? And not
much really seems to have changed in the world, has it? Whether in far-away
Syria or around the corner in Granger County, how many lives are still being
lost or ruined, how many of the Good Shepherd’s flock still seem to be
sacrificed for others’ power, domination, and control? We hear the Good
Shepherd’s Easter news year-in and year-out, but if we are not paying proper
attention it can begin to sound abstract at best.
But
there was nothing abstract, certainly, about Peter’s sermon in today’s reading
from the Acts of the Apostles, in the aftermath of the first post-Pentecost
miracle, an amazing cure which Peter somewhat modestly calls a good deed done to a cripple. It all
happened, Peter proclaims, in the name of
Jesus Christ the Nazarene, whom God raised from the dead … ‘the stone rejected
by the builders, which has become the cornerstone.” There is no salvation
through anyone else, nor is there any other name under heaven given to the
human race by which we are to be saved.”
What
a claim! The sheer boldness of it – that humanity can be saved and that Jesus
Christ is its one and only savior!
Recognizing
the boldness of that claim and taking it seriously – making it our own claim –
is what Easter time is all about. Admittedly, given the inevitable limits of
our attention, it takes some effort to keep up that Easter enthusiasm – to keep
it from wilting along with the Eater flowers!
And
so we celebrate Easter for seven weeks, during which we read every day from the
Acts of the Apostles – to recall the fervor of those very first Christians, who
were transformed forever by the presence and power of the Risen Lord,
experienced in the here and now in his word and sacraments. And we see how
eager they were to share that experience with everyone around them – an
eagerness we need to learn from, for each of us is being propelled by the power
of the Easter story to trust in its power to transform the world. For, as
Peter’s sermon makes clear, the universal power of Jesus’ name is not limited
or constrained by any human failure to hear it.
Jesus
himself says he has other sheep that do
not belong to this fold. These also he must
lead, and they will hear his voice.
The Savior of the world calls all people to his Father, as he continually
transforms the world through the uniquely saving power of his death and
resurrection. In Jesus, God can now be found in every aspect of human life, in
places and people where one might least expect, in situations which our limited
imaginations may even turn into obstacles to God’s presence.
As
Pope Francis has just recently reminded us, in his Apostolic Exhortation, On the Call to Holiness in Today’s World,
“God is mysteriously present in the life of every person, in a way that he
himself chooses, and we cannot exclude this by our presumed certainties. Even
when someone’s life appears completely wrecked, even when we see it devastated
by vices or addictions, God is present there.”
Our
mission, our mission as a Church animated by the power of the Risen Christ, is
to go beyond the limits of our imaginations, and become, like those otherwise
ordinary people whose story is told in the Acts of the Apostles, effective
witnesses to God’s saving power in our world through the death and resurrection
of his Son.
Homily for the 4th Sunday of Easter, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, April 22, 2018.
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