4th Sunday of Easter (A)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Joseph Church, Ponchatoula
While in the studium—the 
Dominican version of seminary—the student brothers were often told that 
agricultural metaphors for the Church weren't all that “helpful.”  For 
example, using images such as harvesting grain, planting seeds, plowing 
fields, pruning trees, etc. to talk about complex theological ideas like
 redemption, justice, etc. is virtually meaningless in our postmodern 
age. Our fussy, urbane professors were particularly hard on the 
sheep/shepherd metaphors in the gospels.  They really got wound up about
 Jesus describing his followers as sheep.  Sheep are dirty, stupid, and 
prone to being killed unless well-guarded.  And it didn't help matters 
at all that those who guard the Lord's sheep—the shepherds, you know, 
the bishops—were exclusively male and celibate!  By the time our 
enlightened profs were finished foaming at the mouth against the image 
of the Church as a bunch of filthy, ignorant animals led by an all-male 
cadre of celibate shepherds, we poor seminarians were quaking in our 
habits, silently vowing to never-ever speak about or even think about 
the Church in terms of the sheep/shepherd metaphor!  Of course, one or 
two of us were farm boys so we knew one thing about sheep that our profs
 didn't:  Sheep don't follow shepherds.   No one leads a flock of sheep.
  Sheep are driven, herded by a skillful shepherd with a big stick and a
 pack of feisty dogs.  Now that's an image of the Church that Catholics 
can understand!  So, what are we to make of Jesus saying, “. . .[the 
shepherd] walks ahead of [his sheep], and [they] follow him, because 
they recognize his voice”? 
Well, by nature, metaphors are 
always imperfect, so we don't want to spend too much time dissecting the
 parallels between Christians and sheep, or between bishops and 
shepherds.   Jesus' point seems to be that those who have chosen to 
follow him will know his voice when he speaks and obey his word b/c he 
speaks with a familiar authority.  Jesus emphasizes his point by noting 
that those who love him “will not follow a stranger; they will run away 
from him, because they do not recognize the voice of strangers.”  In 
other words, Christians do not hear, cannot hear in the voice of a false
 teacher, a false shepherd that familiar ring of authority that 
proclaims the authentic faith, the Real Deal of Gospel Truth.  We could 
play with the sheep metaphor a bit and say that the voice of a false 
teacher, a false shepherd always sounds like a wolf growling with hunger
 even when it looks, smells, and acts like a lamb.  Oh sure, the 
occasional individual sheep—the lapsed or lukewarm Christian—may be 
fooled, seduced by the hypnotic thrill of the wolf's promises, but the 
flock as a whole is never fooled, never taken in by a stranger's voice. 
 Together, as one flock, we remember the Chief Shepherd's voice; we 
remember him saying, “I am the gate. Whoever enters through me will be 
saved, and will come in and go out and find pasture. . .I came so that 
they might have life and have it more abundantly.”  There is no other 
gate to the Father's eternal pasture, no other Shepherd for His faithful
 flock.  Christ Jesus alone brings us to a more abundant life!
As faithful sheep, we should 
ask:  how do we come to recognize the authoritative voice of our 
Shepherd?  In his Acts of the Apostles, St. Luke gives us a clue.  Peter
 stands with the Eleven and proclaims to the crowd, “Let the whole house
 of Israel know for certain that God has made both Lord and Christ, this
 Jesus whom you crucified.”  Luke tells us that when those in the crowd 
heard this truth spoken, “they were cut to the heart. . .”  Cut to the 
heart!  Peter utters a simple sentence, twenty-one common words strung 
together, a declarative sentence that rings out over those gathered, 
seizes their attention with absolute clarity, and instantly convicts 
their hearts in the truth:  the man Jesus, the one whom they crucified, 
is the Lord and the Christ long-promised by their God.  Peter's 
pronouncement slices through their guilt; their recriminations; their 
religious and legal defenses; their logic, their doubts, and their 
fears.  They were cut to the heart, that place in their souls where no 
lie can easily rest and b/c they recognize their sin, they ask, “What 
are we to do?”  And Peter tells them what to do.  “Repent and be 
baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the 
forgiveness of your sins. . .Save yourselves from this corrupt 
generation.”  Among those who heard Peter preach that day were three 
thousand souls who accepted his message and were baptized.  Those three 
thousand, once convicted in the truth and baptized in the name of Christ
 Jesus, would always recognize the voice of the Lord and his shepherds. 
 A cut to the heart made by the sword that Christ himself yields is 
always deep and always permanent.  It cannot be forgotten nor can it be 
mistaken for the mark of a stranger.
As men and women baptized into 
the life, death, and resurrection of Christ, we are deeply and 
permanently cut by the truth of the gospel.  Christ's voice always rings
 true; the familiar authority of our shepherd is unmistakable, and we 
cannot be lead astray if we graze with his flock, the Church.  The 
apostle Peter and his successors proclaim the central, abiding fact of 
our two-thousand year old flock: “God has made both Lord and Christ, 
this Jesus whom you crucified.”  That's the sound, the voice of gospel 
truth, the words and the spirit that cuts the hearts of all those who 
long to see their lives redeemed, who desire a life beyond this one, who
 know that they will be perfected only when they come to see their 
Father face-to-face at the foot of His throne.  Do you recognize that 
voice?  More importantly, can you speak with that voice and spread the 
good news it proclaims?  Sheep may be dirty, stupid, and prone to being 
eaten by wolves, but we are no ordinary sheep!  We belong to the Eternal
 Shepherd and the world is our pasture to cultivate for him.  Having 
heard his call, it's time for us to answer.  
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