4th Sunday
of Easter
Fr.
Philip Neri Powell, OP
St
Dominic Church, NOLA
Being
a former farm boy, I am not all that happy about being compared to
sheep. Sheep are dirty. Loud. Stupid. And they stink. When I was in
seminary, our preaching and Scripture professors told us to think
carefully before we called God's people “sheep.” Is that really
the image you want to leave with your parishioners? That they are
dirty, loud, stupid, and stinky? If you call yourself a shepherd,
then you're the keeper of the sheep; the rustler of the sheep; you
poke at them to make them go where you want, and when the time comes,
you fleece them! So, maybe the whole sheep/shepherd image is a bit
outdated. Unless, of course, you remember that back in Jesus' day
sheep were a foundation stone of the economy. They provided just
about everything needed to survive. They were cared for almost like a
family's children and were protected from lions and wolves. That
sheep/shepherd image has two sides. The side Jesus uses this evening
is the side that places the sheep well within the family, well within
the protection of the Father. He places us – his sheep – in
familiar territory, in comfortable reach of food, water, and shelter.
He places us – his flock – within reach of his Word.
Jesus
says, “My sheep hear my voice; I know them, and they follow me.”
How do we explain that some who heard Jesus teach and preach turned
away from him? That some openly opposed him? That others started to
follow him but abandoned him along the Way? And still others stuck
with him almost to the end? Those who have ears to hear will hear and
those with eyes to see will see. Those who are most in need of mercy
and desirous of it will hear and see the mercy Christ offers to them.
The “poor” – those who live lives of spiritual poverty – see
the riches Christ offers them. They recognize those riches as theirs,
or they don't. They receive those riches, or they don't. IOW, we will
choose to follow Christ, or we won't. There is no halfway. If we
choose to follow, we follow. We follow behind, stepping
where he steps and heading in the same direction at the same pace. If
I am running head, or walking off in another direction, or skipping
along toward a cliff – I am not following. I can say that I'm
following Christ, but I can also say that I'm the 25yo
multi-millionaire quarterback of the NOLA Saints. Don't make
it so. Jesus says, “My sheep hear my voice; I know them, and
they follow me.” If you follow Christ, he knows you. And if he
knows you, then you have heard his voice.
To
be a follower of the Good Shepherd means that you belong to a flock,
a family of individuals who heard the voice of Christ and chose to
follow him. We came into an existing family, a long-lived,
long-suffering family that's been through every trial and tribulation
the Enemy could invent. For over 2,000 years our flock has endured,
persevered, rebuilt, struggled, and fought for the faith on just
about every continent in every language known to man. And here we are
doing it some more! We endure and persevere and rebuild and struggle
and fight for the faith b/c we chose to follow the Good Shepherd. We
rely on his protection, his strength, his love, his mercy. And we
will always have all that we need to carry on. Some will hear and
turn away. Others will hear, join us, and leave. Still others will
recognize in the voice of Christ – that's me and you – the
Father's offer of mercy and stay with us. If you'll forgive the image
– they will add their stink to ours and become invaluable sheep.
About us and for us, Jesus says, “I give [my sheep] eternal life,
and they shall never perish. No one can take them out of my hand.”
No
doubt you have heard the news that the SC is probably going to
overrule Roe v. Wade and end this country's fifty-year long
nightmare of abortion-on-demand. Some states will continue to allow
abortion. Some will regulate it and others ban it altogether. Several
national abortion rights groups have called on supporters to disrupt
Masses this Mothers' Day morning. I doubt we'll see anything like
this NOLA. However, what we will see is increasingly angry,
intolerant, and violent threats to the Church. And thus staying in
Christ's flock will increasingly come at a price. Remember: we live
in the world; we are not of it. We belong to Christ. And Christ calls
us to stand fast and firm against the furious assaults of our ancient
Enemy. Abortion supporters are not our enemy. Women who have obtained
abortions are not our enemy. Even the abortionists themselves are not
our enemy. Our enemy is the Spirit of the Age, the one who feeds (and
has always fed) on our rage, our self-righteousness, our hatred, and
our pride. Christ the Good Shepherd commands us, his sheep, to starve
this dark spirit, and to offer it nothing but mercy, peace, and the
Father's abundant love. Meeting this spirit's anger with our own, or
its intolerance with our own, or its violence with our own is an
exercise in failure on our part and a triumph for the Enemy's
recruitment program. The Enemy wants/hopes/counts on us to meet its
tit with our tat. To go round by round blow for blow.
Why? Because when we do so, we provide it with everything it needs to
accuse us before God. To bring us before the Father and says, “See!
Your sheep are no better than mine!” Christ calls us to stand fast
and firm against the furious assaults of this ancient Enemy. How?
Prayer. Daily prayer. Personal prayer. Prayer together as his
flock. The rosary. Divine Mercy. St. Michael the Archangel. Fasting.
Fasting with the intention for rescue for those deceived by the
Enemy. Fasting to protect ourselves against deceit. Fasting for
strength for our shepherds. Works of Mercy. Working as Christ
in the world. Giving to ministries that work with expecting mothers.
To ministries that help women heal from abortion. To ministries that
facilitate adoption. Forgiveness. Go to bed each night with no
one owing you a debt. Forgive abundantly, freely, recklessly. The
Enemy cannot abide the peace of Christ.
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