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Knowing the Shepherd’s Voice Keith McFarren April 26, 2026 John 10:1-10 I don’t like being compared to sheep. Unfortunately, the Bible does it all the time…but I still don’t like it. I don’t like being compared to a dirty, smelly sheep…especially when I take a shower every day. And another thing, sheep aren’t very smart. I’m not a genius by any means but I’ve got a little bit of intelligence up here (head). But one has to wonder, if sheep aren’t very smart how do they recognize the shepherd’s voice? That’s kind of the question for all of us this week. We, like sheep, don’t always make the best decisions either. We stray; we get lost; we get trapped in ditches; we get turned upside down; we bleat and we cry while we wait for the shepherd to rescue us. So I wonder, do we, like sheep, know our shepherd’s voice? We all want the shepherd to rescue us when we need help. And that’s the sign of a good leader…a good leader is someone who will show up in the time of trouble and rescue us; someone who will show us the way and keep us out of trouble. We all want good leadership. We want good shepherds to lead us in and out of green pastures. That’s why we have elections. We vote hoping to elect good leadership. We apply for jobs hoping that we’ll work under a good leader and we go to school with the hopes that we’ll be educated by a good leader. But unfortunately, we don’t always find the leadership we’re looking for or the leadership we need. It’s easy for the trust we place in our leaders to be broken and when that trust is broken, we find ourselves lost, or spiraling out of control or maybe in a ditch or who knows where, trying to find our way out. This picture that Jesus gives us this morning is a vivid portrait of a shepherd caring for his sheep. The shepherd would lead his sheep out to a good grazing area and then stay there for a certain number of days while they grazed in the lush grass. While they were there the shepherd he would create a temporary corral, or a temporary pen to keep the sheep in when they weren’t grazing. Using the stones he would find in the fields, the shepherd would quickly put together a corral or a pen, and at night he would lay down in the doorway of the corral or pen. That way there was no way a sheep could wander away at night unless it stepped on the shepherd and there was no way a wolf could come in without stepping on the shepherd and waking him up. He (the shepherd) put himself in the position to serve as the gate. There was no way in and there was no way out unless the shepherd gave the okay. Do you see what’s happening here? That is what Jesus was thinking of when he said, “I am the door.” Through him and through him only are we are able to find access to God. “Through him,” Paul said, “we have access to…the Father” (Ephesians 2:18). The writer of Hebrews calls him, “the new and living way” (Hebrews 10:20). Jesus opens the door to God. In fact, until Jesus came, people would think of God as being a stranger because they had no access to him or even worse, they thought of him as being an enemy because, when he did show up, he always seemed to be punishing Israel for something they did wrong. But Jesus came to show people what God is really like, and in his coming he also showed us how to gain access to God. In his coming Jesus showed us that he is the door through whom we have to go to have access to God. It was Jesus who said, “I came that they may have life and have it abundantly” or as the New Living Translation puts it, “My purpose is to give them a rich and satisfying life” (John 10:10). In contrast to the thief who takes life, Jesus is the one who gives life. An abundant, rich, full life. A life that is eternal, yet at the same time a life that begins immediately. But what does that mean? Or in this case, how do we get it? What do we need to do to experience this abundant life that Jesus is talking about? The answer is to strive to be like Jesus in all that we say and all that we do. If we really want to experience life to its fullest, all we need to do is ask ourselves one simple question, WWJD? —What would Jesus do? What would Jesus do in this same situation? What would Jesus want me to do? How can I be more faithful to Jesus? How can I be more like Jesus? That is how we can live life more abundantly – by living our lives just as Jesus would live his. Jesus is the door to God. We believe that there is no way for us to get to God except through this door - this door named Jesus. So if we want to get through the door and have better access to God and a better relationship with God, what better way would there be than to believe in Jesus, and to trust in him and to listen to him when he calls our name. What better way is there to have a better relationship with God than to use Jesus as a model for our behavior, and to use him as a model for our actions and to use him as a model to live our lives. It all begins by listening. We need to listen to Jesus but we also need to follow him. We need to not only listen but we need to trust him. We need to not only listen but we need to have hope as well. Following the shepherd is a product of listening to the shepherd. He tells us in verse four that he will lead us, but he can only do that after we have responded to the sound of his voice. He will lead us, he tells us, but we have to choose to follow him. And the only way we can follow him is if we have learned to recognize the sound of his voice…which calls for a certain amount of discernment on our part. There are all sorts of voices out there. Good voices and bad voices. There are voices we need to learn to run from. Voices that want to lead us astray and down the wrong path. Voices that don’t have our best interests in mind, voices that don’t want us to prosper and grow, voices that don’t want us to know the joy and happiness that abundant life can bring us. So how do we know which is which? Which is the good voice and which is the not so good voice? How do we figure out which voice is God’s voice and which voice is the voice that is out to hurt us? John doesn’t give us a whole lot of instruction about that this morning. But we do know that it takes a lifetime of continual study and devotion and faithfulness. Learning to distinguish the shepherd’s voice is a process that John Wesley calls sanctification…it’s a lifetime of slow but continual learning and devotion that helps us to grow closer to Jesus so that we can become more like him. There are a couple of hints in these verses this morning that will help us. First, we need to know that the shepherd not only cares about us but he also knows our name. We are more than just a social security number to Jesus. We’re more than just a picture on a driver’s license or an unused balance on a credit card or a statistic on a computer printout. When he calls our name, and we have submitted our life to him, it’s a call that is going to resonate into the deepest parts of our soul. Following Jesus has a “rightness” feel about it…it’s that feeling deep within us, a response deep down in our soul that tells us we’re doing the right thing and we’re going in the right direction. We know that we are called to be who we are, not who we think we want to be or who the world tells us we need to be. And the more we follow and the longer we follow we will begin to discover a peace within us that helps us know we’re doing the right thing. In verse nine we’re told that following Jesus is the only way - “whoever enters by me will be saved.” And that’s all well and good but deciding to follow Jesus doesn’t mean that our spiritual journey is over. We’re told instead that as the sheep of Jesus’s flock we also come in and then go out and we too graze in the pasture. The Christian lifestyle is not for the lazy or the apathetic. There is a lot of movement involved in it. We don’t receive our salvation and then sit down over in a corner somewhere and twiddle our thumbs. We find our sustenance in our coming and our going. As Christians, we are continually learning to recognize the voice of God and by recognizing him, we will continue to draw closer to him as he calls out for us to be on the move, day after day, to be coming and going all the time, because we he wants nothing more than for us to go out amongst the world and share the good news of the Gospel. When we try to live our own lives by listening to the voices of the world around us, life can be just as traumatic as it can be dull and boring. But when we learn to recognize the shepherds voice, when we walk with Jesus and submit ourselves to him, we will soon find ourselves filled with a new vitality and a superabundance of life as we give of ourselves to others and strive on a daily basis to be just like him. |
