Homily – 4th Sunday of Easter

My friends, we continue this week celebrating Jesus’ life among us, which led to his death, because, as we know, he advocated that all of us, in this life, be treated justly, with care – ultimately, with love, and finally, his resurrection which gives us all hope that one day, the same will be true for us. 

   In the meantime, we are called to be the change we want to see in our world, in our brother Jesus’ footsteps. With this in mind, I would like to share the following story from six years ago – if you were with us then, you may recall this story – if not, it will be new, and at any rate, it’s a story worth hearing twice, as it is a fine example of what we are called to be as Jesus’ followers.

   The story:  A person stopped for the yellow light, and the driver who was tailgating, furiously honked because they missed their chance to get through the intersection.  Still in mid-rant, this person heard a tap on the window. A police officer ordered the person to exit the car with hands up, was ultimately taken to the station, searched, finger-printed, photographed and placed in a holding cell.  After a couple of hours, a police officer escorted the “would-be criminal” back to the booking desk and the arresting officer who said, “I am very sorry for the mistake, but I pulled up behind your car while you were blowing your horn, and giving the person in front of you the finger.  I noticed the “What Would Jesus Do?” bumper sticker, the “Choose Life” license plate holder, “Follow Me to Sunday School” bumper sticker and the chrome-plated Christian fish emblem on the trunk, so naturally I assumed you had stolen the car.  It is always good to remember that people are watching!

   This is Good Shepherd Sunday and John’s gospel lays out for us what a “good” shepherd is.  Now being that most of us have no notion of what being a physical shepherd of sheep is all about, a bit of explanation for us 21st Century Christians as to how 1st Century Christians would have heard Jesus’ words is in order.

   Large sheepfolds were generally constructed outside of town, and several flocks would be kept in one sheepfold.  Someone would be hired to look after the sheep. There was one gate to enter the enclosure. Those who were about the good—the welfare of the flock entered through the gate. Anyone else, a thief, would sneak in another way.  When the owner of a particular flock came to retrieve their sheep, the owner would call them in a distinctive way that only their sheep would recognize, and come. Many shepherds knew their sheep as individuals and called them by name.  It is this same kind of care and attention that each of us is promised by our God and that Jesus had in mind when he said, “I came that you might have life and have it to the full.” You will recall how Jesus, after his resurrection, was known to Mary Magdala by the way he said her name. 

   This “good shepherd story” is a very telling one for us to keep in mind in these post-Easter days.  Jesus truly meant his words to those first disciples that “he would never [totally] leave them,” and by extension, us – he would go, yes, physically, but through his Spirit, he would always be near, and that should give us “the peace” he spoke of often in those post-Easter days when he appeared to them. 

   I think you will agree with me that there is much in our present days that cause us to feel less than, “peaceful,” but we must truly trust, and believe in Jesus’ words, that we will not be left alone.  Our relationship with our loving God, and experienced more tangibly, we might say, through Jesus, began at our baptisms, when through water and faith, we each became part of a spiritual family of care.  In our 1st reading today, Luke writes in the Acts of the Apostles about how God gave us Jesus, the Messiah, to show us the way. 

   Peter continues in this reading telling “all of Israel,” that, “to save themselves,” they must “be baptized.”  Peter and all the apostles would come to see that following in Jesus’ footsteps would not be so “black and white,” a one-time event, but that baptism was just the beginning, and that they would  need to say “yes” again and again throughout their lives, through many ups and downs. 

   This is true for us as well.  Loving those who we may find hard to love, because of not understanding how, on the one hand, someone can claim to be a Christian, and on the other, commit actions that speak only of meanness, selfishness and greed.

   Truthfulness – truth-telling, is another action that seems in short supply in our present day, and it is an action that we long for in our day-to-day lives, especially from our so-called leaders.  Following in Jesus’ footsteps tells us that we humans are capable of so much, more good than the daily news speaks of.  Why is it seemingly so easy to drop bombs on the innocent rather than to come to the negotiation table with open, peace-filled hands?  I don’t have the answer to that question any more than you probably do, my friends, but my hope springs eternal that “good” wins out in the end!

   Robert reminded me recently to see that since our blessed state of Minnesota fought back against the ICE surge here, we haven’t seen that same kind of thing taken up in any other state!

     I began this homily with a story that asked us to consider if we merely “proclaim” our Christianity or actually “show it” through our actions, being the change we wish to see – others are depending on us and watching, as in the opening story, to be who we say we are! Only we can determine if we will live, as Jesus did—trying to understand, giving a response and action that is reflective of justice, mercy and love for each other, or not.  So, keep writing, keep demonstrating, keep being the change – it all matters!  Amen? Amen!