Fourth Sunday of
Easter in Year A
Acts 2:42-47
Psalm 23
1 Peter 2:19-25
John 10:1-10
Good
Shepherd Sunday, as this day is sometimes called, provides multiple points of
entry for an ecotheological perspective. In John 10:1-10 Jesus refers to
himself both as a “good shepherd” and also as the gate by which the sheep enter
into safe pasture. 1 Peter 2:25 compares those who follow Christ to sheep who
had gone astray but are now safely in the care of the shepherd Jesus, “the
guardian of your souls.” Psalm 23 begins, “The Lord is my shepherd . . .” One
only has to say those first five words, and almost everyone in church can join
in reciting this most precious psalm.
We are
no longer an agrarian nation. Most of us don’t know any sheep herders
personally. But at the time when this psalm and the other passages were
written, herding sheep was a common profession. Sheep are not the brightest
animals on the farm. They have to be led where you want them to go. It is up to
the shepherd to find suitable pasture for the sheep to graze. And the shepherd
must find water for them. Not just any water—but still water, so that the sheep
won’t be swept away by currents that are too fast for them. When we think of
this image of water, as Christians, we can’t help but think of the baptismal
waters when we hear these words. In the still waters of our mother’s wombs we
were created. In the still waters of the font we were baptized Children of God.
And this water sustains us all our lives.
Read more: http://www.lutheransrestoringcreation.org/the-fourth-sunday-of-easter-in-year-a
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