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I am the Good Shepherd. The Good Shepherd giveth His life for
the sheep. But he that is a hireling and not the shepherd, whose
own the sheep are not seeth the wolf coming and leaveth the sheep
and flee it. And the wolf catches them and scattereth the sheep.
The hireling fleeth because he is an hireling and careth not for
the sheep. I am the Good Shepherd and know My sheep and am known
of Mine. As the Father knoweth Me, even so know I the Father.
And I lay down My life for the sheep. And other sheep I have
that are not of this fold, them also I must bring and they shall
hear My voice and there shall be one fold and one Shepherd.
Therefore doth My Father love Me because I lay down My life that
I might take it again. No man taketh it from Me, but I lay it
down of Myself. I have power to lay it down and I have power to
take it again. This commandment have I received of My Father.
There was a division therefore again among the Jews for these
sayings and many of them said, "He hath a demon and is mad. Why
hear ye Him?" Others said, "These are not the words of Him that
hath a demon. Can a demon open the eyes of the blind?"
May God add His blessing to the reading of this, His Word.
For our guests, we may add a word at this point. We are
studying through the gospel of John each Sunday morning. We've
been there for a long time and will be there for a long time.
But it's rich and it's exciting and we're learning what God's
Spirit designed to say to us through the Apostle John as he
recorded the events of the life of Christ. The gospels, Matthew,
Mark, Luke and John, record the record of the life of Christ.
They record the life of Christ in terms of His birth, His death,
His resurrection and those things that occurred in His life which
bear important weight on His own deity and importance to our
understanding of Him and of God.
Now in John's gospel particularly, John has one basic theme.
And we have repeated it again and again and shall do so this
morning. John constantly desires that men understand that Jesus
is God. He is concerned with the deity of Christ, that He is God
in a human body. So repeatedly through the gospel of John, John
records the various times that Jesus made the claim to be God.
And it's interesting that again and again on every page Jesus is
claiming to be God in one way or another, and repeatedly with all
of His claims to be God there is a constant running rejection on
the part of Israel. In fact, by the time you get to chapter 10
there are at least three times when the Jews have tried to kill
Jesus in anger and fury as a result of His claim to be God.
Now as we come to chapter 10, we come in on the closing of a
discourse that Jesus is giving to a group of people who have
gathered because of a particular miracle. In chapter 9 Jesus
healed a man born blind, something that had never been done, a
congenitally blind man. Jesus healed him on the Sabbath so
immediately it was reported to the Pharisees who were the great
guardians of the Sabbath. It was reported to them that Jesus had
broken the Sabbath law in healing the man. It's interesting that
the Pharisees claimed that Jesus had broken the law in healing
the man and then denied that Jesus healed him because they didn't
believe Jesus could heal. It's a rather strange paradox, but
they found themselves in stranger ones than that.
So at the same time they deny the miracle they accuse Jesus
of doing it on the Sabbath. And so Jesus is confronted again
with these same leaders who again design in wrath and fury to
blast Him out of the situation, get rid of Him, and He confronts
them beginning at the end of chapter 9, and particularly
beginning with verse 39. Now mixed into the crowd, not only are
the Pharisees and the Jewish leaders, but also are Jesus'
disciples and the man who was healed of his blindness, who by
this time is a convert. If you look backwards a little bit at
verse 38 you see the man said, "Lord, I believe. And he
worshiped Him." So the man not only had his eyes healed, he had
his soul healed. He not only had been given physical sight, but
he had been given spiritual sight. And since the man's
neighbors, to whom the man immediately reported the miracle of
his sight, since the man's neighbors had reported this to the
Pharisees, there was now a big confrontation between the
Pharisees, the Jews, the disciples, the blind man and Jesus in
the midst to find out what He thought He was doing this, doing
this on the Sabbath and who did He think He was. And just kind
of clearing the air of all of this situation.
Well, naturally in any given situation where Jesus is
present, Jesus is also dominant. And you don't hear anything in
this discourse from anybody but Jesus. Everybody just stands
there until the very end, and we'll see that a little later in
our message this morning.
Beginning in verse 39 Jesus makes a very important
declaration, kind of bouncing the thought off the miracle that
had just taken place involving the blind man because in verses 39
to 41 of chapter 9, Jesus has told these Pharisees and Jewish
leaders that they were the ones who were really blind
spiritually, that they could not discern spiritual truth, they
could not see God. They did not know right from wrong in terms
of recognition because they were spiritually blind. Elsewhere He
called them blind leaders of the blind, and then said both of
them would fall into the ditch. And so they are spiritually
blind. They do not discern God or God's truth, they are totally
blind to Messiah. They are absolutely blind to everything Jesus
claims. And when they think they see, they don't see.
So, in verses 39 to 41 Jesus tells them that, in effect.
And He wraps it up at the end of verse 41 by saying, "Therefore
your sin remains." And earlier in this gospel Jesus said, "If
your sins remain, you die in your sins." And you and I know if
you die in your sins, you're damned for eternity.
And so, what is happening here is Jesus has told them they
are blind. And then told them that that blindness damns them for
eternity. Now, of course, they never did believe this at all.
All the way through the gospel He's been telling them the same
thing in different words and they never believed it. And so,
Jesus takes a further step here. He says, "You have chosen to
be blind willfully and you cannot help somebody who doesn't know
he's blind." Jesus says to them in 39 to 41, in effect, "Since
you will not admit your blindness, I can't heal your blindness so
you are willfully blind." Then Jesus goes a step further and
says, "Consequently, I declare you to be judicially blind." In
other words, if a man chooses to be blind, sooner or later God
confirms him in that blindness and he is hopeless.
There's a point at which, you know, you can go past the
point of grace and you become judicially confirmed in whatever
you've chosen. To the pre-flood civilization God said, "My Spirit
will not always strive with man." There comes a point when you
go past grace and then there's confirmation, the Pharisees came
to that point. Later on, you remember in Matthew 12, Jesus said,
"You have seen all My miracles, you have seen everything I did,
you heard everything that I've said, you have concluded that what
I do I do by the power of Satan, for that you will not be
forgiven." And He confirmed them in their unbelief and they
committed what was really the sin of blasphemy against the Holy
Spirit, for which they would not be forgiven.
So, when they had had all the revelation He could give and
still didn't believe, then God just assigned them a judicial
blindness that left them in their blindness and they were damned
in their sins. And so Jesus declares that they are, in fact,
blind.
Then He gives a graphic illustration of it which is the
discourse of chapter 10:1 to 21. And the illustration is given
in a paroimia. Now there are two things in the Greek, two words,
one is parable, parabolos and the other is paroimia. They are
both figures of speech. Very often Jesus spoke in parables,
didn't He? Very often. Here and because there are no parables
in John, here it's a different thing, it's a paroimia, a paroimia
and a parable are as different as a metaphor and a simile.
And so by
use of a paroimia, Jesus proves their blindness. In other words,
He says you're blind, then He speaks in a lucid clear paroimia
and sure enough, they're blind, they don't see it. See. So what
it is is a living illustration confirming their blindness. At
the same time it confirms their blindness, the disciples and the
blind man are just eating it up, see. Because their faith
renders them capable of understanding it.
Now in every case, whether it's a parable or a paroimia, it
always had a two-fold purpose...to conceal and to reveal. While
it was dark to somebody, it was light to somebody else. And so
when Jesus taught in parables, the people who were blind did not
understand, the people who saw did understand. And so that's the
case right here. To illustrate their blindness and expose them
as false leaders and show the people that indeed He was right,
they were blind, He speaks in a lucid clear paroimia or simile or
allegory, it is so clear and so beautiful and they do not get the
message at all illustrating the fact that indeed they're blind.
And as I said, while they don't get the message at all, the
believers get the message. And we get the message of the tender
loving care of the Shepherd to the sheep, which is glorious.
This illustrates how Jesus loves us. Tremendous truth. So while
Jesus' words were dark to the unbeliever, they were light to the
believer. And that's what a parable, or a paroimia is designed
to do.
Now this paroimia shifts gears all the way through it.
We're not going to go into this because we've already been in it
two weeks ago in the first ten verses. But you'll remember that
there's a shift in gears. The fold here means one thing and the
fold there means something else. And the door is significant in
at least two different ways, one place it means Messianic right,
the other place it refers directly to Jesus Christ. So there is
a shift in the paroimia, and it must be studied very carefully.
For example, the first ten verses, the false leaders are
called strangers, thieves and robbers. In the section we'll
study today they're called hirelings, both referring to the same
thing only from a little different angle. So while it is in a
sense a similar paroimia, that is it's always the figure of a
shepherd and a sheep and a fold and a flock, yet it shifts in its
significance.
We come to our
text in John 10, we come to verse 11. And this is very
simple and yet it is profoundly thrilling to see the
relationships of the shepherd, and that's what we want to discuss
this morning. If you have your bulletin, you have an outline in
the bulletin, you might want to follow along. Incidentally, in
verse 1 to 10 we really had a relationship between the shepherd
and false shepherds, didn't we? The false shepherds were the
strangers, thieves and robbers contrasted to the true shepherd.
Now here we have three relationships of the Good Shepherd...His
relation to the sheep, His relation to the Father, His relation
to the world. And as I said, in the first ten verses if you
wanted a fourth point for that outline, to teach the whole
chapter at once, the first point would be His relation to false
shepherds, that's verses 1 to 10, but we're dealing with 11 to
21.
So it's the relationship to the sheep, to the Father and to
the world. And in all of these relationships, Jesus is a true,
good Shepherd promised in the Old Testament. He is the center of
everything. He is the central point and the figures are all
drawn in relation to Him. Now there are some rich rich truth
here, we could spend weeks just delving into verse 11 alone, it
is so loaded with theology and truth.
Let me start out by giving you a little sub-heading for
point number one. Point one, the relation of the Good Shepherd
to the sheep. There are three sub-points. What does He do for
the sheep? He dies for the sheep. Secondly, He loves the sheep.
Thirdly, He unites the sheep. And we'll see each of these in
the text. Beginning in verse 11 and going through verse 13 we
see the first sub point, He dies for the sheep. Verse 11, "I am
the Good Shepherd, the Good Shepherd giveth His life for the
sheep."
Now first we see then that Christ has a relationship to
sheep. He is the Good Shepherd. And that the Good Shepherd
gives His life for the sheep. The first thing Christ does for
the sheep in text here, He dies for the sheep.
Now let's back up a little bit and I want you to look at
verse 11, just the first statement..."I am the Good Shepherd."
That is a profound statement. And we often, I would think, look
at it rather on a surface level, and we don't understand the
original and what's tied into this, that statement is jammed pack
with truth because the Greek construction is very different. It
has several definite articles in it and in the Greek it literally
would read this way, "I am the shepherd, the good one...I am the
shepherd, the good one." There are two words, at least, in the
Greek language for good, one is agathos from which we get the
name Agatha, which means the good one. And agathos means good in
the sense of moral quality, and that's all. Just good in the
sense of moral quality.
For example, I might paint a painting. It might be agathos,
good in the sense of moral quality. I mean, it might just be of
a tree or a flower, I wouldn't paint an obscene painting.
Morally it would be good. Artistically it would be lousy because
I am not an artist. But when you want to express the word good
in terms of not only a moral quality in the painting, but a
profoundly good piece of art, then the Greeks had another word
that expressed not only moral goodness, but total beauty and
loveliness and that word was kalos and that is the word that is
used here.
Jesus does not say, "I am the morally good one." He says,
"I am the good one preeminent and excellent in every feature, I
am the good, the beautiful one." That word is really packed. I
am the shepherd, the excellent preeminent, lovely, beautiful one.
That's what the word kalos meant. And that singles out Christ,
friends. He's not just another shepherd. Two times a definite
article, "I am The Shepherd...I am The preeminent, excellent,
lovely, beautiful one." There is no other shepherd. He's above
all shepherds. And, of course, to the Jewish mind, who in the
history was the greatest shepherd? Who was it? It was David.
And so what is Jesus saying here? In effect He's saying, "I'm
greater than David."
You say, "That must not have registered too well with them."
No. But that's all right, in chapter 5 He said He was greater
than Moses and in chapter 8 He said He was greater than Abraham,
why not go for David? He's the only one left.
You see, Jesus Christ was establishing in the minds of
Israel His superiority. He said Moses wrote of Me, He said
before Abraham was...what?...I am. And now He's the good, the
beautiful, preeminent, excellent shepherd. Quite a claim for
Jesus to make in the face of Israel. But He backed it up with
His deeds, didn't He?
But I think there's even something beyond the claim to be
greater than David. I think what He's doing really here is
claiming deity. Look at the statement again. "I am," first of
all could be reference to the name of God. But what He's saying
here when He says, "I am the Good Shepherd," is really a profound
statement in terms of His deity because of this. I read this
morning in our opening Psalm 23, "The Lord is
my...what?...shepherd." Psalm 80 calls God the Shepherd of
Israel. The Jew knew that the true excellent Shepherd was God.
And when Jesus comes along and says, "I am the one excellent
kalos preeminently beautiful Shepherd," you know what He's
claiming? Claiming equality with God. That's what He's
claiming. He made Himself equal with the Jehovah of the Old
Testament and He could do it because He was equal.
Then having stated His identity, He then discusses the first
characteristic of the relationship between the Good Shepherd and
the sheep, He gives His life, He dies for the sheep. Verse 11 in
the middle, "The Good Shepherd, the excellent, preeminent,
beautiful Shepherd giveth His life for the sheep." Now that's
the first thing Jesus Christ does. Before we can have any other
relationship to Him, He had to die, didn't He? Before we had any
access to God, before we had any communion with Jesus Christ,
before we had any relationship as a sheep, He had to die that we
might gain entrance into His fold. So the first thing the Good
Shepherd does is die for the sheep.
Now in Palestine the shepherd was absolutely responsible for
the sheep. That's why this paroimia is so clear. If anything
happened to the sheep, the shepherd had to produce evidence that
he tried to make sure it didn't happen and did his best to
prevent it. If there wasn't such a standard, you know, the
shepherd could steal the sheep, or fleece the sheep, or barbecue
the sheep or do anything he wanted and just say...Well, he got
away." So in the case of any kind of a problem, a shepherd had
to produce evidence that he had struggled to save the life of the
sheep.
Amos, for example, in Amos 3, I think it's verse 12, where
Amos talks about the fact that if a shepherd loses a sheep, he
would have to bring a leg or two legs or a piece of an ear to the
owner just to show him that the sheep had truly been devoured by
a lion or a bear or wolves or that the sheep somehow had died or
something had happened to the sheep. He had to try to get a
piece of the sheep.
In Exodus 22:13 it says, "If it be torn in pieces, let him
bring it for a witness." In other words, bring a piece of the
sheep to the owner so that you would verify the fact that you had
struggled to save the life of that sheep. So even the shepherd
in Palestine was used to risking his life in the protection of
the flock. And the idea is simply that, that Jesus Christ in a
million times magnified sense gives His life for the flock, the
sheep of God.
David, for example, you remember was talking to Saul in 1
Samuel 17 and he was reminding Saul of the time that he had kept
his father's sheep and fought against the bear and the lion.
Remember? To protect the sheep. And Isaiah 31 speaks of the
crowd of shepherds that were called together to deal with the
lion that was coming after the sheep. So it was the shepherd's
duty with the risking of his own life to protect the sheep. And
it was a natural thing for him do. You see, every night when the
sheep went into the fold, he put the rod down there and every
sheep passed under the rod and he checked all the marks and the
scratches and the cuts. You do that for a few months and you
stay with those sheep all day, and you're going to get attached
to those sheep and the shepherd did and he loved the sheep and he
gave his life because of that.
Doctor Thomason has written a book called, The Land of the
Book and in it he gives an instance of this. He says this, and I
quote: "I have listened with intense interest to their graphic
descriptions of downright desperate fights with savage beasts.
And when the thief and the robber come, the faithful shepherd is
often to put his life in his hand to defend the flock. I have
known more than one case where he literally had to lay it down in
the contest. Illustration, a poor faithful fellow last spring
between Tiberius and Tabor, instead of fleeing actually fought
three Bedouin robbers until he was hacked to pieces with their
kanjars(?) and died among the sheep he was defending," end quote.
And so, the true shepherd never hesitated to give his life for
the sheep, if need be.
Notice here the word in verse 11 is "giveth," do you see it
there? Did you know that if the wolf or the lion came after the
sheep, the sheep could not persuade the shepherd to defend them?
How could they do that? There's no way. That shepherd must
voluntarily protect the sheep. Why as soon as the sheep see the
lion...whissssh...they're not going to stand around and take a
vote on whether the shepherd ought to protect them or not.
They'll be gone. The only way that that shepherd would ever be
able to protect those sheep would be on the basis of
his voluntary choice to risk his life. That's what Jesus did.
He gave His life, freely, voluntarily, He gave His life. And
you'll see it in verse 17 in a few minutes, He says, "I lay down
My life," personally...personally He did it. Then in verse 18,
"No man taketh it from Me." Jesus voluntarily gave His life for
the sheep. We had no access to God except someone die in our
place, bear our sin, Jesus did it.
You say, "Yeah, but, you know, I mean, it's no big thing.
Jesus was God. Came down here, got into a body, then they came
along for a few years, they nailed the body to the cross, He just
took off. I mean, you now, He didn't need that body anyway. No
big sacrifice. Just lay that body on a cross and nail it up
there, I mean, Christ was detached. He was God, God of the
universe. There was not a real involvement." I've heard that.
Well, that's an interesting thing. The only problem with that is
it's not true, which is a problem of some consequence.
If you notice carefully in verse 11 you'll see the word
life. Now in the English version you never would understand the
significance of this because it's not there. But listen to this.
In the Greek there are two words for life, neither one of them
is used here. One is bios from which we get our word biology
which means life just the breathing part of life, you know, I
exist, that's it, you know, as opposed to being dead. The other
is zoe which means the circumstances of life. When Jesus gave
His life He didn't just give up His biological breathing, He did
not just forfeit the circumstances of life. You know what the
word used here is? It's psuche, that's the word that's
translated soul. It means the total man inside. When Jesus
died, He wasn't just throwing His body up there, you want to read
the verse right read it this way, "The Good Shepherd poured out
His soul for the sheep," see.
When Jesus died, friends, He was totally involved in that
death. And to make sure we don't misunderstand that, God even
wound Himself through the Greek language, picked out psuche and
stuck it in there. Jesus did not in a detached fashion give up
His zoe or bios, He poured out His psuche, His entire being into
death. He didn't just do it in a detached way. Jesus said in
Matthew 20:28, "The Son of Man gives His life a ransom for many,"
and right there His life again is psuche. He poured out His
soul.
Listen, Jesus felt it all, friends. He felt the curse of
sin. He felt the hurt of hate. He felt the pain of nails. He
felt every excruciating agony that the sin of the world could put
upon Him, and He felt every bit of it in His own soul. There was
no detachment on the cross. This verse is loaded with theology.
Then you'll notice that there's an interesting construction,
"He giveth His life for the sheep." That's huper, that means in
the behalf of or for the sake of or for the benefit of. Why did
He die? For His own benefit? No. He didn't need to die. He
had no sin. He died purely for the sheep, for our
benefit. What a sacrifice. Undeserved, but He did it for the
benefit of the sheep He died.
Now, you say, "Well that's a little strange in the analogy
because if the shepherd died on the hillside, it wouldn't be for
the benefit of the sheep." You're right. In the human realm, if
the shepherd died, the sheep were finished. There was nobody to
protect them and nobody to regather them. If the shepherd died,
the sheep were helpless. And to be very honest, you know, that's
even in Christ's case what happened initially. Zechariah
predicted this, the Shepherd will be smitten and the sheep will
be...what?...scattered. And at the death of Jesus Christ,
...they were gone. The disciples were scattered. The only
thing that reversed that was three days later, what did Jesus do?
He rose from the dead and the first thing He did was regather
the flock that had been scattered, He rose from the dead. He
died for the sheep. And even though they were scattered at the
beginning, He regathered them and His death was for the benefit
of the sheep.
Are you glad He died? I'm glad He died for my benefit. I
heard one who said that He died for angels. I don't think He
died for angels. It says He died for sheep. Isaiah 53, "For the
transgression of My people was He stricken." Matthew 1:21, "Thou
shalt call His name Jesus for He shall save His...what?...people
from their sins." He died for us.
So, Jesus states the character of the Good Shepherd. He
gives His life for the sheep. Isn't that a beautiful thing?
What self-sacrifice.
Then He contrasts the Good Shepherd to those in verses 12
and 13. Watch it, this is really fascinating. Verse 12, He's
still talking about giving His life as opposed to these kind who
don't. "But he who that is an hireling," that's a paid-part-time
shepherd who is in it for the money, a mercenary, "He that is an
hireling and not the shepherd whose own the sheep are not seeth
the wolf coming and leaveth the sheep and fleeth. And the wolf
catcheth them and scattereth the sheep. The hireling fleeth
because he is an hireling and careth not for the sheep."
Now you see how Jesus...this is so powerful. Here are all
these, you know, religious mucky-mucks from Israel standing there
listening to Jesus. And now He hits them right between the eyes
again and says, "You care nothing about the sheep, you are
hirelings, you are religious mercenaries in it for the money and
the prestige. And when any trouble comes you bail out and the
sheep get ruined, scattered, crippled and devoured." In fact,
they were even earlier called those who destroyed the sheep. But
here he calls these false leaders mercenaries or hirelings. They
work for the job, they don't care about the sheep, they only want
the money. They have no love for the sheep, only love for the
pay. And when the wolves attack the flock, the hireling forgot
everything but the saving of his own hide and took off.
And I mean, that's a natural thing. I remember when I was
in high school, I had a job one time to herd sheep out in Death
Valley. It wasn't an after school job, but it was a weekend type
thing. And it was...I didn't really like it. I mean, it was
miserable out there...miserable. Now I had no concern for the
sheep. And I'll be very honest, had a whole lot of wolves come
over the hill, you wouldn't have seen anything of me. I would
have been long gone. To me it was a job. I had no care for the
sheep. And that's what a hireling is. Zechariah 11:6, Zechariah
says that a characteristic of a hireling is that he makes no
attempt to gather the sheep when they're scattered. And you know
something, folks? Lest you think that the only hirelings are in
Israel, they're not. We've got them all over the place. Paid
professionals, ministering in the name of Jesus Christ. May I
say that we have hireling teachers, we have hireling preachers
and we have hireling pastors. We have hirelings in every
dimension of Christian service who want only their money and
could care less about the sheep.
May I add a statement? There is no...catch it...there is no
Spirit-directed ministry with a price on it. None. That is the
antithesis of faith and Spirit direction. There is no Spirit-
directed ministry with a price on it. If a ministry is not love,
that minister is a hireling. He is a false shepherd. And he
really doesn't care anything about the sheep.
And, boy, the Bible is really strong on this. Titus 1:10
says this, listen, "For there are many unruly and vain talkers
and deceivers, especially they of the circumcision...watch
this...whose mouths must be stopped, who subvert whole houses,
teaching things which they ought not." Why? "For filthy lucre's
sake." You know what filthy lucre is? Money. Anybody in the
ministry for money is a hireling.
You say, "Is that all the Bible says about it?" No, a lot
more, I'll share some of them with you. First Peter 5:2, this is
what he says to the true shepherd, I really like this, the
undershepherd like we are as ministers, "Feed the flock of God
which is among you." That's what we want to do is feed the flock
of God. I like that, "Taking the oversight of it." You know,
just watch them, make sure everybody is going along good. "Not
by constraint," not because somebody pressures you to do it, but
willingly, now watch this one, "Not for filthy lucre." There's no
place in any kind of Christian ministry in the name of Christ for
a prompting on the basis of money.
Peter also mentions something else about it in 2 Peter 2:3.
He says, "And through covetousness...false leaders,
hirelings...with feign words make merchandise of you." See.
There's no Spirit-directed ministry with a price on it, it
doesn't exist.
And so, these Jewish leaders are compared to hirelings. And
I'll tell you right now, there are plenty of hirelings under the
name of Christianity. They're cowards in crisis. They want
nothing to do with the hard things. They could care less about
the sheep. When things get rough, they pack up and they're gone.
There's no
place in Christianity for mercenaries.
Well, you'll notice the wolves that come and the
wolves represent Satanic attacks from the outside. And it's kind
of an interesting thing that Satan attacks the sheep, you know,
constantly with wolves. Temptation and sin, and the world
usually shoots these wolves at the church, you know. And let's
face it, these wolves are pretty tough customers.
There's a lot of real crippled Christians and they've fallen to
the wolves of Satan in sin and the flock is scattered. Is it
scattered? You better believe it's scattered. We keep talking
about the body idea, you know, and maintaining our love and our
oneness in Christ and, man, we're scattered all over the place by
the wolves of Satan. The Christians are crippled and been chewed
on and nibbled on by these wolves until their weaknesses are
obvious.
So, you see, the flock of God suffers from a double danger.
The danger of attack from the outside wolves of Satan, and the
trouble from the inside with a hireling instead of a true
shepherd. And I'll tell you, the church runs with danger. We
run with it all the time. It's kind of an exciting place to be,
isn't it? We're trying to run right down the middle, and watch
out for the stuff from the outside and the problems on the
inside. And the inside danger is the greatest, obviously,
because if there's a strong faithful shepherd, right, if there's
a strong faithful shepherd, then he's going to defend the flock
from attacks from the outside, right? But if you've got a
hireling, not only is he propagating error, but at the same time
he is totally incapacitated to defend them from the outside
attack. So you've got total destruction and chaos and everything
is a disaster.
So the church's first essential is Christ-like leadership
which cares for the sheep to the extent of risking its own neck.
All right, so we see that the Good Shepherd gives His life for
the sheep, pays the price. And the right kind of under shepherd
hangs in there with the sheep and defends the sheep.
Now the second thing the Good Shepherd does, He loves the
sheep. This is so good. You know that your
relationship to Jesus Christ is not just theological? Did you
know that? It's personal. Jesus actually loves you and He loves
me in an intimate singular unique personal way. That is
thrilling and it is emphasized in these verses. Look at verse
14. "I am the Good Shepherd," repeats the statement, "and know
My sheep and am known of Mine. As the Father knoweth Me, even so
I know the Father and I lay down My life for the sheep." Now
these verses tell us that He loves the sheep.
You say, "I don't see the word love in there." No you
don't. But it still tells us He loves the sheep. How? Because
He uses the word "know," and the word "know," ginosko means to
know experientially. It's not to know by reading it in a book,
or philosophizing, it's to know it experientially. And the word
"know" very often in the Bible is used in terms of a love
relationship. For example, and we've talked about this many
times, a refresher. In the Old Testament it says, "Cain knew his
wife and she bore a child." It doesn't mean he knew her name.
It implies the most intimate kind of love relationship. It
implies a union of love. Cain knew his wife intimate...Amos 3:2,
"Israel only have I known, said God." It doesn't mean the only
people God even knows exist is Israel, obvious...it means He
loves Israel, special love, right? The word "know" implies
loving fellowship. Did you get it? Loving fellowship. "Depart
from Me I never...what?...knew you," Matthew 7. Does that mean
He doesn't know who they are? No. It means, "I never had an
intimate loving fellowship with you."
"Joseph did not know Mary until the birth of Jesus." What
does that mean? He had never met her? No. It means he never
had a union with her of love, physical. So, you see, the word
"know" implies loving union, loving fellowship.
Now read the verses that way, look at 14, "I am the Good
Shepherd and have loving fellowship with My sheep and My sheep
have loving fellowship with Me. As the Father has loving
fellowship with Me, even so I have loving fellowship with the
Father." And you know what that says? We are all tangled up in
a love triangle, between us and Christ and God in loving
fellowship. Now I like that. My relation to God is not
theological only, personal. He loves me.
You say, "You're kind of pushing there in the context,
MacArthur." Well I'll push over to chapter 15 for a second, look
at verse 10. "If you keep My commandments, you shall abide in My
love even as I have kept My Father's commandments and abide in
His love." There's the same triangle, isn't it? Only that time
it says love instead of know. No difference. Jesus has a unique
intimate love relationship, a sweet fellowship with His sheep and
it goes both ways.
Chapter 14 verse 21, "He that hath My commandments and
keepeth them, he it is that loveth Me and he that loveth Me shall
be loved of My Father." There's the same triangle again. And it
goes on. "And I will love him and manifest Myself to him," verse
23, "if a man love Me, he will keep My words and My Father will
love him and we will come to him and make our abode with him."
See, it's the same triangle all through John's gospel. We're all
tangled up in love with Jesus Christ and God, fantastic,
personal, real love.
Now, experiential love and Christ loves us, He loves the
sheep personally, but experiential love wants one thing most and
it can be defined by two words...it wants identification and
oneness, or unity. You know what I mean? For example, if you
really, let's say a man really loves a lady, really loves her, a
guy loves a girl, the natural end of their love is unity that
they too shall become one. That's...you don't say, "Honey, I
love you so much that I'm going to join the Foreign Legion." No.
That is the very opposite. "I love you so much I want to spend
every day of my life with you." Remind him of that, ladies. My
wife reminds me of that all the time. But love says I want
unity, I want identification. Jesus said, "Sheep, I love you."
God says, "I love you," and then God in Romans 8, the Bible says,
wants to conform us to the image of who? His Son. You see, He
wants us to be identified with Jesus. God loves us so much that
He wants us to be one with Him. If you say to somebody, "I love
you," that means you want to be identified with them. The
Apostle Paul loved Jesus Christ so much that in Philippians 3:10
he says, "I want only one thing, that I may know Him and the
power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings,
being made conformable to His death." Paul said I love Him so
much I want to be one with Him in His life and death and
resurrection and all His power. You see, true love demands
identification and oneness. Just as marriage is the obvious goal
of love in a man/woman relationship, so in a God/man
relationship, a union of oneness is the obvious goal of that kind
of love.
Listen, Christ loves you, sheep, and He loves you with such
a love that He wants you to be one with Him, die with Him, rise
with Him, walk with Him, be like Him, more and more conformed to
His image. He loves you so much, can you imagine that He loves
you so much that He wants you to be one with Him, joint heirs,
His image? Fantastic love. Do you love Him enough to want that,
too? Do you want to be one with Him, identify all the way down
the line? If you don't, then you don't have the right kind of
love. Real love wants total identification with His death, His
resurrection, His life, His sufferings, whatever it may be, just
to be one with Jesus Christ is all it ever wants. No, Christ is
not a mystical fog floating around somewhere, a theological
abstraction. He is a personal real lover and His love in my life
is as experiential as any other love relationship that I know.
So what does the Good Shepherd do for the sheep? He dies
for the sheep and He loves the sheep. Thirdly, verse 16, He
unites the sheep. Now verse 16, "And other sheep I have that are
not of this fold," now that does not refer to men on Mars, that
refers to Gentiles, "other sheep I have that are not of this
fold, them also I must bring and they shall hear My voice and
there shall be one fold and one shepherd."
Do you know what else Christ does for the sheep? He unites
the sheep. He reaches around the world to Jew and Gentile,
whoever it may be, and gathers them into one flock. And the word
translated "fold" at the beginning of verse 16 is the same word
translated "flock." That's what He means, we are one flock.
We're not two flocks crammed into one fold, we're one flock.
You say, "Well who is this one flock?" Look at chapter 11
verse 49, "And one of them named Caiaphas, being the high priest
that same year, said unto them, Ye know nothing at all." That's
the pot calling the kettle black. "Nor consider that it is
expedient for us that one man should die for the people that the
whole nation perish not, and this spoke he not of himself but
being high priest that year he professed that Jesus should die
for that nation." Now here comes this, that's Israel, "And not
for that nation only, but that He also should gather together in
one the children of God that were scattered abroad." They were
already designated as children of God, they were just waiting to
be gathered. And so it is that God not only sent Christ to
Israel, but to the Gentiles.
Ephesians chapter 2:11 and following, "Wherefore remember
that ye being in time past Gentiles in the flesh," now
verse 13, "But now in Christ Jesus ye who once were far off
were made near by the blood of Christ, for He is our peace who
hath made both one," that is Jew and Gentile, "hath broken down
the middle wall of partition between us, has abolished the enmity
to make of the two one new man, that is Jew and Gentile made
one." Verse 18, "For through Him we both have access by one
Spirit unto the Father." And so, Paul stresses that we are one.
And then in Galatians 3 he says, "There is neither Jew nor
Greek, bond nor free, male nor female, you're all one in Christ."
Third thing the Good Shepherd did was unite the flock. And
the unity does not come from the fact that we're all shoved into
the same fold, it comes from the fact that we all love and serve
the same shepherd. And it's not an ecumenical unity, it doesn't
come about because of the good work of the council for Jews and
Christians, or whatever it is. It doesn't come about because of
some ecclesiastical structure, it's the unity of love and
obedience to Christ. And if you're a Jew and love and obey
Christ, if you're a Gentile and obey Christ, that's the same
fold, same flock. The tragedy is that the one flock doesn't act
like one flock.
So, the relationship of the Good Shepherd, we're really
racing now, to the sheep, gives His life, loves His sheep, unites
the sheep. Now two other relationships here and we'll see them
very quickly, the relation of the Good Shepherd to the Father.
What is Christ's relation to God? Here it is in verse 17 and 18
and it has two aspects. Verse 17, "Therefore doth My Father love
Me because I lay down My life that I may take it again. No man
taketh it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I have power, or
authority, to lay it down. I have power, or authority, to take
it again. This commandment have I received of My Father." Now
the last statement, "This commandment have I received of My
Father," is an obedience statement. The first statement of verse
17 is a love statement.
The two things that characterize the relationship of the
incarnate Christ to the Father are love and obedience. He had
the power to take His life back again after He had given it.
Nobody took it from Him. And I always think of John 19 where
Pilate says, "Don't You know I have power to take Your life?"
See. Pilate, he didn't have power to get up in the morning.
Jesus said, "You don't have power to do anything if I don't allow
it." "I have power to take Your life." Jesus said, "Nobody
takes My life, I lay it down and then I pick it up again." There
have been a lot of people who could say, "I laid my life down,"
there has been nobody but Jesus who said, "And then I took it up
again." And He did all this as an act of love and obedience to
the Father. So you have love at the beginning, obedience at the
end, and the act in the middle. God loves Christ, Christ loves
God and that love implies obedience.
Now mark this, friends, there is no such thing as love
without obedience. It doesn't exist. Does not exist. In
chapter 15 verse 9, "As the Father hath loved Me, so have I loved
you. Continue in My love, if you keep My commandments you shall
abide in My love." In other words, without the obedience end of
it, the love is a mockery. Say you love and then not obey,
that's foolishness...foolishness. Love is seen in obedience. I
don't care whether it's your children, I don't care whether it's
your wife or your husband, I don't care what relationship it is,
whether it's you and God, love is viewed in obedience.
Now you go to 1 John and you see this so aptly. First John
2:3, just listen, we'll read 3 to 5, 1 John 2:3, "And by this we
do know that we know Him." There's the word "know" again and
meaning love. "If we keep His...what?...commandments." That's
it. Verse 4, "He that saith, I know Him, I have loving
fellowship with Him, and keepeth not His commandments is
a...what?...a liar. But who so keepeth His Word, in him verily
is the love of God perfected." You see, that's the whole point.
Then over in the fifth chapter, same book, he says this,
"Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God,"
verse 1, "and everyone that loveth Him that begot, loveth Him
also that is begotten of Him." Now watch, "By this we know that
we love the children of God when we love God and keep
His...what?...commandments," again. Verse 3, here it is, "This
is the love of God that we keep His commandments." There is no
love without obedience. None. And people may come along and
say, "Well, I love God very very much," and then they don't even
obey God. The Bible says, "Study to show yourself approved."
They don't study. "I love God, I just don't study." No. It's a
pretty shallow sick love if it doesn't obey. We stand up, "O how
I love Jesus." Oh really, you do? How much do you love Him?
"Well I love Him, I love Him." You love Him so much you can't be
bothered to come Sunday night and study His Word with us. You
love Him so much you couldn't come on Wednesday nights for
fellowship and testimonies and prayers. You love Him so much you
can't read His Word. Do you love Him so much you can't bother to
give to the needs? You love Him so much you can't bother to
pray. Maybe you love Him so much you can't even serve. Maybe
you love Him so much you can't even use your spiritual gift. Is
that really what love is all about? Don't think that God keeps
the record of your love on the basis of how you sort of float in
on Sunday morning and float out again and God says, "He loves
Me." No. No.
You want to know how to prove your love? Obey. You know
how Jesus proved His love? The obedience of...here it
comes...self-sacrifice. Isn't sacrifice always the measure of
love? Sure it is. Christ's relation to the Father was a
relationship of love that issued itself in self-sacrificing
obedience. When you start to sacrifice, then God hears the word,
"I love you," not until. When the sacrifices start coming, then
God starts reading the love loud and clear.
What is Christ's relation to the Father? Love and
obedience. What should be our relationship to the Father? Love
and obedience, same thing. For we are one with Christ, aren't
we?
Lastly, thirdly, the Good Shepherd's relation to the world.
Very quickly. This is a polarized relation. Two extremes.
Verse 19, "There was a division therefore again," I like the word
"again" cause there have always been...they been divided ever
since chapter 7. "There was a division therefore among the Jews
for these sayings." Now you've got two groups...whist...they
just polarized themselves. Group A, verse 20, "And many of them
said, He hath a demon." And here we go back to the third level of
conflict. They have descended to name calling again, like
earlier when they called Him a demon-possessed Samaritan. They
said, "He has a demon and is mad." He's not only demon
possessed, He's crazy. "Why hear ye Him?" Why do you stand
around listening to this guy, He's crazy? Demon possessed.
You know, there are some people who think Jesus is a madman.
That is a tragic sinful and damnable conclusion. Boy, that's
what they concluded in Matthew 12, you know. They said, "What He
does He does by the power of Satan." And Jesus said, "For that
you will not be forgiven." If a man sees all the revelation of
Christ, everything He's ever done and said, if those people stood
there and saw all His miracles and heard all His words and
concluded He did it by Satan, they were beyond the possibility of
salvation because they rejected total revelation. That is
blasphemy and there are blasphemers today, plenty of them.
Perhaps the most prominent one is Madeline Murray O'Hare, but
there are many in her bag who just don't have her platform.
But then you have the other pole and society often divides
itself in to these polarized ends. Verse 21, "Others said," and
I like them, they're on the verge of salvation. "Others said,
These are not the words of Him that hath a demon." Listen to
what He says. His lucid conversation, the majestic calm of His
words, their strength, the strains thrill that His words sent
through their soul. These are not the words of a demon-possessed
man.
And I like that little last shot, "Can a demon open the eyes
of the blind?" So the world is polarized regarding Jesus.
What's His relation to the world? On the one hand they think He's
a madman. On the other hand, they're just hanging on the balance
of faith. And it is to group B that Christ will commit Himself,
John 7:17, "If any man wills to know His will, He shall know of
the doctrine." If you're going to be in one of these two groups,
I hope you're in Group B.
So, we meet the Good Shepherd. In His relationship to the
sheep, He gives His life, He loves the sheep, He unites the
sheep. In His relationship to the Father, two things, love and
obedience, same two that should characterize us. In His relation
to the world, two poles, the close minded, the open minded, those
are the relationships of the Good Shepherd.
As we close, one beautifully glorious passage comes to my
heart. If you are one of the sheep, will you just listen to
this, and we'll close with this passage, just listen. If you're
one of His sheep, you're about to hear an injunction to you as
sheep. Here it comes. Hebrews 13:20 and 21, listen. "Now the
God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus,
that Great Shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the
everlasting covenant, make you perfect in every good work to do
His will, working in you that which is well-pleasing in His sight
through Jesus Christ to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen."
Our Father, we thank You this morning for Your truth,
instruction of Your precious Word. Lord, how our hearts have
been lifted and thrilled again as we've seen our Shepherd, what a
joy it is to know that You love us. God, help us to manifest our
love in obedience. And, Lord, we would pray for some who may be
apart from the flock, sheep yet to be gathered, God, that they
might be gathered by the Shepherd this morning into the flock.
And those of us who are Christians, Father, may we come to the
point where we come to the point of real commitment in our lives
in terms of self-sacrificing obedience and that by the power of
that great Shepherd who came out of the grave we might be indeed
made perfect to do His will that Jesus might receive the glory
forever and ever. We pray in His name. Amen.
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