John 10:1-21 · The Shepherd and His Flock
The Golden Gate
John 10:1-21
Sermon
by Mike Ripski
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Jesus says, “I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.”

I. What is this life that Jesus gives abundantly? Have you received it? What difference has it made in you and is making in you?

A. The Psalmist calls the Lord “my Shepherd, who gives me all I need.” This is what he does: “He prepares a table before me in the presence of my enemies.”

In that day and culture, to eat with someone was to enter into a covenant with them. It was to promise to stand with them “come hell or high water.” It was to walk with them through the valley of the shadow of death. It’s why Jesus got into so much trouble for eating with the wrong kinds of people.

The Lord prepares a table for holy communion.

Jesus, the Good Shepherd, would also invite the enemy to the table that Jesus prepares. Jesus says, “Come and eat with me and I’ll give you my life abundantly, so that you are enabled to do what I do: absorb the consequences of sin by forgiving those who hurt you, so the vicious cycle of revenge can be stopped.

This is the nature of the life Jesus gives abundantly.

B. The Psalmist continues: “You anoint my head with oil.”

That was the way kings were made. Whent the prophet Samuel selected the shepherd-boy David to be the king of Israel, he anointed his head with oil. Even though Saul was still on the throne, his successor was already on the scene. To call Jesus “the Messiah, the Christ” is to call him literally, “The Anointed One” or “King Jesus.”

In I Peter 2:9, the epistle-writer says to the early Christians, “but you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood…. Once you were no people, but now you are God’s people.” You are a royal priesthood. He says, “God has anointed your head with oil.” God views you as royalty. Your baptism speaks the truth about God’s relationship with you: “You are God’s own, God’s beloved, and God is very pleased with you.”

You may not feel like royalty. But how you feel is not what matters. What matters is how God views you, because only God has the authority to speak the truth about you. Living in that truth of who God says we really are is the nature of the life that Jesus gives abundantly. Therefore, if we spend our lives trying to prove ourselves worthy of occupying space on the planet, we’re wasting our lives doing what is unnecessary.

C. The Psalmist continues: “My cup runneth over, it overflows.”

The life Jesus came to give he gives abundantly. There is no scarcity. There is more than enough to go around, because this life is born in love and reborn in love and this love multiplies without end.

So this life that Jesus came to give us abundantly is a life that is lived free from fear, uninhibited by enemies, not even death. It is life willing to risk losing life, because the promise is that there’s always more where that came from.

It is life in which every person is royalty, because God says it’s so. We are released from self-doubt and self-loathing. And when we’re freed from the bondage of self-absorption, we can treat one another as the royalty God has declared us to be. Love doesn’t have to be parceled out, because it is in limited supply. Its nature is to multiply, not divide.

This leads us to Jesus’ self-identification as the gate into the sheepfold. This is where they are kept for the night, protected from outside threats like hungry predators and protected from their own inclination to wander off and get lost.

II. In this passage Jesus uses two images to convey to us who he is. He tries with these images as with so many others in John’s gospel to help us “see” God’s self-revelation in him. Jesus wants us to receive life from the source of life. Using Psalm 23 I’ve focused on the image of Jesus as shepherd. Now I want to focus on Jesus as the gate.

A. Jesus is the gate through which we are saved. What does it mean to be saved by going through Jesus? To be saved is to receive the life that Jesus gives abundantly. Elsewhere in John’s gospel, Jesus calls it eternal life. It is life from God, life lived the way God intends it. Because it is God’s life, it endures, lasts, isn’t diminished by aging or life’s vicissitudes. It is eternal because its Source is eternal.

Jesus is the gate to such life. When one is enjoying this life that Jesus gives abundantly, one will live as he did. How did he live?

One the night that he was betrayed, he got up form the table and washed his disciples’ feet. He told them to do as he had done. He said, “A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another as I have loved you.”

Eternal life, God’s life, is life spent serving others, sacrificing for others, treating them as the royalty God has made them, even enemies. It is living fearlessly. It is receiving love and sharing what we’ve received.

B. Throughout its history, the church has done a lot to undermine its witness to his life that Jesus gives abundantly, life that is eternal. With its attitude, its spirit, its behavior it has lived the life of the world, not the life Jesus gives abundantly. Instead of washing feet, it has beaten people over the head with its grasp of the truth. It has been prideful, arrogant, self-righteous. It has even resorted to violence in the name of the Prince of Peace. As gatekeeper the church has seen its role to be that of deciding who qualifies to be let in, who should be kept out. The result has been that its kept out the Shepherd and those who have heard his voice and are following him.

Jesus is the gate. Jesus says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father,

except through me”. But to know the Father through Jesus, to enjoy the life Jesus gives abundantly, is to know that we are forever tempted to be obsessed with the speck in another’s eye, while oblivious to the log in our own.

Jesus’ way was to offer life precisely to those the gatekeepers of his day had shut out for reasons that felt were justified. The problem was they shut Jesus out too. He didn’t meet their criteria. Jesus invited to the table those who needed to experience the truth about how God viewed them. And so Jesus treated them as royalty, as worthy of having their feet washed. He offered them life abundantly.

Now notice in this passage that the Shepherd doesn’t lead the sheep into the sheepfold to keep them there. No, Jesus the Good Shepherd, leads the sheep in but also out to find pasture.

We are tempted to equate the sheepfold with the church, the saved. We believe that this is the end rather than the means for something else. We start thinking in terms of us and them, we and they. We start thinking that we’ve made it and now our job is to build a fortress to protect ourselves.

C. According to Jesus, he leads his sheep in and they are fed when they go out to find pasture. Jesus says in John 4:34, “My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to complete his work.”

The Shepherd leads us through the gate in and out. “Out” is as crucial to the life Jesus gives abundantly as “in.” If we are the gatekeeper, we open the gate in and out – and because we are also the sheep, who enjoy life that Jesus gives abundantly, we open the gate so all who hear his voice and recognize it can come in and go out. We are generous, merciful, graceful gatekeepers, because we seek to do unto others as we want them to do to us.

By what right do we have to say who is hearing Jesus’ voice and recognizing it? And, if they aren’t, aren’t we called to help them rather than condemn them?

There used to be a TV cop show called Hill Street Blues. Each show began with roll call. The sergeant would end his announcements and assignments with these words, “Let’s be careful out there.” He meant, “It’s dangerous out there. Stay on your toes, so nothing will happen to you.”

Jesus the Shepherd leads his sheep out of the sheepfold into the world and says, “Let’s be careful out there.” He means, “Let’s care for everyone out there as royalty, as God’s beloved children, as those to whom God wants to give life abundantly.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Mike Ripski