Thursday, June 19, 2008

The Shepherd Knows -John 10:14-16

Sermon nuggets Thurs June 19

Theme- The Good Shepherd

Verses- John 10:14-16
14 "I am the good shepherd; I know my sheep and my sheep know me--
15 just as the Father knows me and I know the Father-- and I lay down my life for the sheep.
16 I have other sheep that are not of this sheep pen. I must bring them also. They too will listen to my voice, and there shall be one flock and one shepherd.(NIV)


A GOOD SHEPHERD KNOWS HIS SHEEP.
The word, know, means more than intellectual awareness. It also means an intimate relationship between God and His people. The Eastern shepherd knows his sheep personally and therefore knows best how to minister to them.

It says that He calls them all by name. Our Lord knows and cares about all who are His. He cares about you and knows you by name. Isn't it amazing that the one born 2,000 years ago, and of course existed before the world began thinks you are important to Him? He notices and cares about individuals. The Psalmist tells us before we are born God formed us and created us for Himself just as He wanted.

Jesus knows our natures. While all sheep are alike in their essential nature, each sheep has its own distinctive characteristics; and the loving shepherd recognizes these traits. One may be afraid of heights another of dark shadows. Because Jesus knows our natures, he also knows our needs. The 23rd Psalm reminds us that in the pastures, by the waters, and even through the valleys, the sheep need not fear, because the shepherd is caring for them and meeting their needs.

The Word also tells us that not only did he know the lost sheep of Israel, but that He knows another flock. Aren't you glad that Jesus did not leave salvation only for the Jews like they once thought? Jesus has more sheep. We gentiles were included in this one flock. The church was not to remain a Jewish flock. Peter and Paul took the message to the Gentiles and God prepared their hearts to receive it. There is but one flock. The people of God who belong to the Good Shepherd and follow him are God’s sheep. There are not two groups of sheep that belong to God has some teach. There are Jews and Gentiles who are following Christ.

The unity of the flock is not that there will be one denominational church. The correct translation, as NIV also has it, is one flock, not one fold. There is a difference. "They shall become one flock and there shall be one shepherd". Unity comes from the fact that all the sheep hear and answer and obey one shepherd and that is Jesus Christ. Unity is not an ecclesiastical unity; the unity is a unity of loyalty to Jesus the Good Shepherd.

The love of the Shepherd is not in a large generic way, but in an intimate and personal way. The Hymn writer sings, “He walks with me and talks with me and tells me I am His own. And the joy we share as we tarry there none other has ever known.”

The joy for the believer is that we each one can know the Lord because we are personally known and loved by Him.

Pastor Dale