I have a travel mug I carry with me every Sunday that says, "Be careful or you'll end up in my sermon." I showed that to our cat when he was being a pest. And it has now come to pass that he was the kicking off point for my sermon about listening for that voice that calls us into service, into action, and into love.
At a time of war, we need more of that. See what you think.
Text:
Psalm 23; John 10:1-10
+++
Anyone who has ever owned a cat knows
that cats are cute…furry…and loving creatures
They’re also the most willful critters
known to humankind.
Our current cat…Romeo…is no exception.
Just as it’s been with our prior
cats…Romeo has a cat door and he can go in and out as he pleases.
But at nightfall…we want him inside.
Even though we live in a downtown neighborhood…there is still wildlife that
comes out at night…foxes and other potential predators.
We lost one feline friend to some
unknown animal attacker…so we’ve been cautious ever since.
As the days grow longer and warmer…Romeo
is happier spending more hours outside.
He enjoys going into the area behind our
house to hunt for geckos in the many oak and magnolia leaves…and then falling
asleep under a bush or the porch of the abandoned house behind ours.
Quite often…when I am coming home late
at night…I’ll find that he hasn’t come home yet.
Isabelle will tell me that she tried to
call for him…but…well…cats are willful.
It happened again this past week…when I
got home at almost nine o’clock.
Romeo still hadn’t come home.
Isabelle and I were talking about his
bad boy behavior…and how cute and annoying he can be about not coming back at
night.
I was still unloading things from the
car…and carrying on this conversation about Romeo outside when I heard the
tell-tale sounds of something leaping over dead branches and onto the leaves in
the backyard.
In trots Romeo…coming over to me to rub
his white and black furry body against my shins.
He had heard my voice.
And now that both parents were home…he
was ready for his dinner and the chance to curl up on chair in the office.
It’s funny how pets respond to the
voices of their owners.
Because of the bonds we form with
them…and the relationship and trust that we build with them…they come to
know…and love us.
Shepherds build that sort of
relationship with their sheep…which is the reason why we see so many references
in the Scriptures to “Shepherds” and “Sheep.”
One of the most well-known of those is
in psalm 23…”The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not be in want. He makes me lie
down in green pastures and leads me beside still waters.”
We get that sense of the Shepherd who
cares for the sheep so completely.
We, as those sheep, feel that love when
we lay our trust on God.
Interestingly…one of the commentators I
was reading suggested that we should have read a different psalm for today:
Psalm 118, which figures prominently in Palm Sunday and Holy Week.
“Open for me the gates of righteousness;
I will enter them; I will offer thanks to the Lord.”
It is a bit odd that on this Fourth
Sunday of Easter…the Gospel passage we heard from John is not the part where
Jesus refers to “I am the good shepherd,” but rather “I am the gate” of this
enclosure where the sheep are kept safe.
And it’s also important to know where
our Gospel lesson falls within the broader context of John’s Gospel.
If we think back many weeks ago during
Lent…when Deacon Karyl would present to you some very lengthy passages of
John’s writings…one of them was the healing of the blind man.
We might recall that Jesus and the
disciples came across this man on their journey…and the disciples were like,
“Who sinned to cause this man to be blind?” and Jesus said, “Nobody sinned, now
watch this.”
He put mud on the man’s eyes and told
him to wash it off in Siloam and—voila—he was no longer blind.
That started a whole controversy…the
formerly blind man keeps getting interrogated…and when he made a confession
that Jesus clearly was not some demonic force but rather a healer…this man got
kicked out of the synagogue.
Jesus and this man were then
reunited…and the man says he believes and worships Jesus.
Standing by and witnessing all of this
is a group of Pharisees who hear Jesus declare that he “has come for judgment
so that those who do not see may see and those who do see may become blind.”
The Pharisees take offense at this…and
Jesus basically says to them…these representatives of the establishment
religion… you’ve become blind. You’ve allowed too many “things” to become
paramount to the one thing that matters: God is Love.
Not rules.
Not power and prestige.
God is Love.
God is the gatekeeper…and I am showing
the people the gate.
If you follow my voice…if you take in
the lessons I am teaching you… and put these into practice… this gate will
swing open to you.
And once you move through this gate…you
will find that green pasture…that abundant life with the love and care of Psalm
23.
That’s what happened with that blind man
in the chapter before in John’s Gospel.
Not only did he come to see…but as all
those other voices kept pestering him and badgering him about his miraculous
healing…the voice he ultimately listened to and believed was Jesus.
Because the voice of Jesus spoke in a
tone that conveyed mercy…compassion…and love.
Or…to put it another way… it was words
of the unconditional love that provides health…healing… and hope.
This has been one of the greatest
offerings that I’ve seen here at St. Barnabas as well as our wider Episcopal
Church.
Now…I grew up as an Episcopalian…so this
is the one Christian tradition I’ve known my whole life.
I have seen it’s good… it’s not so
good…and I have experienced the wounds of when it has been downright bad and
ugly.
But I have also seen and known our
denomination to be that one place…that flickering light of Christ… for those
seeking a relationship with God that is loving and not rule-bound or—worse—some
terrifying abusive Father.
I have heard the stories of so many
people who kept searching for a place where they felt safe and could start to
relate to God through Jesus…the Jesus who was that shepherd of the Middle
Eastern tradition…leading people out of their despair and into a journey with
Love.
A true and lasting Love that keeps
saying, “You matter.”
This is the message we are to share with
all the various people we encounter in our lives.
There is a God who loves
each one of us deeply and wants us to extend that love to others.
There is a place where you
can be loved and accepted as the beloved child that you are.
There is
health…healing…and hope with unconditional love and it begins with each of us
who will listen for it…and hear it calling our names.
Come and see.
Take and share.
In the name of Our One Holy and
Undivided Trinity.

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