That You May Have LifeSample
Jesus: The Good Shepherd
Leaving a child with a babysitter is far from an easy task. Finding a person you trust is just the start…There’s all the information to convey: feeding and nap schedules, bedtime routines, and soothing methods. There are meals to prep, sleepsacks to lay out, and activities to plan. And even once you’re gone, there’s perhaps a constant line of worry running in the back of your head - What if the baby won’t take the bottle? What if the toddler throws a tantrum and the sitter can’t calm him?
Whether you’re on the low or high end of the spectrum of anxiety, leaving your children with someone else will always cause some level of concern. The reality is no one will care for our kids as well as we can. The best caretaker is the one who knows, loves, and cares most.
In John 10, Jesus calls himself “The Good Shepherd,” contrasting his care with the insufficient care of others. Simply put, a shepherd’s job is to protect his sheep. In naming himself The Good Shepherd, Jesus invites people to entrust themselves to him for safekeeping. Why? Because he is the true guardian who knows, loves, and cares most.
First, Jesus is the Good Shepherd because he knows us best. “I know my own, and my own know me, just as the Father knows me and I know the Father,” Jesus says in John 10:14-15. Jesus is equating the profound intimacy he shares with his Father to his relational intimacy with us! He knows his own, and his own know him. Not only does Jesus know us best, but when we follow Christ, we know him in return. John 10:4 says, “The sheep follow him, for they know his voice.”
In contrast, as Jesus says in John 10:5, the sheep don’t know a stranger’s voice and flee from him. Just as a little child can pick out her parent’s voice in a crowd, we, as Jesus’ sheep, can follow his voice and lead because of the relational intimacy we share with him. We know Jesus is leading us out of his sovereign, personal knowledge. He knows what’s best for us.
Second, Jesus is the Good Shepherd because he loves us most. “The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep,” Jesus says in John 10:11. Others might come with the guise of love but are ultimately unwilling to sacrifice for us. Jesus says in John 10:12, “He who is a hired hand and not a shepherd, who does not own the sheep, sees the wolf coming and leaves the sheep and flees.”
Jesus demonstrated his great love for us by leaving heaven and taking on our humanity. He died the death we deserve and rose from the dead so that our sins might be forgiven. No one or nothing else can love to this extent or save us with their love.
And third, Jesus is the Good Shepherd because he cares most: he most desires our flourishing. He says in John 10:9-10, “I am the door. If anyone enters by me, he will be saved and will go in and out and find pasture. The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life and have it abundantly.”
To be led by Christ to find pasture is to obtain the fullest experience of life. It is not only to be safe and secure but to thrive! This life - this experience of flourishing and thriving - is a communion with God and his love that lasts forever. It is to possess an all-satisfying relationship with God that is eternally secure. Jesus’s claim to be in the door in verse 9 means that he is the only means of receiving this eternal life, the only fount of spiritual nourishment, and the only basis for spiritual security.
What are you tempted to entrust your heart with besides Jesus? Where else might you seek security, satisfaction, or life? Is it to the approval of a certain person: your spouse, your boss, or someone with status and popularity in your social circle? Is it to the attainment of a certain ideal: success, beauty, or influence? When we look to something besides Christ to satisfy our need to be known, loved, and flourish, we give pieces of our hearts to caretakers who will always fall short. Jesus alone is worthy of the entrustment of our hearts. He alone is the Good Shepherd.
Jesus knows us best: we can trust his lead.
Jesus loves us best: we can trust his care.
And Jesus most desires our flourishing: we can trust his sufficiency.
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About this Plan
A devotional series for moms on the 7 "I AM" statements of John. Explore the nature of the life Jesus offers and what it looks like to pursue and experience this life in a season of raising kids.
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