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Voices of Faith

April 21, 2002
Good Shepherd Sunday

The Abundant Life of the 23rd Psalm
The Rev. William A. Kolb

Old Testament: Psalm 23
Gospel: John 10:1-10

If King David wrote the 23rd Psalm, and that is what we are told by those who are most likely to know, then this psalm is more than two thousand years old and perhaps nearly three thousand years old. What amazes me is how easily we can identify with people who lived so very long ago when the world was such a totally different place. It was an agrarian world, a world without modern conveniences, a world without modern economies, a time when life was short and communication very limited. And yet, people then were more like us and we like them, than we were different.

Look, for example, at the 23rd Psalm. There is a clear desire by the writer for a shepherd—one to take care of him, to make him feel safe, to make him feel loved and cared about. Is that any different than our deepest feelings today in the 21st century? Or look at another line: "he restoreth my soul." David is expressing his need to be set right with God and with others. His soul is uneasy, he needs things set straight for all to be in peace between him and God, and between him and others.

Have you ever been on the "outs" with someone, and everything is tense and withdrawn between you? And have you not been flooded with peace and delight when that relationship was restored to wholeness? Did that not nurture and restore your soul? And is this not, again, an indication that to be human in the 1st or 2nd century B.C. was not all that different in these most important ways from who we are today?

This most beloved of psalms assures us of God's nurturing, loving care for useach of us, each of us by namea God who wants to make sure that we are alright, we are safe, we are at peace by the still waters and in the green pastures of life. God wants to see us have the "abundant life," of which we hear this morning in our Gospel reading.

Abundant spiritually, God wants us to be filled with Him so that nothing can come between God and us. So that our experience of life is one that is guided by God and one in which our hearts are filled with Him, so that we live the fullness of an abundant life—whether we are wealthy or poor, whether we are healthy or sick. A life filled with light because He is light.

Now, this very positive description of life with God raises two doubts for some that get in the way. Doubts that can get in the way of receiving the comfort and peace that comes from believing. The first doubt can come when the pastures are not green, the water is roiled, the valley is dark. Some feel uncared for if things are not going well. But it is in the times of the dark valley, the times of fear and tribulation, that God's presence and nurture are most needed and for many most certain.

The second cause of doubt is one that is very much near the front of our minds today. It concerns the under-shepherd-ordained or lay-anyone who represents the love of God to others. God cares for us individually, but He also cares for us through others. God inspired scripture but moved humans to write it, so it is not perfect. I had a letter by email this week from a man somewhere in the U.S., who wrote to a web site in which I take part. His letter concerned his desire to be a Christian and his puzzlement that the Bible, as he said, contradicts itself in so many places. He listed thirty to forty instances.

In much the same way, when God seeks us and seeks our heart through human intermediaries, things will sometimes go wrong. In the Roman Catholic Church and other churches today, there has come to light the problem of ordained ministers who have abused the trust and the persons of those in their charge. That grieves God and is the exact opposite of what Christ intends the Church to be—a safe and caring haven.

But the failure of the human under-shepherd does not mean that God has failed us, or that God does not love us or care what happens to us. God never lets us down, never fails us, never forsakes us. And God is there with the bandages and the oils, ready to soothe and strengthen us when we have been hurt. I have been by the bedside of the dying; I have been with folks whose minds were gone; I have been at funerals with people who never or almost never go to church. But start the 23rd Psalm and they will say it with me. There is something about it that goes deep, which soothes the places in our spirit that are universally in need of filling and comforting.

More than a half-century ago—and it seems a world away—my older brother and I were boarding students at a school in Connecticut. The year was 1944 and war raged throughout Europe and in the Pacific. Merricourt was a small institution of about fifty children, run by a couple known to us all as Uncle John and Aunt Ruth. My brother was always getting into trouble and it seems like I would get punished right along with him. Infractions such as cursing, hitting another boy or wetting one's bed would bring very predictable punishment, the most common of which was being sent to bed without dinner.

There was a woman, a large woman, who cooked for all of us. Her name was Mary. I recall that she would walk around the grounds between classes at mid-morning and give us slices of warm toast from the basket she carried. She would ring a bell that she also carried. To this day, when the bell is rung at our own school each weekday morning here at St. James', my mind goes back, instantly, to those early days. Mary was the kind who would bake a cake for a boy's birthday but before she put it in the oven, she would make sure it was filled with pennies, nickels and dimes, so that many of us would enjoy the one boy's special day. Not too sanitary by today's standards, but we loved it and I don't recall anyone keeling over from it.

The reason I tell this is because of what happened just before we went home for the last time. The war in Europe had ended, it was spring and summer recess was near. Nevertheless, late afternoon found my brother and me punished once again, sent to our beds without the evening meal—visions of breakfast, so far away, dancing in our heads. When who should appear but Mary—on tiptoe, finger to lips—motioning us to climb the stairs to the top floor, where she opened a closet door.

Inside was a little table with two chairs, set with a tablecloth and all our favorite foods! Will I ever forget that moment? Of course not. Then and there I experienced the love of God through His under-shepherd in that place, as she set a table for us in the nearby (just two stories beneath us) presence of those who were, as far as we were concerned, our enemies—those who had sentenced us to bed without dinner.

Well, I'll bet you can tell your own story of the kindness and mercy of an under-shepherd nurturing you long ago, or perhaps even sometime in the recent past. And I'll bet that there are stories with great meaning or feeling in your life that are brought to mind by this or that phrase from the 23rd Psalm.

How alike we are, you and I, and you and I and those who lived when this was written. It is amazing. It really brings home the point that we are all created by the same loving God, by the same Creator. And that we all have the same universal need for the love and safety that only God can bring. It is that nurture that defines the abundant life that Jesus came to bring to us. Though at times we stray from the paths of righteousness, God is always ready and eager to take us back to where the grass is plush and peace is to be found. On this Good Shepherd Sunday, we give great thanks for that assurance.Amen.

Copyright ©2002 The Rev. Bill Kolb
Preached at St. James' Episcopal Church, Jackson, MS

Old Testament Reading: Psalm 23
23:1 The LORD is my shepherd, I shall not want. 23:2 He makes me lie down in green pastures; he leads me beside still waters; 23:3 he restores my soul. He leads me in right paths for his name's sake. 23:4 Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I fear no evil; for you are with me; your rod and your staff—they comfort me. 23:5 You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies; you anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows. 23:6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life, and I shall dwell in the house of the LORD my whole life long. NRSV (New Revised Standard Version)

Gospel Reading: John 10:1-10
10:1 "Very truly, I tell you, anyone who does not enter the sheepfold by the gate but climbs in by another way is a thief and a bandit. 10:2 The one who enters by the gate is the shepherd of the sheep. 10:3 The gatekeeper opens the gate for him, and the sheep hear his voice. He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out. 10:4 When he has brought out all his own, he goes ahead of them, and the sheep follow him because they know his voice. 10:5 They will not follow a stranger, but they will run from him because they do not know the voice of strangers." 10:6 Jesus used this figure of speech with them, but they did not understand what he was saying to them. 10:7 So again Jesus said to them, "Very truly, I tell you, I am the gate for the sheep. 10:8 All who came before me are thieves and bandits; but the sheep did not listen to them. 10:9 I am the gate. Whoever enters by me will be saved, and will come in and go out and find pasture. 10:10 The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly. NRSV (New Revised Standard Version)

 


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