Be Your Own Shepherd
John Shuck
First Presbyterian Church
Elizabethton, Tennessee
February 26, 2012
First Sunday in Lent
John 10:1-42 (Scholars' Version)
We are making our way
through John’s gospel. John’s
gospel is about Jesus. But the Jesus depicted
here is not the historical person. John’s Jesus is an imaginative
construction. The events and the dialogue we just read from
chapter ten are probably not events and dialogue that took place, that someone
(ie. the author we call John) wrote down, but rather, a scene created by some
author we call John.
Now that makes a big
difference. For those who believe that
the Bible is inerrant, to say what I just said would be blasphemy. To say
that there is a difference between the historical person of Jesus and theological
and literary construction of Jesus really messes with people’s heads. Some people get angry about such a suggestion.
That was the reaction to
the work of the Jesus Seminar in the 80s and 90s when they meticulously went
through every saying and deed attributed to Jesus in the canonical gospels and
in other gospels to see what could be historically plausible and what was
literary or theological creation.
Folks were mad as heck.
Not only were the folks
who didn’t want scholars messing with their Jesus upset, other scholars were
upset as well. It appears that they didn’t
like that the Jesus Seminar did this all in public and offered their methods
and conclusions in language that non-specialists could actually read. The Jesus Seminar let the cat out of the
bag.
This type of
historical-literary criticism has been used in academic circles for decades,
centuries even. But it was so shrouded in academic language
that it seldom left the academy. We
preachers got the message both from seminary and from our congregations that
sharing this type of stuff with church folks was unhealthy to one’s
career. Furthermore, we were instructed that offering
critical assessments of scripture or theology was damaging to the faith of the
sheep.
The sheep are
simple. The sheep need to be fed. The sheep need to be led. The sheep need to be protected against wolves
like the Jesus Seminar and against hired hands who don’t care about the sheep,
like ministers who share blasphemous ideas like ‘Jesus probably didn’t say most
of the stuff the Gospel of John said
he said.’
Won’t somebody think of
the sheep?
Baaaa.
Baaaa.
One of my favorite
criticisms over the years has been by other ministers that I am leading my
sheep astray. That would be you. In this schematic you are the sheep and I am
the shepherd. How is it that ministers
made that assumption about themselves? Who
dreamed up this plan? Even the word “pastor”
comes from the pastoral metaphor of a shepherd as pastor of the flock.
Now granted some
ministers are quick to say, “Jesus is the shepherd. But we are the under-shepherds.” Yeah, whatever. There is a reason why those in authority
like to think of themselves as shepherds or under-shepherds. That is to have control over the sheep. It is loving control of course. Because the sheep need to be fed. The sheep need to be led. The sheep simply cannot handle life at all
except that a loving shepherd tells them what to eat, where to sleep, and what
to think. If you are a sheep you don’t
need to do a lot of thinking. Mostly just
obeying. Listen to the voice of the
shepherd and follow.
In the Five Gospels, the Jesus Seminar wrote
this about the tenth chapter of John:
“…there is no echo here of the authentic voice of Jesus; the Johannine community is attempting to work out its self-definition in terms delivered from the scriptures.” P. 436.
In other words, John made it up.
John borrowed images of shepherding from the Hebrew Scriptures in
places like Ezekiel and the Psalms and of the story of David as a shepherd boy
and applied them to Jesus. I doubt that the historical Jesus ever thought
of himself as a shepherd. To me Jesus
was more like a guy who would say,
“Don’t wait for a shepherd. Be your own shepherd.”
His parables and
aphorisms were about inspiring people to find their own voice and to use
it.
“The kingdom of God is within you!”“You are the light of the world.”“You are the salt of the Earth.”
Why then does John turn Jesus into a shepherd?
This is not about
Jesus. It is about John. He wants sheep. The theme throughout John is to believe what
"we" told you. “We” being the ones who
control and own the story. Some
scholars suggest that the original ending for The Gospel of John was the end of chapter 20. It is the scene in which Thomas the doubter
is scolded by Jesus for not believing the others.
“’Do you believe because you have seen me?’ asks Jesus. ‘Those who can believe without having to see are the ones to be congratulated.’”
Then the book seems to
end with the narrator saying:
“Although Jesus performed many more miracles for his disciples to see than could be written down in this book, these are written down so you will come to believe that Jesus is the Anointed, God’s son—and by believing this have life in his name.”
Don’t doubt. Believe.
Be a good sheep.
Elaine Pagels in her
book Beyond Belief suggests that the Gospel of John and the Gospel of Thomas (that did not make it
into the Bible) represent competing communities. Whereas John
saw Jesus as an object of belief, Thomas
saw Jesus as inspiration to discover oneself.
This section in which Jesus addresses the character Thomas, Pagels sees
as a dig at the community that centered itself around the Gospel of Thomas. Don’t be
like Thomas. Don’t be like that group. They will lead you astray.
Interesting stuff. Thomas’
Jesus is made up too, although the Jesus Seminar discovered that more of the
sayings of the historical Jesus have been preserved in Thomas than in John. However, Thomas’s
Jesus is also a creative theological fiction as is John’s Jesus. These early
communities were competing over not only who Jesus was but who Jesus is.
Those competing visions of Jesus were competing ways of living. That competition had to do with
authority. It had to do with
boundaries of who is in and out of the community and what was the hierarchy of
authority. One can imagine that it
might be easier to build a church around the Gospel of John than around the Gospel
of Thomas.
I offer this critical
assessment for a number of reasons. The
Bible is not always what it seems. It
was created by numerous human authors.
Every one of them had an agenda. They created these stories and these images
for a variety of reasons. Reasons that
we may never know.
Still today these stories in the Bible are used for certain agendas. People will quote from the Bible and from Jesus as if it or he were the final authority and then claim authority as under-shepherds to interpret it and him for you.
Still today these stories in the Bible are used for certain agendas. People will quote from the Bible and from Jesus as if it or he were the final authority and then claim authority as under-shepherds to interpret it and him for you.
Now you may say, "John
Shuck, why should we believe you?" My
answer is you shouldn’t. If you disagree
with my interpretation of the Bible,
good for you. Be your own shepherd. I can’t
lead you astray if you are not sheep.
If I succeeded at least
in part by encouraging you to look at John’s
gospel, and actually the whole Bible, critically, good. That was my devious plan. I also
want to offer another spin on the shepherd story.
There is something that is endearing and comforting about the shepherd. In our busy industrial society, the notion of leaving it all and moving to Kansas to wander around with sheep all day sounds like a pleasant idea.
There is something that is endearing and comforting about the shepherd. In our busy industrial society, the notion of leaving it all and moving to Kansas to wander around with sheep all day sounds like a pleasant idea.
There is a reason why
the most beloved psalm, the psalm that is most likely to be known by heart is
the 23rd Psalm.
The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want,He makes me like down in green pastures,He leads me beside still waters,He restores my soul.He leads me in right paths for his name’s sake.Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,I fear no evil.For thou art with me.Thy rod and thy staffThey comfort me.Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies,Thou annointest my head with oil.My cup overflowsSurely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life,And I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever.
I remember it in the
King James version.
The image of Jesus as
The Good Shepherd is a comforting image.
As comforting images go, it is one
of the best, at least one of the most popular. In those times in our lives in which the
valley is dark and life is anything but peaceful and pastoral and we are
surrounded by enemies and dangers, when we do fear evil, to know that the Lord
is my shepherd and that the Lord has a face, perhaps the face of Jesus as we
have imagined him or have seen images of him in artwork, is comforting. We can
reach this Jesus through meditation, prayer, scripture, and song. It restores the soul.
Even as I advocate critical
study of images, I find that image and others to be powerful and
comforting. In part because I grew up with it and it is
embedded in my psyche. But also because
there is a longing we humans have for a comfort and an anchor, for a
shepherd. That is why our hymns are
filled with that kind of imagery.
But the image of Jesus
or of God as the shepherd or the gate or the anointed one or God’s Son and so
forth is an image. They are all
images. They are the way our brains work
to get in touch with the ineffable.
We can make an idol of
any these images. We can make an idol of our religion as a whole. We can make an idol of the Bible, our images of God, Jesus
even. Idol-making
usually leads to violence. Think of the
craziness in Afghanistan over the Qur'an burning. Christians can be equally crazy when criticism
of creed or the Bible is equated with blasphemy. The
critical study of these images is important because it keeps them from becoming
idols.
Yet we wouldn’t want
our critical study of images to keep us from using them. That
is where I part ways with those who want to do away with religion. I think these symbols and images can help us
live meaningful and joyful lives.
In traditions that use
icons for prayer, the instruction is not to pray to the icon, but through the icon. The icon or image is a vehicle. The image of Jesus as Good Shepherd is, for
me, a vehicle, not an end. As I have
come to see it now, the feelings of comfort, of belonging, of care, of
peacefulness of purposefulness, are the real thing. Jesus
is the vehicle, but at the end of the day, you are your own shepherd.
You are your own
shepherd.
Those feelings of love,
comfort, belonging, care, and purposefulness are not dependent on something or
someone outside giving them to you. They
are yours. You can activate them within
by many means, including by the use of these beautiful images.
So go ahead, sing the
songs, pray the prayers alone or with others, and embrace the tradition with
awareness. Yes you walk the lonesome
valley. But you do so with the awareness
that the kingdom of God, the lamp of truth, and the love that holds the
universe is within you.
Amen.