Jesus is God. He is the good
shepherd who preserves life. Beloved in the Lord Jesus Christ,
when kids hear the term stranger danger, they know what that means. There's someone who might hurt
them. So they must run to safety, call
out for help. You teach your children not to
engage with persons, with these types of persons, because those
persons are not in the self-interest of that child. And that's good. But there were stranger dangers
in the Bible as well. And similarly, Jesus warned his
people not to follow them, for they would lead them astray. Sadly, these strangers that posed a danger to God's
people were supposed to be the shepherds of Israel. And instead,
they plundered the sheep. These people should have been
a place of safety and comfort, but they were called savages.
They were savages who abused the sheep they should have taken
care of for their own benefit. These were not good under shepherds. Jesus told his people not only
to avoid these dangerous shepherds, but to come and receive his benefits
because he was the true shepherd who looked out for the interest
of his sheep. So we can say we see Jesus as
the bread of life. Jesus is the light of life. Jesus
is the door of life. And now you see him as the good
shepherd who preserves life. This is what you will hear about
today. Our headings are two and simple, following the outlines
we've used before. How is Jesus the good shepherd? And what are the implications
of the good shepherd to you? Every doctrine must have application
to your life. Our goals are that you will rest
in the provision and comfort of the true shepherd, that's
the start, and that you will then bring in more sheep so they
too can be blessed of the Lord. How is Jesus the good shepherd
our first point? Well, Jesus unequivocally declared
that he was the good shepherd, not the evil shepherd who plundered
the sheep as before. He was sent, he said, to the
lost sheep of the house of Israel, and he came to do good for them. And in fact, the way he described
it, in bringing this picture with a great degree of richness,
he said he was bringing back the tree of life. Remember in
the Garden of Eden, that was taken away. The Lord says, they
eat of that. That wouldn't be good for them.
But Jesus would come back, bring the tree of life, and he would
bring healing to the nations. There's a beautiful passage of
that in Revelation chapter 22, verse 2. And we'll read together,
in the middle of its tree and on either side of the river was
the tree of life. which bore twelve fruits, each
tree yielding its fruit every month. The leaves of the tree
were for the healing of the nations." See, the world needs healing
because the world is sick. And you have to lead them to
the place where they could eat and live. And they needed that
truth. And that's what the Good Shepherd
did for them. Jesus was the good shepherd,
meaning he was the one and only true shepherd. The others weren't
good enough or they were downright bad. When you see this word good,
good shepherd, what does that mean? What does that ring in
your head? Well, this is a good word. There
are different words for good. This one here means to be good
in a beautiful way. Then you say, so how good was
he? Well, look how good the shepherd was. Jesus taught that he would
die for the sheep and rise again to care for them. Why is this
so remarkable? Well, first of all, there were
some prophets before who died for the gospel, people like Jeremiah. The Lord was quick to point this
out. He said, you killed the prophets from Abel to Zechariah,
the first godly man to the very end. But these men couldn't die for
the sheep and be raised up for God to save them. None of them
was resurrected. So the sheep needed someone who
would die for them and be raised from the dead for them. And that's
why Jesus said, I am the good shepherd, because only one could
live for the sheep, die for the sheep, raise again for the sheep,
and then come back and take his sheep to be with him forever. You see, when a regular shepherd
died, maybe he was attacked by an animal and killed, what happened
to the sheep? The sheep were scattered. But
when Jesus died, he said, you destroyed his temple and in three
days I'll be up again. And on the third day he arose
triumphantly to care for his sheep. Moreover, his divinity
did not die. His divinity was watching over
his sheep all the while he was in the grave. You see the difference when he
said, I am the good shepherd. And by the way, in Palestine,
the greatest threat to the sheep were wolves. So the Lord is saying,
look, the wolves have nothing on me. I am the good shepherd. I'm not afraid of wolves. I will protect my children from
them. Number four, Jesus openly stated
the Jewish leaders were acting like hirelings. And you see the
contrast now. He says, I'm not just the shepherd,
I'm the good shepherd. Whereas those teachers you have,
they're hirelings, not true shepherds, and they would abandon the sheep
when there was danger. I remember Pastor Arslan Ul Haq
mentioned in Pakistan, when COVID hit, the imams who were in the
different mosques, they just left and went back to places
of safety and abandoned the people. That's the picture here. That
was done even by Jewish leaders. They didn't care about the sheep.
They allowed the sheep to be dragged away and to be eaten.
They were not interested in the sheep, but they were interested
in shekels, the money. They did not fight the wolves
as a true shepherd would. Why? Because they didn't own
the sheep. They weren't part of the family
of the sheep. They didn't really care about
the sheep as the true shepherd did. Now I want you to follow
while I read from Ezekiel 34, and then we'll read Zechariah
together. Ezekiel 34 verse 2, Son of man, prophesy against
the shepherds of Israel. Prophesy and say to them, thus
says the Lord to the shepherds, and hear the language now, woe.
That means hell. Judgment. Woe to the shepherds
of Israel who feed themselves. Should not the shepherds feed
the flocks? You eat the fat and clothe yourself
with the wool. You slaughter the fatlings, but
you do not feed the flock. Weak you have not strengthened,
nor have you healed those who were sick, nor bound up the broken,
nor brought back what was driven away, nor sought what was lost,
but with force and cruelty you have ruled them." What sad language
for the ones who should have cared for the flock, and they
were acting like the strangers. They pose the danger to God's
people. Let's read Zechariah 11, 4 and
5 together. Thus says the Lord my God, feed
the flock for slaughter, whose owners slaughter them and feel
no guilt. Those who sell them say, blessed
be the Lord for I am rich and their shepherds do not pity them. Imagine the degree that they
had gone in their sin that they would say when they cause damage
to God's people, they would say, God has blessed me. It's like
a thief. Saying, I'm rich, God has blessed
me with my stolen goods. That's why in Isaiah 56, the
Lord calls these shepherds dumb shepherds, foolish men. They lead or foolish. Five, Jesus declared He loved
His sheep, and His sheep loved Him. You see the good shepherd
now, how He builds upon this picture that He is not just the
shepherd, but He's the good shepherd, and those other ones stay away
from them. And why is it that we can have
this relationship? I love you, you love me. This is the true shepherd, and
He can recognize His children everywhere. But more than recognizing
them is this word, knowledge, that people can make a mess of
sometimes. This word means to love. It means
to know intimately, like Adam knew his wife and she conceived.
The Lord is saying, I know my sheep. I love my sheep, and my
sheep love me. 1 Corinthians chapter 8, verse
3 says, But if anyone loves God, this
one is known by him. You notice knowledge is not the
meaning here. It would make no sense. Of course,
God knows him. Intellectually, this is saying
God loves him. And this is a special word, right,
that I've mentioned before, gnosko. It's to know in an experiential
way. You talk about how much this
shepherd loves his sheep. The details he knows of your
life and he cares that not one hair can fall from your head
without his notice and his approval. Not only does he know how many
hairs you have in your head and you don't, but he also knows when one falls
off and ordains even that. Things you have no clue about
how many hairs you lose. He does. So He shows the sheep favor,
caring for them, and the sheep shows Him faith. And both are
grounded in love, love being the foundation. Six, Jesus didn't
make up this doctrine out of thin air. This doctrine was alive
and well in the Old Testament. Let's read, we'll do some reading,
but I think it'll be good for refresher. Psalm 23, verse 1
together. The Lord is my shepherd, I shall
not want. He makes me to lie down in green
pastures. He leads me besides the still
waters. What love of God that he is doing
what is good for his sheep. Ezekiel 34, verse 23, together. I will establish one shepherd
over them, and he shall feed them. My servant David, he shall
feed them and be their shepherd." You notice this follows what
we just read about these filthy scoundrels who were calling themselves
shepherds, who abused the people, who were a danger to the ones
they're supposed to care for. Can you imagine a child being
afraid of his father, that his father will kill him?
That's unreal in our minds. But that was the problem. Look
again, Isaiah 40 verse 11. Look at the good shepherd together.
He will feed his flock like a shepherd. He will gather the lambs in his
arms and carry them in his bosom and gently lead those who are
with young. You see the care, even for the
sick, even for the needy. He cares for the youth that are
carrying, the youth that are carrying the lambs in their wombs. What a picture of a caring shepherd.
You couldn't drive them hard if they were pregnant. And then
look at Solomon, chapter 2, verse 16. Together, the Shulamite,
my beloved is mine and I am his. He feeds his flock among the
lilies. A picture of the care of the
good shepherd who cares for his bride. But this doctrine of Jesus
being the Good Shepherd is not only found in the Old Testament,
it's found in the New Testament among some of the other writers.
Hebrews chapter 13, verse 20 and 21, together. Now may the God of peace who
brought up our Lord Jesus from the dead, that great shepherd
of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant,
make you complete in every good work to do his will, working
in you what is well-pleasing in his sight, through Jesus Christ,
to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen. That great shepherd
of the sheep. And he made an everlasting covenant.
What was that everlasting covenant? To die for his sheep so they
would be able to live. What a promise. You know, if
you have some chickens, and we grew up then, suddenly one of
those creepy crawly creatures got in there and killed a few,
it was like, oh, well, I guess we've got to buy some more chickens.
Got to set some more eggs." It didn't bother us that much.
The Lord made a covenant that I will die to save my sheep. 1 Peter chapter 2, 24 and 25. who himself bore our sins in
his body on the tree, that we, having died to sins, might live
for righteousness, by whose stripes you were healed. For you were
like sheep going astray, but have now returned to the shepherd
and overseer of your souls. When the Bible says by the stripes
you're healed, remember this is not the charismatic thing
of saying you're healed from your headache or your stomachache
by the blood of Christ. This was speaking of spiritual
healing. You notice the context. He died
on the cross so your sins are removed and your soul is healed.
That's some shepherd. That's your shepherd. That's
my shepherd. So what does this mean to us?
How do we respond knowing that Jesus is this good shepherd,
the shepherd? First of all, come to the good
shepherd where he's calling you for salvation. He says, do not
harden your hearts as the Jews did, leaving their bones in the
hot desert sands. saying, hear this voice. Hear
this voice through the reading of the Word and listening to
the Word of God and preaching the Word of God and singing the
Word of God. Let the Holy Spirit work through
that Word to bring salvation. That's the food of the shepherd. If you reject that food from
the shepherd, it won't be the desert sands. It will be the
fires of hell. That's what happens if you reject
the salvation. Not only must you come to the
Good Shepherd, you must stay with the Good Shepherd. He promised
that He will never leave you nor forsake you. And He will
be with you by His Holy Spirit. How long? Till the end of the
age. How long will the Holy Spirit
seal you? Till the day of redemption. And you need this in order to
grow. You need that nourishment in order to grow. That's why
we eat of the Lord's Supper. So you are able to reflect on
Christ, and the knowledge of His love will cause you to be
willing to fight against the devil, the world, and your flesh,
and you will be mature. You will learn to cast your cares
upon Him, knowing that He cares for you. So what is that? Sanctification. He leads you to salvation. He
says, come, and He keeps you and says to you, I will sanctify
you. What else? Number three, save
the good shepherd's straying sheep by bringing them back to
him. It is the least you can do for
him who did so much for you. Find out his sheep that are straying,
not like those shepherds who let them wander away and became
prey to wild animals, or gave up on them, sold them
off. No, find out where they are so you can bring them back
and give glory to the Savior. This is why the church practices
discipline, to bring them back. So pray for them, help them,
rebuke those who are strained. Don't be afraid. Love them enough
to rebuke them. Four, the Good Shepherd promises
salvation was never limited to the Jews. He had his sheep everywhere. This good shepherd talked about
this in detail. And you're one of his sheep,
regardless of your background. I watched yesterday when there
was singing, when the choir was singing. What a beautiful sight
it was to see people from so many different continents reflecting
the promise to bring in sheep from everywhere. 1 John 2, verse
2, together. And he himself is the propitiation
for our sins, and not for ours only, but also for the whole
world." Look at that. He died for all kinds of sheep. You know, you could see your
neighbor's sheep wandering away, and you didn't really care too
much about their sheep, because they were not your sheep. Jesus
cared for the stranger and he brought them in. This is a time
of in-gathering of the nations. Remember, I pointed out the number
of things in the Old Testament. There were three major feasts.
The Feast of the Unleavened Bread, the Passover was tied to that,
was a picture of Jesus Christ who would die for his sheep. He would die so his people could
eat of him and live. And 50 days after the beginning
of harvest was the Feast of Pentecost, a picture of the Holy Spirit
working in the lives of people everywhere to bring them in.
And then there was the Feast of Ingatherings. That's the final
time in pictures when the Father will gather His children from
all the ends of the earth and bring them in. That's the time
where we are in now, that the Lord is gathering His people
through you, You see the implication, of course.
This is New Jerusalem coming down. This is New Jerusalem with
its doors open. Better be that anyone who enters
that door. is welcomed by you and brought
into the family of God. That you work with your children
so they will remain in the family of God. They will gather with
God's people and long to be here to worship. Imagine the people
who were downtown last week to watch Santa Claus. What did he
do for anyone? And here we have the one who
gave his life And sometimes people are careless. You mean worship
twice on Sunday? If at all? No, Jerusalem's doors
must be open and the world must be invited in, in this time of
the ingathering. Five, many will cry to the good
shepherd for help, but he will reject them because he knows
their fake hearts. Remember, we talked about love,
knowledge, to have that experience with God. How many will try to
say, oh, didn't I do this in your name? I went to church.
I knew people at New Horizon. I've listened to the sermons. And he will say, I never knew
you because they had fake hearts. Yeah, they look passionate, but
their hearts were unregenerate. You can't fool God. He knows
the condition of your heart, whether you have truly surrendered
to him. Six, under-shepherds have the
weight of God's demands on them to care and guard the flock well. That's an implication especially
for the elders, deacons. They must love the sheep and
care for them as Christ did. They must give themselves for
the sheep. The attitude must never be, well,
that's a choice they want to make, I'll leave them alone.
It was to plead with them and plead with God for them that
those who are straying might return and live godly lives. And like the shepherds of the
past, they may have to inflict discipline
in order for the sheep to stay close. No one likes to think
about it, but it really was a way of keeping sheep that are prone
to stray where the shepherds will have to look at that healthy
sheep and break one of its leg and then bandage it up so that
sheep will learn not to stray far away, will stay close by. That's not an easy thing to tell
people to do. No one likes to inflict punishment
on others. But that's the work of the shepherd,
and you are under shepherds of Jesus Christ, and he expects
nothing less. You must do so in love, not discipline
from anger or hatred or frustration, but do it from love. Good shepherds must also learn
to stay awake at night thinking and praying and advising the
flock. Now what happens though, Jesus
talks here about the hirelings fleeing. What happens if there's
a problem? Is it ever justified for a minister
to run away? And this is an important thing
to reflect on, and the answer is it depends on the situation,
because there are some times where the minister might abandon
a flock because he's fearful for his own life. He wants to
protect himself. He doesn't want to get in trouble.
So he runs away. That's sinful. But there are
times, as John Calvin pointed out, where a minister may face
the congregation might be better off with the minister not there
in order to protect them. Or maybe because God would use
him in some different way in another place, then he may have
to flee. And we think that even Christ
had to flee when people were trying to kill him. There were
times when his work, he had a lot more work to do, so he had to
leave one place when they were chasing him. One time they were
trying to throw him off the cliff. and he had to escape from there. He wasn't called to say, okay,
I'm gonna stand here and be a martyr, go ahead, push me down, let me
die. He came for a purpose, and he had to fulfill that bigger
purpose. So you have to be careful when
you're dealing with this, not because someone runs away, because
he's being persecuted, the government trying to kill him. Sometimes
it's wise to leave. Sometimes it's necessary to stay. It depends on the motive. Number
seven. Thank God for the work of the good shepherd and pray
and support his under-shepherds to do his work. Your under-shepherds do not do
it for praise or for money. They're not hirelings. But also know that there are
many who are not fit to be under-shepherds. You must also work and pray for
their removal. If they would not reform their
lives, that they would be removed from office. Yes, support good
ones. Work to remove those who will
not change. There are too many people who
are in it for the fame and the finances, and they treat God's
people with contempt. And you say, what do they do?
Do they harm people? Yes. How? preaching the full
counsel of God, by not looking at them and saying, you're living
in sin. You need to break off that relationship with that ungodly
person. Or look at them in the face and
say, you need to change your job. Your job is making you do
dishonest things. See, those things are not easy
to say, but they are necessary to say. And ministers sometimes
don't want to, because they don't want to ruffle feathers, because
people might leave the church, and then the money might go down. Actually, those are the people
you need to remove. Why? Because their consequences are
deadly. They're leaving people in sin, because you don't want
to hurt their feelings. You know, if somebody has cancer,
and you say, oh, that will make them worry, if I tell them they
have cancer, what will be the result? death. Sometimes you
have to get aggressive and the doctors will have to catch you
and cut you open and do all kinds of things to get you to feel
better. That's what the good shepherd does. But the one who
doesn't, don't tolerate him because he's deadly to you. More, he's
deadly to himself. And more, and more importantly,
he robs Christ of your devotion. And eight, you who are ministers,
elders and deacons, do you have the passion for the sheep? He
expects you to be passionate about His sheep. Remember His
passion for His sheep. When you heard the intensity
of His suffering that was coming, the Bible says His sweat became
as blood. But He set His face like flint,
like a stone, determined to go to the cross to die for His children. And that's what God expects from
you, that you will be willing to die for them. That's also
true for you as fathers, that you have that same passion for
your under-shepherd. You know you are in charge of
his sheep, those little babies at home. God help you if you
treat them with contempt by not teaching them, by not disciplining
them, by not loving them. You know, you think of David
who was willing to take on a bear and a lion. You look at that
and say, what a teenager. Maybe a little dumb to do so,
but his love for his sheep made him stand up to the bear and
to the lion. That's a picture for us today
that will stand up for truth. When you hear these goofy things
being promoted on television, when you hear people promoting
false doctrine, that you have the courage to say, that's not
what the Bible says. Now, you might not be popular,
but remember, you're not called to be popular. You're called
to be faithful to truth. You need to be willing to do
so. Do so in love, but do so. That's important. Let's summarize
and conclude. Jesus is the true shepherd who
gave his life for his sheep, and he preserves their lives.
He's not a dead shepherd. He's a life-giving and life-preserving
shepherd. He's the one who saves you. He's
the one who keeps you. Not the liars, not the hirelings,
not the fake ones. See, he kept that promise he
made at the covenant of redemption. And now you get to eat as a sheep
from the tree of life that Adam lost. So beloved in the Lord
Jesus Christ, show you are grateful to your good shepherd who gave
his life for you and now keeps your body and soul for eternity.
How do you show that? Number one, worship him. Worship Him. Second, stay close
to Him. He gave His life on the tree
for you. Eat and live. Eat and live. Food is close by. Why starve
when there's an abundance right next to you? There's that Word
of God. How often do you read it? Or
do you let yourself starve when there's good food there? Nobody
does that normally. Not for the physical food. You
saw last night, people went after that food and they were happy.
You could see them smiling. Even more voraciously, we must
go for the word of God. And then the third thing. Show
you're faithful. Stay close to Him so you can
keep getting the nourishment to be faithful. And part of being
faithful is to search for strange sheep and bring them back. Now,
do you have a friend or maybe a relative who worshiped God
but has stopped? Find them. Bring them back. Help them to resolve their issues.
Don't be afraid to talk about that. And if you need help, ask
for help so that straying ones will be brought back into God's
family. You know, maybe they were abused.
Maybe they were betrayed. Maybe they were abandoned by
loved ones, parents, pastor, elders. But they're still the
Lord's sheep. And you, as the under-shepherds,
must find them and bring them back. You're all under-shepherds
in the general way. Yes, we have elders and deacons
and pastors, but you're all shepherds. You're all Christians. You're
anointed to be prophet, priest, and king. So search the lost
one and invite him to come to the care of the good shepherd
again. This will honor him. This will save the souls from
Satan's hand. I remember Jesus prayed for this
in the high priestly prayer in John 17. And this is what you
want. This is work. This is a sermon
with specific work for you to do. And finally, if you don't
have Jesus as your good shepherd who died for your sins, you will
have to die for your own sins. And that may be what you want
to do. But why would you want to do that when someone has already
paid for all your sins on the cross? So I urge you today, pray
to God, asking him to count the life and death of Jesus Christ,
your good shepherd, as yours. And he will make you his own.
Let us pray. Thank you, Lord, for your words,
and thank you for your people's attention to it. May we be encouraged
knowing that you love us in your Son and we're now inside that
door and we're being nourished inside by the Good Shepherd.
Help us, Lord, to remember our duties to those who are straying.
Just like we were rescued, use us to bring the straying ones
home, to protect their souls from damnation. More, to bring
praise to your holy name. Give us the courage to do so.
Give us the passion to do so. Give us the knowledge to do so.
We ask in Jesus' name. Amen.