Fourth Sunday of
Easter Year C
Every year, this Sunday’s liturgy offers for our
meditation a passage extracted from the lengthy Chapter 10 of the Fourth
Gospel, where our Lord presents Himself as the “true shepherd.” The four verses
which I just read this year are taken from the last part of the speech and
helps us foster a deeper understanding of this beautiful biblical image. But do
you pay attention to the portrait of the Good Shepherd that is painted here?
Firstly, it dispels a widely held myth about the Good
Shepherd. Whenever we think of this, what does it remind us of? For most
people, the image of Jesus as the Good Shepherd may come from pictures in
children’s books or in stained glass windows: Jesus as a benign shepherd in
long flowing robes, surrounded by cuddly lambs and golden-haired children in a
soft grassy field on a perfect day.
Perhaps, the image painted by St Luke in his parable of the lost sheep
may have something to do with influencing this portrait (Luke 15:4-8).
But the image of the shepherd in St John’s gospel has
nothing to do with this nice and pleasant picture. Our Lord is not presenting
Himself as the one who lovingly caresses and coddles the wounded sheep like a
doting mother whilst giving its ego a therapeutic massage. St John paints a
picture of a seasoned battle-worn shepherd, strong, courageous, who fights off
bandits and wild beasts like David (another shepherd-warrior-king). Here is one
who is not afraid to risk everything and even lay down His life for the flock
He loves. Here is one who stands in the face of danger, holds his ground and
issues this warning, “no one can steal from the Father.”
We tend to overlook the fact that shepherds are also
fighters. Shepherds must be prepared to kill to protect the sheep in their
charge. For of such is the “Good
Shepherd.” The shepherd does not flee the scene at the slightest indication of
danger or risk to himself. The shepherd does not sit down for a meal over
roasted lamb with a bandit who has only one intent in mind – the stealing and
killing of his charges. The shepherd does not hand over his flock to the wild
beasts in order to appease them and to save his own skin. As “nice” as the
image of a benign and friendly shepherd may be, he does not have his sheep’s
best interest in mind. His job is to protect and guard them from their enemies.
His job is not to invite the enemies in, to feast on his flock.
No, the life of a shepherd and his flock is one marked
by danger and strife. In fact, all life is a struggle from start to
finish. At no time is life not in the
conflict of struggle. And the struggle
to survive is a fraction of the total struggle in which life is engaged at all
times and places. The heart struggles to
beat, the lungs to function, families to love, enterprises to exist. Man’s
ineffable, ineluctable and interminable destiny in this world is conflict (war
as Heraclitus puts it). Someone once
said, “Time is war. Space is
conflict. Land is violence.”
And that is the reason why we speak of the Church as
Church Militant, with Christ as our Warrior-King, Shepherd cum General. It is
not our intention to be belligerent, that is to pick fights and to sow discord
and violence. Rather, it is others who often pick fights with us, who sow
discord in our midst and eventually intend our destruction. And so, our destiny
has already been written by the perennial condition of a fallen humanity
hostile to Christ and His mission. The Catechism of Trent, Article IX, puts it
very succinctly: the Church “is called militant, because it wages eternal war
with those implacable enemies, the world, the flesh and the devil.”
It is not un-Christian to fight, on the contrary,
Christians are called to fight the good fight. But how can this spirit be
compatible with the commandment to love? Everything a Christian does should be
motivated by love, but this does not conflict with the spirit to strive and
fight. Rather this spirit should be a fruit of love. Love presupposes sacrifice
for the one who is loved. Without sacrifice, there is no true love – only
sentimentalism. If a man loves his wife and children, he is ready to defend
them. If he loves his country, he must be ready to fight against all attacks. Likewise,
he too must defend his faith and his Church. True love is proven under such
difficult circumstances. Love is ultimately determined when self-sacrifice is
called for. Our Lord who sacrificed Himself on the cross is the greatest
example of the militant spirit as the fruit of love.
But unfortunately, modern society, mistakes our
fundamental convictions as intolerance and extremism which breeds violence. We
live in a society that is more concerned with providing self-help therapies
which affirm us in our error than it is with challenging us with the Truth in
order to change. In fact, this is a generation which can’t handle the Truth.
Living a lie is so much less threatening and comfortable. That is why the world
tries to convince us not to enter into battle. “Do not waste your life fighting
for abstract ideals, enjoy the pleasures life has to offer,” is its message.
Yet the Catholic spirit should be the exact opposite – “Do not waste your life
on the pleasures of this world, fight for ideals that are worth living and
dying for.”
Sadly, the church is too often simply a mirror of the
wider culture on this issue. This plays out in how church leaders sometimes
compromise the most basic values and beliefs of the Church in order to appease
the world. We want to make peace with the world, even at the risk of offending
God. We insist on “listening” to the world and even conforming to the values of
the world, forgetting that the primary duty of the Church is to teach prophetically.
And so we end up dumbing things down in an attempt to be catchy or popular. We fail
to realise that our kids can actually understand the big doctrines of the
Christian faith, if they are given the opportunity and the forum to do so. But
we often believe that they are too dumb to handle these things.
But the Church of the living is ultimately the Church
Militant. This is what the Church is meant to be. Catholicism is meant to be
active and not passive. It's where you are required to adapt to it, rather than
it adapting to you. The longer you are in it, the more you realise its demands
of you. The Catholic Church is not a mall or a spa. No, the Catholic Church is
a gym, a battleship ready for war. Yes. The Catholic faith is difficult. It is
demanding and it’s meant to be so. It is about mercy, but it is also about
overcoming oneself. We are challenged in
a deep way, not just to “feel good about myself” but to become holy.
In times of war and in the heat of battle, obedience
is paramount. That is why the Lord tells us, “The sheep that belong to me
listen to my voice.” This is what ultimately defines us – our obedience. He
makes the judgment call, we merely carry it out. In the midst of a culture of
mass information, relativism and individualism, in which there are so many competing
voices, we must learn to listen to the only voice that matters, the voice of
Christ the Good Shepherd. Failing to listen to His voice only ends in chaos and
conflict within the ranks of the flock.
So who are the sheep of His flock? Are they those
docile, pacifist creatures who only know how to pray, pay and obey? Hardly. His
“sheep” are those who have the courage to follow Him and the humility to obey
Him. His “sheep” are those who are prepared to fight in His army and die for
Him. If our Shepherd King is a Warrior, we His sheep must be ready to wage the
“eternal war with those implacable enemies, the world, the flesh and the
devil.” Indeed, following His example, pious Catholic men and women throughout
the centuries have brought tremendous acts of daring and bravery to the
battlefields of life and steadfastly faced innumerable situations of danger and
conflict. Nothing could be more Catholic than this.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Terms of Use: As additional measure for security, please sign in before you leave your comments.
Please note that foul language will not be tolerated. Comments that include profanity, personal attacks, and antisocial behaviour such as "spamming" and "trolling" will be removed. Violators run the risk of being blocked permanently. You are fully responsible for the content you post. Please be responsible and stay on topic.