Homily For The 4th Sunday Of Easter, Year A.
Acts 2:14, 36-41; Psalm 23:1-6; 1 Peter 2:20-25, John 10:1-10.
“THE SHEPHERD AND THE SHEEP!”
By: Rev. Fr. Charles Onyeka Ezejide.
· The
4th Sunday of Easter is traditionally known as the “Good Shepherd
Sunday” or the “Vocations Sunday”. This day is set aside to pray for vocations
in the church that God may raise for himself good shepherds for his vineyard
because “the harvest is rich, but the labourers are few” (Matt. 9:37).
· Growing
up, there is hardly any child who could not recite Psalm 23 from the beginning
to the end without reading from the bible. We prayed it at the assembly ground,
we wrote it as tests in schools, and we adopted it as our favourite Psalm, clearly
telling the world that Christ is our Shepherd and if the Lord is our Shepherd,
there is nothing we shall want.
· Today,
our readings call us to a deeper commitment to the words of that Psalm. The
responsorial psalm states that “the Lord is my shepherd, there is nothing I
shall want” (Ps. 23:1). It means that God can only be our Shepherd if we
willingly accept to be his sheep.
· Dearly
beloved, this acceptance to be God’s sheep while he is our shepherd should not
be a mere verbal acceptance, but an acceptance concretised in word and in deed.
· In
the first reading (Acts 2:14, 36-41), Peter clearly
understood the fact that God was and is still his shepherd, there is nothing he
shall want, and there is nothing that should scare him because he, as a good
sheep, has a capable shepherd.
· It
was the confidence in God as his Shepherd that gave him the courage to preach
and challenge the status quo. He announced to the people the urgency of
repentance, and because they saw his belief and conviction in the message and in
the power of God, it led to the conversion of over 3000 people.
· Dearly
beloved in Christ, we must ask ourselves, since we became Christians, how many
people have we positively affected, let alone led to genuine conversion and
repentance. If Peter and the other disciples did it, then we too can do it.
There is no reason to be afraid because if we are good sheep, then the Lord
will surely be our good shepherd who will protect us from the darts of the
enemy.
· For
many who have not started enjoying the benefit of having Jesus as their good
shepherd because they have not been good sheep themselves, they must today ask
questions like the crowd in the first reading “What must we do?” (Acts 2:37).
And the answer is simple, we must repent of our sins and misgivings and return
to the sheepfold where Christ can shield and shelter us.
· Dear
friends in Christ, returning to the sheepfold could be extremely difficult;
breaking even from our old life to a new life in Christ can be a difficult
decision to make. To enjoy the privilege of a sheep from Christ, our chief
shepherd, then we must be prepared to make that sacrifice.
· The
second reading (1 Peter 2:20-25) reminds us that Christ
himself, to become our shepherd, suffered for us, died on the cross for us, his
sheep, and by so doing, left us an example to follow. Even though in the case
of Jesus, he had done no wrong, he had to endure all these for our sake. Yes!
We may have gone “astray like sheep, but now you have come back to the shepherd
and guardian of your souls” (1 Peter 2:25).
· Friends
in Christ, since our security, our provision, and protection lie in remaining
in the sheepfold, in the gospel reading (John 10:1-10),
Jesus expressly commands us to enter the sheepfold through the gate, thereby
warning us of the possibility of other self-acclaimed shepherds whose duty is
to kill and destroy.
· The
sheep only listen to the voice of the true shepherd, and one by one, he calls
each of us by our names and leads us out, and he leads us while we follow. The
question is, since Christ is our shepherd, do we really know him? Do we listen
to his voice? Do we follow his direction?
· Today,
the Lord tells us that apart from being the good shepherd, he is also the gate
to the sheepfold, and anyone who enters through him will be safe, finding
pasture. Because he has come so that we may have life and have it to the full.
· Dearly
beloved in Christ, Jesus invites us today to come back to him because he is
always ready to be our shepherd. He is always ready to play his role as our
creator and guide. Are we ready to come back to him?
· The
responsorial psalm tells us that “the Lord is our shepherd, there is nothing we
shall want” (Ps. 23:1). It therefore means that if we do not want to be in
want, we must acknowledge Christ as our shepherd and return to the sheepfold
because Christ cannot be your shepherd if you are not his sheep.
· May
God give us the grace to acknowledge Christ as our shepherd, so that we can
enter under his protection and providence by listening to his voice and
following his direction through Christ our Lord, Amen!
· Happy
Sunday!!!
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