John
by David CookThe context of today's reading is the blindness of the Pharisees (John 9:39). In this chapter, Jesus speaks of himself as both the gate to the sheepfold (v. 9) and the good shepherd (v. 11). Unlike the gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, John does not describe Jesus speaking in parables. Instead, he presents Jesus teaching in ″figure[s] of speech″ or allegories (see John 10:6; 16:25, 29).
Verses 1-5 contain an analogy. In the first century, sheep were kept overnight in a communal pen with a watchman on guard. In this analogy, the shepherd enters the fold by the gate; the watchman, recognizing him, opens the gate; the shepherd's sheep hear and follow him. The contrast here is with the thief-and-robber who does not enter via the gate, as well as with the stranger whom the sheep do not recognize and follow. Instead, they run from him.
Jesus' listeners don't understand this story, so He puts it in another way in the three paragraphs that follow:
Jesus, then, is both the gate to God's flock and the Good Shepherd who, by giving His life, provides the way to shelter. That is why Jesus has come. All who turn their back on pretenders and come via Him have real life- they know the Son (v. 14), and they know the Father (John 17:3).
The thieves, robbers, strangers, and hired men in this context are the religious leaders of Israel in Jesus' day-those who come in religious garb, whose goal is comfort, ease, and a secure pay packet, but not the security of the sheep.
The Christian faith is all about Jesus. The gate is not a set of dogmas or rules, but a person to be trusted and known. Jesus shepherds the sheep by laying down His life, and pouring out His blood, for them.
Jesus is the gate of the sheep, and the Good Shepherd; His sheep know His voice. Are you listening to His voice today?
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