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To: Salvation
Regnum Christi

Christ Knows His Sheep!
| SPIRITUAL LIFE | SPIRITUALITY
Fourth Sunday of Easter

Father Steven Reilly, LC

John 10:27-30

My sheep hear my voice; I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish. No one can take them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all, and no one can take them out of the Father´s hand. The Father and I are one."

Introductory Prayer: Lord, we continue celebrating the joy of Easter. This meditation is a privileged moment to experience this happiness. I offer you my faith and devotion.

Petition: Lord, help me to realize that I am known and loved infinitely!

1. God Is Not a Watchmaker: Philosophers and scientists of the Enlightenment were enthralled with Reason. They looked at the universe and saw logic and law, and they likened God to an expert watchmaker. He had created a Rolex of a universe and was now contentedly allowing his creation to run its course. The perfect and implacable laws of physics had freed him from the cares of creation — a visit to his celestial office would reveal a vacationing God “gone fishing.” This deistic notion of God is not the God we worship. Our God is an ever-present God, intimately concerned about his children. He has not forgotten about the world. He is not far away. He became man and even when his time came to leave this world, he devised a way to remain with us. Could God get any closer than being truly present within us through the Eucharist? He shows infinite intensity in the focus of his love. Anyone who threatens the sheep of this loving God does so at his own risk: “No one can take them out of the Father’s hand!”

2. Knowing the Sheep: This loving Father has a Son who is the perfect reflection of his being: “The Father and I are one.” The Son is a shepherd whose love, like the Father’s, is intense and personal: “I know [my sheep].” Human categories don’t do the divine reality justice. The human shepherd, after all, would be hard pressed to think of his sheep as individuals. When he looks at them, he sees a flock. When he speaks about them, the same word “sheep” will work both as singular and plural. But Jesus is the Shepherd unlike any human shepherd, just as his Father is the Creator unlike any human watchmaker. For Jesus, each sheep is an individual, loved with a unique love. When you come to Christ, you don’t need to wear a nametag. He knows your name!

3. Doing Our Part: If Jesus is the Shepherd unlike any human shepherd, we should be sheep unlike any typical wool-covered mammals. Their ardor for the next tuft of grass is such that the voice of the shepherd hardly suffices to keep them in the flock. Barking dogs are an essential element to good flock maintenance. But Christ’s sheep don’t need that kind of coercion. In prayer we “hear [his] voice.” May we never tire of belonging to the blessed flock of Christ! May we always listen and heed his voice.

Conversation with Christ: Lord, you are my Shepherd. With you, there is nothing I shall want. I will always keep my eyes fixed on your rod and staff. My courage will never falter if you are at my side.

Resolution: I will show spiritual leadership in my family today.


41 posted on 04/21/2013 5:50:51 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All

Hearing the Shepherd’s Voice

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.

by Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D. on April 19, 2013 · 

What was the response to Jesus’ preaching, according to the New Testament?  Some who heard him were impressed; others wanted to push him over a cliff (Luke 4:29).  The same was true for Paul and Barnabas during their missionary journeys.  They were hailed by some and run out of town by others.  Jesus summed it up quite clearly: “Do you think that I have come to give peace on earth?  No, I tell you, but rather division.”  (Lk 12: 51).

It was not that he really wanted to create strife.  His coming simply provoked a crisis.  Crisis means judgment, a situation that shows what people are truly made of.  Good and evil, black and white really do exist, and they exist in the human heart.  Often we see things in such varying shades of grey that we don’t know where we and others truly stand. A crisis forces everyone to show their true colors.

Paradoxically, you can’t recognize him when he appears unless you already belong to him.  ”My sheep hear my voice.  I know them, and they follow me” (John 10:27).  But how do people come to be His?  Are they predestined to belong to him?  Are others predestined to reject him?  Is there no free choice, then?

In John 6:44, Jesus says “No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him.”  Regardless of whether a person witnesses a bona fide miracle, faith is still necessary to recognize the presence and action of God in the extraordinary event.  To respond to the presence and action of God with repentance and a changed life also requires faith.  Now faith is a supernatural reality.  We cannot manufacture it.  It is a gift that, once received, becomes a virtue, a power that enables us to think, act, and be different.  But until it is received, we do not have it in us to recognize and accept Christ as the divine savior.  So grace must even precede and enable our first baby steps in the Christian life.  All depends on grace!

So does God want some people to go to hell and so withhold this grace of faith?  The Catholic Church on numerous occasions has clearly said no, in fidelity to the Scriptures.  Paul, in 1 Timothy 2:4, says this: “God wants all to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth.”  So the Church has always believed that God gives to each person, at least at one time in their life, sufficient grace to be saved.

Grace is God’s free gift of empowering, healing, life-changing love.  But here is the thing about it: God never forces it on anyone.  A person is always free to say “no thanks” at any time; when the initial gift is offered, or sometime after saying “yes” to the initial gift.  The Christian life is not about accepting this gift once at an altar call or on the day of your baptism or confirmation.  It is about saying yes each and every day, a persevering yes until your very last breath.  That’s why Paul and Barnabas exhorted their converts to “hold fast to the grace of God” (Acts 13:43).

God will never let go of his end of the rope that draws us upward to heaven.  But we can always choose to let go of our end.  No one can snatch us out of the Good Shepherd’s hand.  But we can decide to let go of that hand.

Confidence in God’s power and assurance of his love are both aspects of the Christian virtue of hope.  But reckless complacency is not the virtue of hope but rather the vice of presumption.  Our joyful assurance must be balanced with humble vigilance and prayer for the grace of perseverance, the grace to “hold fast” to his hand.

But what about the others who apparently don’t hear the shepherd’s voice?  Is it God’s responsibility, because he has not given them grace, or their fault, because they have hardened their hearts?  That is really not our concern.  Our responsibility is to pray that God open the hearts of all, and that the witness of our lives and words would be an aid, rather than an obstacle, to those wrestling with the greatest decision of their lives.

 


42 posted on 04/21/2013 6:05:32 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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