I am the gate
Tony E Dillon Hansen
Reflection based upon John 10: 1-10, Psalm 23, 1 Peter 2: 19-25, Acts 2: 42-47
Opening Prayer
The gate is a curious symbol for Jesus. Like my yard gate it, it swings in and out of the yard. Thus a gate is a path between something and another. Going to somewhere and coming from somewhere. The question is where are you ? Which direction are you going?
At its simplest, it is a start and an end to something. From this point, you take steps either into where you need to go (should go) or you stay where you are. On Good Shepherd Sunday, we believe that Jesus is guiding us and holding open this gate to something more than we can possibly imagine.
We believe that whatever ails us in our lives today is enough to take the step with Jesus into the new, the promise, the forever of God with Jesus.
So what or who holds you back?
What is it that you leave behind? What worries you about the next step?
Why do we hold so dear that which we would leave behind that we cannot, or will not, take the leap of faith with Jesus?
What is it that we turn to drugs, alcohol and violence instead of faith?
Jesus offers us so much in our world and the afterlife, but we question and doubt. I can understand these because people want proof and they want assurances. Then if that doubt and question are what holds you back, your faith is tired and broken.
Maybe instead, that is when you lean into your faith, lean into the words that Jesus proclaims and find yourself taking that next step into the promise, into the life with Christ.
Doubt and question are part of faith so long as they don’t stop us or hide the truth. We don’t have all the answers and we don’t know everything. That is the most truth I can give you. Thus, faith in that promise is understanding that and understanding that there is an answer to those questions and doubts.
That answer can be found here in Jesus and proclamation of victory. The resurrection of life from certain failure and doom and misery. In this Christ, we have life that we need and all the answers that we couldn’t imagine on our own.
So yes, Jesus is a gate, and the shepherd calls to us to be with us near the still waters and restores our souls when we need it the most. For when Jesus was tortured and murdered, Jesus was knew that faith in God was most needed, and because God was going to see him through to still waters of new life.
Even in those moments, Jesus held true and bore violence so that we might have new life with him because “by his wounds you have been healed.”
Then together, we are more than our wounds, our miseries, our political divide, our social anxiety. Together, we can believe and walk together through the gate with similar doubts and questions but with faith that that is the true promise that has been given to us. We are healed. That, like Acts 2, is when we break bread and are a community with people because we, together, believe in the purpose and the life that has been given to us is not just some fairy tale or fantasy.
This life, that Jesus gives, is real and waiting for us to walk through that gate of acceptance, that gate to the promise where no one is turned away or denied - to a promised land of deliverance and restoration despite all of our failures and doubts.
This gate is for those who hear the words and follow as the sheep of the Shepherd. As farmers will tell you, sheep know their voice and respond to the words they speak. In the same way, Jesus is calling you to come to the gate. This gate is for you.
Where are you and which direction are you going? Take the step into the promise of Jesus. Take the step into resurrection and new life.
Beloved, Jesus is calling. The questions for you: will you respond and will you go to that gate and be saved?
Beloved, that is possible, that faith is possible because …
Thanks Be to God.