Scripture: John 10:1-18
Journal: How are you allowing the thief to kill and steal and destroy in your
life these days? What would it look like
to allow the Good Shepherd to protect you from his attacks? Will you let him?
Reflection:
“The thief comes to kill and steal and destroy; I have come that they may
have life and have it abundantly.” (John 10:10)
The thief. What a perfect description of who our enemy
is and how he goes about his business.
He comes when we are not looking, when we are not paying attention, when
we least expect it, and he kills and steals and destroys. Notice it doesn’t say he kills or steals or
destroys. It says he kills and steals
and destroys—all of the above.
He kills our dreams and our
hopes and our faith by convincing us to believe his lies. He steals our joy and our delight and our
trust by making us believe things about ourselves and about our God that are
simply not true. He destroys our peace
and our love and our gratitude by getting us consumed with ourselves and our
circumstances—filling us with anxiety and insecurity and frustration. And most of the time we don’t even realize that
he is the one behind all of these things.
It’s simply masterful.
So when Jesus draws our
attention to the thief, and to his ways, it causes us to stop and say, “Hey,
wait a minute. What’s going on here? Why on earth am I allowing this “thief” to
come and go as he pleases? Why do I
continue to allow him to wreak havoc in my life?” For if we were to realize that it is indeed
the thief that is behind all of this carnage, we would not continue to allow
him to operate unhindered.
Maybe that’s why Jesus calls
himself both the gate (John 10:9) and the good shepherd (John 10:11) in this
passage, because he knows we are in desperate need of both. We need Jesus to keep the thief out and keep
him from coming and going as he pleases.
And we need Jesus to continually speak to our hearts and remind us of
the truth of who we are in him. We need
his protection and we need his affection.
We are his sheep. And his sheep must
recognize his voice and run away from the voice of the “stranger.” The voice of Jesus, our good shepherd, calls
us by name and leads us out, into the truth.
The truth that sets us free.
So today I must say yes
to the voice of the good shepherd and I must say “no, not today” to the
voice of the one who comes to kill and steal and destroy. That is the only way I will be able to
experience the life and the abundance that Jesus promises.
Prayer
Closing
Prayer: Lord Jesus, thank you that you do not steal
and kill and destroy, but that you give abundant life. Empower me now, O
Lord, to stand against the thief who is constantly trying to rob and deceive
me, and help me to listen to your voice of truth, which alone can set me
free. Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment