The Good Shepherd; John 10:1-6
Chapters nine and ten flow
together. Originally there were no chapter divisions in the New Testament. We
must understand the events of chapter nine if we are going to properly
interpret the events of chapter ten. Chapter ten is the discourse on the good
shepherd. Jesus Christ is the good shepherd, He is called the great shepherd,
He is the chief shepherd.
One of the basic rules of interpretation
is context. Scripture must be interpreted in the time in which it was written
and it must be interpreted within its context. There are three different
aspects to Bible study. The first is observation. That looks at the text and
asks what is there. That is a very important procedure: what is there, what it
is saying, what the parts of speech are, the verbs, classifying the nouns, etc.
The second stage is interpretation, and that asks what it means. It does not
answer the question: what does that mean to me? That is not the issue in
interpretation. John did not write this Gospel to you. It is written to you by
extension and by application but not directly. Paul did not write to us the 1st
epistle to the Corinthians. He wrote that to a particular people in a
particular time in a particular place going through particular problems. When
we understand and properly interpret what he was saying to them, then we
develop application to us. Then the third stage is application. Application
then asks the question: how does this relate to the way I think and to what I
do? This passage on the good shepherd has nothing to do with pastors and
congregations.
The passage begins when Jesus
says: “Truly, truly, I say to you.” We are coming to the climax of a crescendo.
He has been building an argument for the last couple of chapters and the
conflict between Jesus and the Pharisees has been intensifying. We have to think
back on how John has developed this in his Gospel. There was His initial
statement that “if you tear down the temple I will rebuild it in three days,” and that immediately antagonised
the Pharisees. In John chapter three there is the discussion with Nicodemus
where Jesus made it clear that the issue was authority. If the ultimate
authority, Nicodemus, is going to be the things you think, the things you see,
then how will you ever believe me when I not only tell you about the things on
the earth but I tell you about things in heaven? So he challenged Nicodemus at
the core of his thinking in terms of ultimate authority issues. In chapter five
there is a more heated discussion following His healing of the cripple at the
pool of
There is a figure of speech
called a simile. This always uses the terms like or as—I am like a door, I am
like a shepherd, I am like a gate. It is a stated comparison. A metaphor is an unstated comparison—I am a door, I am a shepherd, I am the
gate. When it is extended out in a story like this it is an allegory. An
allegory is an extended metaphor where the different elements of the story
relate to a principle. But like any allegory you don’t try to make every single
detail mean something. That is the pathway to heresy.
In this passage we have the
metaphor of shepherd. Shepherd describes a field of meaning. Shepherds have all
kinds of responsibilities, they do all kinds of things. Their business, their
job is relating to sheep and they do all kinds of things to sheep. That
describes the field of meaning. Then there is the analogy. The analogy here is
to Jesus Christ and His role as the good shepherd. Not everything related to a shepherd
is going to compare to the Lord Jesus Christ in His ministry. Not everything in
the ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ is analogous to the work of a shepherd.
So we have to define the area of overlap. The Scriptures always define the
interpretation for us. That is the principle. The Bible never leaves us hanging
to just go out and say: “Okay, how is Jesus going to compare to a shepherd? Let’s
figure that out.” We are not left to our own devices, that is what allegory
does. The Scripture always defines the parameter and meaning for any figures of
speech. So we will see what the Scriptures tell us about the analogy of shepherd.
It is one of the most important images used throughout the Bible.
1)
It goes back to
creation. God made the creation to show His handiwork, Psalm 19:1 NASB
“The heavens are telling of the glory of God; And their expanse is declaring
the work of His hands.” Why are things the way they are? Because God made them
that way. God made sheep to be sheep and to have those characteristics so that
he could use that animal as an analogy to teach certain things to Christians
about the nature of the everyday believer. The person most responsible for
dealing with the sheep is the shepherd, and a shepherd is someone who knows the
sheep inside and out, and in the culture of that day the shepherds lived with
the sheep. They knew every single one of the sheep. When we look at Scripture
like John chapter ten we need to realise that every passage has a context. As
we have seen before, one rule of hermeneutics is any text without a context is
a pretext. This particular passage has three levels of context we need to look
at. The first level we need to examine is the overall biblical context. The second
is the cultural context of the time in which the Scripture was written. Third,
we must look at the immediate context, i.e. John chapter nine, in order to understand
why Jesus suddenly begins to talk about sheep and shepherds.
2)
Prior to the
first advent we have the shepherd-sheep analogy used in several ways. First, it
is used of Yahweh. Psalm 23:1 NASB
“The LORD [Yahweh] is my shepherd, I
shall not want.” Psalm 79:13 NASB “So we Your people and the sheep
of Your pasture Will give thanks to You forever; To all generations we will
tell of Your praise.” Psalm 80:1 NASB “Oh, give ear, Shepherd of
Israel, You who lead Joseph like a flock; You who are enthroned {above} the
cherubim, shine forth!” Psalm 95:7 NASB “For He is our God, And we
are the people of His pasture and the sheep of His hand. Today, if you would
hear His voice.” Ezekiel 34:15 NASB “’I will feed My flock and I
will lead them to rest,’ declares the Lord GOD [Yahweh].” So
it is an identification of deity. The second way it is used is of the kings,
princes and leaders of the nation
Just north of the temple
enclosure is a gate in the outer wall of
The Pharisees have just
demonstrated that they have more concern for their petty non-biblical
regulations about the observance of the Mishnah than they have for alleviating
the suffering of the blind man, or healing him, or its significance as a sign
of the Messiah. They have accused him of being a liar, a perjurer, of just
making the whole thing up. They have rejected his evidence, the evidence of his
parents, and they have excommunicated him from the synagogue. As the leaders of
the nation they have failed. They have failed to accept Christ’s messianic
claims, they have threatened His life, they have been more concerned about
their own traditions, their own desires, and their own power than they have
about the true spiritual needs of the people. They are, in the analogy, the
evil shepherds on contrast to Jesus who is laying claim to be the good
shepherd. He is the one who is concerned with the sheep and the spiritual needs
of the sheep. He is the one whose voice they hear. The blind man heard His voice.
What Jesus says in chapter
ten is to illustrate the dynamics of what went on in chapter nine. John 10:1 NASB
“Truly, truly, I say to you, he who does not enter by the door into the fold of
the sheep, but climbs up some other way, he is a thief and a robber.” “Truly,
truly” means that which is true, but it is used idiomatically to emphasise a
point’ “he who does not enter” is the present passive participle of eiserchomai [e)iserxomai]. It is a deponent verb so it has an active meaning. erchomai = to enter; eis = into; “through the door” is dia [dia] plus the genitive and it emphasises the means. Thieves
and robbers would hang out in between the pens hoping they could snatch a lamb.
The walls were about eight feet high and when night time came they would climb
over the walls and try to steal the sheep. They looked upon the sheep as
something that was there for their own personal use. They had no right to it,
and it is a perfect picture of religion. All religion in human history operates
from whoever the religious leaders are. They are either operating on
approbation lust or on power lust or a combination of the two, but they often
try to come up with some kind of new, interesting interpretation of Scripture
which has nothing to do with any governing rules of hermeneutics. It is sad to
say that people who ought to know better are practicing this today. We need to
always watch how people handle the Scriptures. Of course, Jesus is talking here
about the Pharisees. Jesus does not mince words, He is not afraid to tell them
exactly what the truth is, but He doesn’t do it in an unkind or malicious
manner. He is explaining the truth as it is.
John 10:2 NASB “But
he who enters by the door is a shepherd of the sheep.” The door is the proper
and legitimate entry way for the shepherd. What was the legitimate entry way
for Jesus as the shepherd? The fulfilment of Old Testament prophecy. Isaiah
7:14, that He would enter by means of the virgin birth. Micah 5:2, that He
would be born in
John 10:3 NASB “To
him the doorkeeper opens, and the sheep hear his voice, and he calls his own
sheep by name and leads them out.” Who is the doorkeeper? He is the forerunner
who announced the Messiah, John the Baptist, the one who as the keeper of the
sheep is the one who recognised the shepherd and allows the legitimate shepherd
to enter into the sheepfold. The sheep hear His voice, and this is when Jesus
comes and He teaches the gospel. When He said to the blind man, “Do you believe
in the Son of Man?” that is the call of the shepherd. The sheep, those who are
on positive volition, hear His voice and they respond as the blind man did and
say: “Lord, I believe.” Those who are of His flock say “I believe,” and then
they walk out the door to pasture. That is the point. It is not to stay in the
sheepfold, it is to go through the door and out to pasture and feed on the Word
of God so they can get nourishment and grow. That is not going to happen by
staying in the sheepfold. You have to go out to pasture, you have to daily take
in the Word, you have to study and make this the priority of your life because
if we are going to make the priority of our life to be pleasing the Lord,
according to 2 Corinthians chapter five, you can’t please the Lord of you don’t
know what pleases Him. The only way we are going to know what pleases the Lord
is to know the Lord and to know His Word, and that has to be the priority of
our life.
John 10:4 NASB “When
he puts forth all his own, he goes ahead of them, and the sheep follow him
because they know his voice.” They hear the true Messiah, they don’t follow
someone else. They have positive volition so that when they hear the truth they
respond to it.
John 10:5 NASB “A
stranger they simply will not follow, but will flee from him, because they do
not know the voice of strangers.” So we don’t have to worry. If we know
somebody who is in a cult, they don’t know their shepherd’s voice, they are not
positive.
John 10:6 NASB “This
figure of speech Jesus spoke to them, but they did not understand what those
things were which He had been saying to them.” This tells us that this is an
analogy. So what is the point of the analogy? That Jesus is claiming to be God,
the only true shepherd, the only true leader of the people, the Messiah, the
Davidic King. He is claiming to be the one who calls them by what he says,
which is Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and in the course of explaining this
He is indicting the Pharisees for their failure to properly lead the people and
is calling them evil shepherds and accusing them of all the things that are
said in Jeremiah and Ezekiel.