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Story 15
The Good Shepherd
our last story? About the blind man Jesus cured?
The Lord continued His comment to the Pharisees, by saying ..
“The kingdom of heaven is like a sheepfold (a place where sheep
are gathered together at night). He that does not go through the
door into the sheepfold, but climbs in some other way is a thief
and a robber. He that goes in by the door is the shepherd of the
sheep. I am the door. If any man goes into the sheepfold through
me he is safe in the fold.”
The Pharisees did not seem to understand what Jesus meant, and so
the Lord explained it to them. Heaven is the sheepfold; the
people are the sheep. The Christ is the door. All who want
to go to heaven must go through the door. This they can do by
believing the Christ and obeying Him.
Those who teach any other way of going to heaven are thieves and
robbers, because they are taking from the people the best things
of life.
Jesus told them another parable to show them that His greatest
wish was to do them good. In this parable He called Himself the
shepherd of the sheep , and other teachers hired men, who do not
care for the sheep because they do not own them.
Jesus said ...
“I am the Good Shepherd, and the good shepherd is willing to
give his life for the sheep. But the one who is hired to take
care of the sheep, who does not own them, cares nothing for
them. If he sees a wolf coming, he leaves the sheep and runs
to look out for himself. Then the wolf catches the sheep and
scatters them. I am the Good Shepherd, and will give my
life for the sheep.”
How sweet and loving the voice of Jesus must have been! Many of
the people believed that Jesus was telling the truth. Many
thought that they would like to belong to this Good Shepherd,
and go to heaven through this door. But some said ...
“He is insane; why do you listen to him?”
Those who were ready to believe Jesus said ...
“But what he says does not sound like the talk of an insane man.
Can one who is insane give sight to a man that has always been
blind?”
And they almost began to quarrel among themselves.
Very soon after Jesus had spoken these words, it was time for
another of the feasts of the Children of Israel. This was the
Feast of the Dedication. Like the other special feasts we have
read about, this one lasted one week. This feast was held in
the winter time. As Jesus walked into the temple one day,
some of the Children of Israel came around Him and asked ...
“How long shall we have to wait without knowing whether you are
the Christ or not? If you are the Christ, tell us so plainly.”
Jesus answered ...
“I have told you so many times, but you would not believe me.
The miracles that I do ought to answer your questions, but you
will not believe me because you are not my sheep. My sheep hear
my voice, and I know them and they follow me, and I give them
the life that will last forever. My Father, who gave them to
me, is greater than all else, and no one shall be able to take
them away from my Father or me, for I and my Father are one.”
Then those Children of Israel took up stones to throw at Jesus.
What did the Savior do? Did He speak to them in anger? No,
He gently said ...
“Many good deeds have I done for you, through my Father; for
which of these are you stoning me?”
You would think these words of Jesus would have made them want
to drop their stones in shame, asking the Lord to forgive them.
Is that what happened? No. They replied to Jesus ...
“It is not for good works that we stone you, but because you,
a man, call yourself God.”
Jesus said ...
“If I do not do the works of God, then do not believe me. But
if I do, then believe the works that you see, even if you
cannot believe me. Then you will know and believe that the
Father is in me, and I in him.”
Again the Sanhedrin tried to arrest the man who called Himself
the Son of God, but they could not do it. Jesus left the
temple and crossed the Jordan into the country where John the
Baptist used to preach. Many of the people followed Jesus,
saying ...
“He is greater than John, for John did no miracle. Everything
that John said about this man is true.”
And many believed Jesus.
These new friends asked Jesus to teach them a prayer, as John
had taught his disciples. Jesus then taught them the same
prayer that He had taught the disciples in Galilee, the Lord’s
Prayer. He told them not to give up praying because God did
not seem to answer them at once. Jesus told them that the
Father loved to have them keep asking, and would give them
what was best for them, just as they were willing to give
good things to their children.
The people of this part of the country crowded around Jesus just
as the people of Galilee had the year before. Think about how
you might feel, if you had been there with the crowd, listening
to Jesus talk? So many people could not hear Jesus speak just
once. After hearing the Savior, many wanted to hear Him again
and again. Some probably believed that Jesus was the Son of
God, but no doubt others heard Him talk, and then forgot Him.
As Jesus was teaching the people one day, a Pharisee asked Him
to dinner. Why he invited Jesus we do not know. Perhaps he
liked to hear the Lord, and wanted to know Him better. But
probably he wanted to draw Jesus away from the people in the
hope of getting the Lord to say something that could be taken
to the rulers and complained about.
Whatever his reason, Jesus went with him. The Lord sat down at
the table, and began to eat. You remember the custom the
Pharisees had of washing their hands before they ate, and why
they did it? Jesus did not wash His hands as He sat down to
this dinner, and the Pharisee found fault with the Lord. But
Jesus wanted to teach the people that these customs were not
of much importance. Jesus wanted them to learn to obey the
real commands of God. It was much more necessary to be honest
and kind and loving, than to wash one’s hands just because it
was a custom.
So when the Pharisee found fault with Him, Jesus told the
Pharisee and the others who were with him at the table what
He thought about these things. They did not like what Jesus
said, and tried to say things that would make Jesus angry,
hoping that Jesus might say more than He meant to say. But
the Pharisee and the others did not succeed. Jesus went away
from them and told His friends not to trust the Pharisees,
for they were hypocrites. Hypocrites are those who say one
thing when they mean something else.
But Jesus said ...
“Do not be afraid of them, even if they arrest you and try to
kill you. God, who takes care of even the sparrows which are
worth so little will surely take care of you. Yet even
though they should kill you, it is only your body that they
hurt, for they cannot touch your soul, that part of youwhich is to live forever.”
Two brothers who lived in that part of the country had quarreled
about some money that had been left to them. One of the brothers
took more than the other thought was right. One day, while Jesus
was talking to a very large crowd of people, the brother who did
not think he had his share of the money said to Jesus ...
“Master, speak to my brother, and tell him to divide the money
with me.”
Jesus answered him ...
“Who made me your judge, or gave me the right to divide your
property for you?”
That was not what Jesus had come to earth to do. Jesus had come
to earth to teach. The people had heard what was said to Jesus
about property. So, while the people were thinking about
property, Jesus taught them a lesson. He said ...
“Do not long to own what you see other people have, for a man’s
happiness does not depend upon the number of things he owns.”
Jesus then told this story:
There was once a rich man who owned a great piece of land, and
he planted the land. Everything grew well for a year, and at
harvest time there was so much to gather that the man did not
have room enough to store it all. He thought to himself ...
“What shall I do? My barns are too small. Where shall I put
all that has grown this year?”
He could have given some away, don’t you think? But he did not
want to do that. He wanted to keep it all himself. So, he
said ...
“I will pull down my barns and build others which will be large
enough to hold all that I have gathered. Then I will say to
my soul, ‘Soul, you have enough for many years; take your
comfort now; eat, drink, and be merry.”
But God said to him ...
“You foolish man, you will die this very night; then who will
have those things that you have stored away?”
Jesus then said ...
“So is everyone who is rich in money and other treasures, but is
not rich in God’s love.”
After finishing this story Jesus taught His disciples many
things that He had taught the people of Galilee in the Sermon
on the Mount. He told them not to be too anxious about their
food and clothing, for God, who cared for such tiny things as
birds and flowers, would surely care for them. Jesus said ...
“Let your greatest wish be to live as one of God’s children
ought, and all these things will be given to you. Do your
best every day, and then, whenever God calls you to live
with him, you will be ready to go.”
Jesus was teaching in the synagogue one Sabbath day,. Among
the worshippers was a woman who was very much deformed. For
eighteen years her back had been bent over like a bow.
Nothing on earth could make her back straight. The loving
heart of Jesus felt pity for the poor woman. He called her
to Him. Laying His hands on her, Jesus said ...
“You are free from this trouble.”
No sooner had Jesus said this than the woman felt a difference
in her back and found that she could stand straight again. She
was no longer deformed. It made her very happy, and she thanked
God for what had been done.
But the ruler of the synagogue was very angry that this had been
done on the Sabbath. So he said to the people ...
“There are six days in the week in which men ought to work.
Come on one of those if you wish to be cured!”
Jesus turned to this man and said ...
“You hypocrite, does not each one on the Sabbath untie his ox
and lead him away to water? If there is such need of doing this
that it is not wrong to do it on the Sabbath, should not this
woman be freed from the trouble she has borne eighteen years,
even on the Sabbath day?”
These words made the Pharisees ashamed of themselves, and the
people shouted for joy because of the glorious things that were
being done.
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