I AM the
good shepherd. I know my own - by which I mean, I love them - and my own know me. In plain
words: those who love me are willing to follow me, for anyone who does not love
the truth has not yet come to know it.
My dear brethren, you have heard the test we pastors have to undergo. Turn now
to consider how these words of our Lord imply a test for yourselves also. Ask
yourselves whether you belong to his flock, whether you know him, whether the
light of his truth shines in your minds. I assure you that it is not by faith
that you will come to know him, but by love; not by mere conviction, but by
action. John the evangelist is my authority for this statement. He tells us
that anyone who claims to know
God without keeping his commandments is a liar.
Consequently, the Lord immediately adds: As
the Father knows me and I know the Father; and I lay down my life for my sheep.
Clearly he means that laying down his life for his sheep gives evidence of his
knowledge of the Father and the Father’s knowledge of him. In other words, by
the love with which he dies for his sheep he shows how greatly he loves his
Father.
Again he says: My sheep hear my
voice, and I know them; they follow me, and I give them eternal life.
Shortly before this he had declared: If
anyone enters the sheepfold through me he shall be saved; he shall go freely in
and out and shall find good pasture. He will enter into a life of
faith; from faith he will go out to vision, from belief to contemplation, and
will graze in the good pastures of everlasting life.
So our Lord’s sheep will finally reach their grazing ground where all who
follow him in simplicity of heart will feed on the green pastures of eternity.
These pastures are the spiritual joys of heaven. There the elect look upon the
face of God with unclouded vision and feast at the banquet of life for ever
more.
Beloved brothers, let us set out for these pastures where we shall keep joyful
festival with so many of our fellow citizens. May the thought of their happiness
urge us on! Let us stir up our hearts, rekindle our faith, and long eagerly for
what heaven has in store for us. To love thus is to be already on our way. No
matter what obstacles we encounter, we must not allow them to turn us aside
from the joy of that heavenly feast. Anyone who is determined to reach his
destination is not deterred by the roughness of the road that leads to it. Nor
must we allow the charm of success to seduce us, or we shall be like a foolish
traveller who is so distracted by the pleasant meadows through which he is
passing that he forgets where he is going.
~St.
Gregory the Great: Homily, 14, 3-6.
Christ the Good Shepherd, by Bartolomé Esteban Murillo.
Oil on canvas, c. 1660; Museo del Prado, Madrid.