John 10: 22-30
Rev. 7: 9-17
“After this I looked, and there was a great multitude that no one could count, from every tribe, from all the tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, robed in white, with palm branches in their hands.”
Prayer: O Good Shepherd, let us lie in your green pastures, and be besides your still waters, so that you may restore our souls. Amen.
How many of you know what LinkedIn is? [raise hands] How many of you are a subscriber or a member of LinkedIn? Yeah, I am, too. For those of you who don’t know, LinkedIn is an online community for professionals in the global workforce. It was co-founded by Reid Hoffman in his living room in 2002, with a vision to “create economic opportunity for every member of the global workforce.” Then it officially launched on May 5th, 2003, 19 years ago almost to the day. LinkedIn’s mission is to “connect the world’s professionals to make them more productive and successful. Now with more than 830 million members worldwide, including executives from every Fortune 500 company, LinkedIn is the world's largest professional network” (About LinkedIn, retrieved May 6, 2022).
So, you can find people with similar professional skills and network with them. You can find job postings that match your skills and credentials. It’s also like a social media platform where you can communicate with others using email, instant messaging, chats, etc. Everyone on LinkedIn can be “linked” to each other, networked together by a common purpose and a common connecting link.
And that’s what this image from the book of Revelation reminds me of… this great multitude of saints from all kinds of backgrounds, speaking all kinds of languages, are all linked together inclusively with a common purpose and a common connecting link—they are all worshipping the Risen Christ. They are proclaiming God’s salvation through Christ, aka the Lamb. They’re all crying out with loud voices the Good News that the Risen Christ, aka the Good Shepherd, gives eternal life to those who hear the Shepherd’s voice.
Today I proclaim that we are that community of Christians. We are linked to the shepherd!
Remember though, that these images from Revelation are not to be taken literally! The book of Revelation is mostly about a dream John has and the images that he wrote down. I don’t think that we are asked to believe that there literally are large heavenly groups of heavenly beings worshipping a Lamb. That would be believing in John’s viewpoint from his dream. Literally believing in a viewpoint I think will bog you down and handcuff you spiritually.
We are, however, asked to believe in the One this image points to. Believing a viewpoint distracts and curtails. Believing that Jesus is the One this story reveals doesn’t distract or curtail. It won’t bog you down. Instead it frees our minds from the trappings of believing in viewpoints and lifts you up into the new life God offers. It opens the doorway of our conscience and our inner spirit to hear Jesus’ voice and see his actions as proof that he is the Messiah, the One whom God sent for us to experience the new life of God’s saving grace. And believing in Jesus and in God’s saving grace forever links us with him as the Good Shepherd, just like the multitudes in John’s dream were forever linked to the Shepherd. So, I thought this week about what it means to be linked to the shepherd.
For one, I think it unleashes the power of life in the midst of death. Yes, John’s vision is a heavenly one, but it spills over into our earthly world. I mean life and death are our realities all the time. I can’t go a day without seeing a crisis that is happening, somewhere. In the world. In our nation. In our church. In my life.
But, being linked to the Shepherd, I believe that God is in the crisis with me. With us. In our community God is with you and me in our valleys of the shadow of death.
Years ago when Barb and I were part of a group that went to Iceland. One day we went to a beautiful beach with a unique lava flow. The weather was cool and breezy, but the sea was rough, and the waves were five to six feet high. Still, one older woman, Lorraine, went out on an outcrop of the lava flow only to be swept away by a larger rogue wave that came in suddenly. She didn't know how to swim. A few of us immediately went out into the rough waves to try and save her, but she was lost in the surf.
When we realized all hope was lost, we gathered on the beach, formed a group, and prayed the 23rd Psalm. There we were. Strangers and friends. Church-goers and non-church goers. Religious and non-religious people. People from our group and people who were just there linked to each other literately holding hands and linked to the Shepherd. In that moment, a new community formed. And together we lifted Lorraine up in prayer. Together we recognized God’s presence in life and death which can happen suddenly. There was no physical miracle, despite our prayers. We only hoped that Lorraine was in God’s hands and that her family would experience healing in the midst of grief. Two hours later her body was found a couple of miles down the beach. About two weeks later, with her body returned to Pennsylvania, and I then officiated at Lorraine’s funeral. Her community came together to mourn their loss and hear words of hope for new life in saving grace. And in the midst of death we find life. In loss we find gain.
I believe being linked to the Shepherd means that the power of the Gospel, which is that Christ was crucified and raised by God, means that saving grace belongs to God. And God gives us this saving grace for all times and places where life and death meet in our lives. Where we experience loss and can find gain. Where we hear Jesus’ voice and choose to follow him.
I believe God is active in our lives bringing us to new life again and again. For us as people. For us a church community. I believe God sees the end result of saving grace for us, even though sometimes we can’t see it and we get wounded on the way. Or get stuck in a crisis. Or receive a stinging rebuke. Or sharp criticism. Or we have to deal with death. It is God’s eternal life here and now that spills over from God’s holy realm. It is the surprising energy of life we experience as we come through our many “ordeals.”
In all of it, trust God, dear Church. Not that God will give us a trouble-free life. Not that the church community will be stress free. We are called to link ourselves to the Shepherd and trust that God knows us and will guide us through any crisis—to the water of life. To gain saving grace. To be a community of saints and sinners who live with such a promise. Amen.
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