The "before" picture |
On Friday afternoon, I finally finished a job I had been
meaning to do for months – fixing a loose rusty old latch on one gate of our
backyard fence. I think I actually bought the new latch last fall, but other
things always seemed to take priority. The night before, the neighbor children
were having fun kicking a soccer ball around and occasionally it would sail
over our fence into the backyard making it necessary for them to open our gate
and retrieve the ball. Of course, most of the time it was left unclosed as it
was difficult to open and shut – putting aside the forgetfulness of a group of nine and ten year old boys. So, I decided
it was time to fix the thing and make their play, and our yard work, a little
easier.
Armed with a drill, extension cords, hammer, nails,
screws, and a screwdriver set, I began reinforcing loose boards, removing the
old latch, and securing a new one. It wasn’t the easiest job as our lawn slopes
down and my balance isn’t the best. At last, the work was all done and I was
quite pleased with the result, for an amateur.
The "after" picture |
The purpose of our fence is mainly to keep out
neighborhood dogs and hungry deer and to protect the garden we try to maintain.
It doesn’t do much to deter raccoons as they climb right over it! The other
day, a cat had strayed in and judging from the disturbed birds I figured it may
be after their nests. So, I shooed him away only to see him slink right under
the fence! Never mind, it helps to discourage bigger animals which can be more
troublesome.
All this brought to mind a passage in John 10 where Jesus
said, “I am the Gate”[i]. He too was concerned
about that which He was trying to protect – not gardens, flowers, and
vegetables, but His own flock of people who belong to Him. I’ve always loved
these verses as it shows the extent of Jesus’ love, compassion, and
protectiveness of His children.
“I tell you the
truth, I am the gate for the sheep. All who came before me were thieves and
robbers. But the true sheep did not listen to them. Yes, I am the gate. Those
who come in through Me will be saved. They will come and go freely and will
find good pastures. The thief’s purpose is to steal and kill and destroy. My
purpose is to give them a rich and satisfying life.” (NLT)
This is such a beautiful picture of how Jesus cares for
His children once they come to Him. He is the only way that leads us into a
personal relationship with God. In John 14:6 He said, “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life. No one comes to the Father
except through me.” I was reading another passage this week about this “gate”
we need to enter. Matthew 7:14 says, “But
small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find
it.” Once we believe that Jesus Christ is the only One who can provide the
gift of eternal life, we enter through Jesus, the Gate, into a life filled with
all the hope, blessings, security, peace, and lasting joy that He longs for us
to have.
A true shepherd not only is the one who can open the gate
for the sheep, but he/she knows every one of the sheep by name. “He calls his own sheep by name…his sheep
follow him because they know his voice. But they will never follow a stranger;
in fact, they will run away from him because they do not recognize a stranger’s
voice.”[ii]
What intimacy is portrayed here! Jesus knows me by my own name and
distinguishes me from every one of His other children! Likewise, I must learn
to know Him better each day so I will recognize His voice and follow it implicitly.
This only develops as I dig deeper into His Word, the Bible, and learn about
His character and how I can become more like Him.
Jesus also called Himself, “the Good Shepherd”[iii] and illustrates to what
lengths He will go to protect those who believe in Him. First of all, He was
willing to lay down His own life to secure our salvation. Then He protects his
children from the “wolves and thieves” who attempt to steal away believers in
Christ to some other belief system or lead them on paths that would cause their
relationship with Jesus to be weakened or even destroyed. Our responsibility is
to stay close to the Shepherd, listen to His voice, obey what He teaches us,
and become wise to those who would distort the truth of God’s Word and deceive
us.
Until next Sunday,
Kathy
Beautiful scriptures, beautifully recounted. I missed church today so I am especially thankful for your message.
ReplyDeleteBlessings,
Lynn
Thanks, Lynn! Your words have encouraged me today.
ReplyDeleteKathy, What a BEAUTIFUL post. I can't read John 10 without getting very tearry! What a great Good Shepherd we have... and you lifted Him up with your wonderful words!!!
ReplyDeleteJust for you for your girls luncheon:
the parmesan peppercorn dressing... it is fabulous!!! Enjoy!
https://sites.google.com/site/stonegableprintablerecipes/parmesan-peppercorn-dressing-from-stonegable
I am impressed that you did that yourself and love the comparison to God being the gate. Stopped by through Spiritual Sundays...many blessings to you
ReplyDeleteThis really makes the case for staying close to the Shepherd. Good job fixing the latch on the gate.
ReplyDeleteBlessings,
Charlotte