Sunday, April 29, 2012

The Good Babysitter

Sermon preached at St. Augustine's Episcopal Parish, Easter 4, 29 April 2012



This Sunday, the 4th Sunday of Easter, is known as “Good Shepherd Sunday” due to the Gospel reading, which is always taken from John chapter 10.  Our lectionary has also included the beloved and pastoral Psalm 23, the most familiar of all the Psalms, with its idyllic opening verse, “The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not be in want.”

Its language is so familiar, in fact, that I wonder if many of us have stopped to really consider what it means for the text to call the LORD “my shepherd”.  What is the job of a shepherd anyway?  What sort of person was and is still a shepherd in the Middle East?  What is the social and economic status of a shepherd in the culture?  For what is a shepherd responsible, and to whom does a shepherd answer?

As I’ve considered these questions, my mind was drawn to seek out what is our own culture’s closest parallel to the job of a shepherd in the Middle East.  And I’d like to read to you what I think Psalm 23 might sound like if it was written for our 21st century American culture.

The LORD is my babysitter;
            I shall not be in want.
She makes me lie down in my pajamas
            and brings me a cool glass of water.
She awakens my imagination
            by sharing with me her cherished family stories.
Yea, though my light is off, and the house creaks,
I shall fear no evil;
            your first aid certification and cordless phone, they comfort me.
You welcome me into your house and feed me a snack
when bullies chase me home from school;
            my glass of milk is bottomless.
Surely your goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life,
            and I will live with the memory of your loving care for ever.

Does this sound sacrilegious, too trivial or mundane, disrespectful, even, to call the LORD, the God of the universe, a babysitter?

Let’s consider together how a babysitter in our culture is similar to a shepherd in the Middle East. 

First, they are both jobs for adolescent youth not typically done by adults. 

Second, they are both jobs that give a first taste of independence and responsibility to a young person. 

Third, neither job is highly regarded by the dominant culture.  If I were to say, “The mayor acts like a babysitter at the capital,” you don’t hear, “The mayor is doing a splendid job!”  Similarly, if we look at the story of David’s anointing in 1 Samuel 16, Jesse parades all of his older sons in front of the prophet, and doesn’t even think to call David in from keeping the sheep.  All he’s good for is being a shepherd, after all.  I imagine college and high school athlete brothers meeting a professional scout who has come to visit while their 12 year-old brother is down the street babysitting the neighbor’s kids.

Fourth, children and sheep are both enormously valuable to their families, and both are utterly helpless to care for themselves, especially if something goes wrong.

So when the Psalm calls the LORD, “my shepherd,” and when Christ calls himself “The Good Shepherd,” we are not being given an image that jibes with the cultural ideal of power and influence.  Rather, the Supreme Divine Reality is brought into the domestic realm and sent out to do the job that is beneath anyone who has any societal power or status.

And God in Christ, rather than taking this job half-heartedly, as a stepping stone to bigger and better things, does the work with the utmost dedication and concern for the helpless and needy sheep.

The beginning of John 10, before today’s Gospel, speaks about a sheepfold, a gate, about listening to the shepherd’s voice, and about being led out to pasture.  Now, if you’re picturing the British Isles and fields of tall, green grass, you’re in the wrong place.  A sheepfold to a young Bedouin shepherd in the Middle East amounts to a small cave into which the two dozen or so sheep would be led as the sun set.  Stones would be piled up at the entrance to the cave, and over the only opening, the “gate”, the shepherd would gather some loose rocks and some dry thorn bushes.  Then, the shepherd would sleep in front of the gate, outside of the cave, as a guard. 

So when your little 12 year-old self hears the howling and sees a wolf coming towards the sheepfold in the middle of the night, and all you have is your rod, a short stick you use to count the sheep, your staff, a longer stick with a crook you use to direct the sheep, and a sling shot, this where the difference between the Good Shepherd and the hired hand really matters.  This is where we see what Jesus means when he says that the good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.

When the text speaks of the shepherd leading the sheep out to find pasture, again, this is not the Irish countryside, but the Middle Eastern desert.  And in the desert leading sheep to food involves the shepherd knowing where to look for the little tufts of grass that spring up along the rocky hillsides each morning.  Sheep will not find their own food in the desert.  They must be led or they will wander aimlessly and die from starvation or a predator.

What does it say about us for the LORD to be our shepherd, for Christ to be our Good Shepherd, or for that matter, our Good Babysitter?

For starters, it says that we are of the enormous value.

It says that we are helpless.  We might think we can take care of ourselves, just look at my 4 year-old son, but we can’t.

It says that we are protected and guarded by someone who will bear any cost to keep us safe.

It says that we are guided and led to find the sustenance we need for each day.

It says that we are intimately known.

And it says that we recognize the voice of our beloved shepherd, our beloved babysitter, when we hear it.

Living into this Reality is the work of a lifetime: to humble yourself enough to listen for guidance, to learn how to recognize the Voice that calls you by name, to follow on the path that the Voice leads you, and to trust your experience of the Divine Presence who does not remain enthroned somewhere far off, but who comes close enough to know your every need, to calm your every fear, and who will lay down his own life to defend you from harm.

Amen.

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