Georgetown Presbyterian Church John 10:11-18 April 22, 2018

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Christopher Chatelaine-Samsen A Better Hired Hand Georgetown Presbyterian Church John 10:11-18 April 22, 2018 In my memory, I m home from college at my parents house, and I m sitting in the kitchen looking at a plumbing diagram. Opposite of the table from me is my grandfather, wearing a paint-splattered work jumpsuit, explaining to me the way in which he s going to reroute the plumbing to fix the radiators that keep getting air sucked into the system. About half-way through the diagram with its twists and turns, I go from nodding in understanding to nodding as a mere assent to hearing words I no longer understand. Without a college degree to his name, he was far more advanced than I with creative solutions to practical problems. My grandfather, in an almost stereotypical way, embodied a particular version of the American working class ethic. He was born, raised, and raised his own children in the South Bronx, moving only a few blocks from his childhood home. After the army, he got a job with National Cash Register, training in their company trade school, and then spending his entire career fixing the sort of mechanical cash registers that you can see in museums now, and eventually owning his own small business. By the time that I knew him, he was retired and using his mechanical prowess for mostly anything else he could get his hands on. He learned to fix tractors on my uncle s farm. He built an entire barn himself, only getting family and friends together for an oldfashioned barn raising. He had learned wiring and plumbing and would come over to my parents house to fix all matters of homeowner problems. When he was too ill in later years to do things himself, he learned computers and spent months digitally archiving family photos. He was the consummate do-it-yourself-er and had the skills and experience to back it up. Why would you hire out for work you can do just as well by yourself, and for a whole lot less, he might ask. I wonder if Jesus felt that same sort of frustration with hiring out for work when he told the parable of the good shepherd. In it, he refers to himself as the good shepherd, and then he refers to these hired hands, those who are supposed to be working at his behest, but as soon as difficulty arises, they cut and run. Often in the parable of the good shepherd, we focus on who the shepherd is, or even perhaps who the sheep are. I want to pause for a moment and take a look at these hired hands Jesus refers to. The image of the shepherd is a rich one throughout the Bible, and when Jesus uses it here, he is standing on thousands of years of Hebrew tradition around shepherding. The

great king David was a shepherd boy who grew to care for his people as a flock. The beloved Psalm 23 tells us that the Lord is indeed our shepherd. Shepherds on the nightwatch attended to the birth of Jesus himself. For Jesus to claim he is the good shepherd is to claim that he is the one who truly cares for Israel, and indeed for all people. He juxtaposes the shepherd with the hired hands, those who are appointed and paid by the shepherd to do the work of attending to the livestock in the chief shepherd s absence. This is, unsurprisingly, a real role in Middle Eastern agrarian life, and may have even been a person who was charged to care for the sheep of multiple families in the village. For the owners, the sheep were almost family members, coming in to the family home at night. For the hired hand, though, it was just a day job. In the parable, these hired hands are evidently poor stewards of the work of the shepherd. They evidently are bound to abandon the sheep once trouble comes. Now, to be sure, it s just a parable. If this was a routine way that hired hands acted in Jesus time, surely nobody would continue to hire out help! But just as surely, anybody who d ever hired out for sheep tending would have known stories about a bad hired hand. Often when we read this parable, we read it as a word of comfort and guidance for the sheep. Sheep don t follow the hired hands that are going to lead you astray. Listen to me, the good shepherd I won t abandon you in hard times. That s wise counsel, but I don t think it s the central point of the story. I think the hired hands are the point, and here s why. At the end of the passage, beyond our reading today, we find out who the audience is. It s not Jesus disciples, first and foremost. It s the temple leaders, the religious authorities. And when they hear this parable, they don t find themselves comforted, but angry. Why angry? They knew, beyond a doubt, that this parable was for them, and that they were neither the good shepherds, nor the sheep. They were the hired hands, the faithless stewards who would rather abandon the sheep to the wolf rather than face the danger themselves. They were the ones who would save their own hides, rather than stand up against the powerful. In their context, as the leaders of Israel under Roman occupation, they understood what Jesus was getting at. They were responsible for caring for the people of Israel, but they had forsaken that care to appease a foreign government, ensuring their own power and safety, and leaving their people to fend for themselves. They re angry, and they re scared. They almost immediately begin to plot, to arrest, and then eventually kill Jesus. He s put them on notice for their hypocrisy, and they suspect that he s opened the people s eyes to the ways in which they d been betrayed by the very people who were appointed for their care.

This story isn t a word of comfort, but a warning. The boss has returned, and has found the hired hands to be wanting. I must confess that, upon reading the parable this way, and not as simply a word of comfort to the people, I find it distressing. As it stands today, in this context, I m more hired hand than sheep. Jesus spends a lot of time lambasting the religious authorities, and I m exactly that a religious authority. We have good reason to be suspicious of religious authorities, and not just because Jesus tells us to be wary. There is a long history of religious figures using their power and charm to start war, to build enmity between people, and to line their own pockets from those of the poor. For example, the United States has been in the heyday of the prosperity gospel movement for decades now, a teaching that claims that God wants to bless us with financial prosperity and unlimited good health, and that seems to require endless donations to fund mansions, private jets and expensive suits. Religious authorities have a strong record of being bad hired hands. Jesus understands this problem and is telling the people, us included, that being a caretaker, a steward of another person, is serious business, and it can go seriously wrong. And there s something especially egregious, a deep sort of betrayal, when somebody who is called to care for others in fact does the opposite. Jesus calls out the religious authorities, and that s apt. Twisting religion for personal gain is a favorite human pastime it was then, and it is now. But I would go further - see, each of us are without a doubt caretakers somewhere. Parents, teachers, leaders in government and business frankly, whatever we do, wherever we do it, we are each a hired hand, ones who have been appointed as a steward, caring for others on behalf of our God who is both our creator and their creator. We have a special word in churches for this role, this idea that we are in fact our sister s and brother s keeper. We are ministers. You, me, everybody here. If we call ourselves followers of Jesus, then we are ministers, because we are caretakers of one another, especially those who are most vulnerable. We are responsible not only for ourselves, and not even primarily for ourselves, but first for our fellow human beings. Our actions are not simply for ourselves, but for the sake of others. Though we are often sheep, for certain, we are also each surely the hired hands, and Jesus word of warning is for us as well. We should all be a little uneasy at this parable.

We should all wonder about our own stewardship how have we been with that which has been entrusted to us? Jesus pulls no punches he paints a picture of the hired hand as faithless. The hired hand is not to be trusted, but of course, it s a parable. He s making a point. But it doesn t need to be that way. The hired hand isn t an inevitably flawed person. There is a better hired hand. This is a moment where I feel some of us might be a little lacking in agricultural imagination, myself included, but I d like you to imagine for a moment that you re actually a hired hand in charge of a herd of sheep. Not metaphorically actually. And you ve been charged by the head shepherd with caring for the sheep in his absence. And a predator shows up. What is it that motivates you to take your staff and defend the sheep, putting yourself at risk? Given a great enough struggle, few financial incentives would keep you, nor would even fear of reprisal. No, I imagine only one thing would keep you there. There s only one force strong enough to result in true selflessness. Love. Love for the sheep, and love for the shepherd. What else could keep the hired hand at the side of the sheep? What else could keep you there when you know you could leave it behind? What other force could drive you to give of yourself knowing there is nothing to be had in return? How else could you give your all? Every other quality you need at those moments discipline, selflessness, commitment they all come from love. And this talk of loving others and loving God all in the same breath? You ve heard it before. It s the greatest commandment to love your God, and to love your neighbor as yourself. Everything else follows. Although we typically identify as the sheep, we are often the hired hands, God s ministers, each of us, acting in the world each and every moment on behalf of our Lord. That s a lot of pressure. But Jesus tells this parable to the temple leaders to call out a particularly egregious betrayal of trust. For us, it s perhaps a little more complicated in the day-to-day, particularly when we try in earnest, and on occasion fail. So perhaps as opposed to having to choose this story as comfort or as challenge it can be both. It is a word of comfort to those who might be led astray, and a challenge to

those who might lead astray. And in our inevitable human error, it is also a word of grace. In our failures and our triumphs, in both our shrinking away and our standing upright, there remains a truly Good Shepherd who seeks the lost sheep and welcomes in and sets straight even the lost hired hands. The Good Shepherd will care for those in our care even when we have fallen short, and the Good Shepherd will care for us and welcome us back. Jesus is shepherd to the sheep and the hired hands alike, and thanks be to God for that. Amen.