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4th SUNDAY OF EASTER

Please note the link that the Revised Common Lectionary committee makes in this week’s textual arrangement. Psalm 23-one of several appearances that it will make throughout the three year cycle-helps us overhear a similar passage on the other side of the aisle-John 10. The epistle lesson is also connected to John 10 in the motif of laying down one’s life for others. In at the intersection of these three lessons we may gain new insight into shepherds, sheep and sacrifice. The lesson in Acts 4 moves us forward in Luke’s theme, Church in the Power of the Spirit, (to borrow Moltmann’s famous title).

Acts 4:5-12-The Reckoning

Today’s lesson continues the story of the lame man who is healed "in the name of Jesus" followed by Peter’s proclamation of the gospel (chp. 3). Luke informs us of an overwhelming response as "many of those who had heard the message became believers" (4:4). Now the reckoning. Peter and John spend a night in the cooler while the Jewish rulers, elders, and scribes convene the next day. Peter’s defense before this august group of the healing and the precise power that effected the cure is unmistakably clear: it is "by the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom you crucified and whom God raised from the dead; through him this man stands here before you fit and well" (v 10). Peter’s words also include the well-known and often-quoted, "messianic" Psalm 118:22.

Psalm 23-Shepherds and Sheep

Should the proclaimer choose to shape the homily around Psalm 23, John 10, or both, then Psalm 23 would be an excellent liturgical resource. Try reading this passage in some of the newer translations or paraphrases just to knock any barnacles of familiarity off from this familiar psalm. God as Shepherd of Israel (in the tradition of kings as shepherds) and later, Jesus as shepherd, seeks to protect, provide, nourish, lead, restore, and guide those who follow.

1 John 3:16-24-Child of God, Servant of All

Last week we read much about the phenomenon of being called "children of God" (3:2-3) and the moral implications such a generous name or title inspires. With this week’s lesson, the writer moves in an ethical direction to describe precisely what being a child of God looks like and what it doesn’t look like. Incongruities emerge from lifestyles-however pious-when our titles don’t match our actions, as this lesson will demonstrate. We are called not to a vacuous "love" but to concrete action and the attitude of inconveniencing ourselves on the behalf of others.

John 10:11-18-The Good Shepherd

The image of God, who is often spoken of in shepherd language, is transferred to Jesus who models the ideal of a good shepherd (especially vis-à-vis bad shepherds, cf. Ezekiel 34!) We also see the resurrection motif in the words lay down, receive it back, and right, that fits well with our passage in first John 3 for this fourth Sunday in Easter.