THE LORD IS MY
SHEPHERD? - Walter Brueggemann can preach a full sermon just on the first phrase of Psalm
23: The Lord is my shepherd!"
The very first word is
"The Lord" or, better, "Yahweh." The first word in Lent is the
peculiar name of the God of Israel, the one who makes heaven and earth, and who liberates
and heals and commands . . . Yahweh is my shepherd. To think shepherd might suggest an
idyllic pastoral scene. In fact, however, the term shepherd is political in the Bible. It
means king, sovereign, lord, authority, the one who directs, to whom I am answerable, whom
I trust and serve. In this simple opening line, the psalm is clear about the goal and
focus, the center and purpose of life: Yahweh and no other. There is no rival loyalty, no
competing claim-not economic or political, not liberal or conservative, not sexist or
racist, nor any of the other petty loyalties that seduce us. It is a mark of discernment
and maturity to strip life down to one compelling loyalty, to be freed of all the others
that turn out to be idolatrous. [1]
THE LORD . . . YOU . . . - Structurally, the psalm begins with a declarative
statement: "The Lord is my shepherd . . ." followed by life-sustaining actions
of God as Shepherd. Then the writer shifts in perspective from the third person singular
("he," "she") to second person ("You"). ". . . you are
with me, your rod and staff . . . You prepare a table before me . . . You anoint my head .
. ." The Psalm concludes with a statement of trust based on what has preceded:
"Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life . . ."
Because this beautiful, comfortable psalm is familiar, it rushes past most of
us unturned. Read it again, this time, savoring the words-listening for what the psalm
speaks to you at this moment in your life. Listen for a word or phrase that might speak to
you.
When has God rescued or protected you with the "rod and staff?" What green
pastures and still waters has God brought you to?
First, check for the homilies that we
already have archived on DPS-perhaps that will provide some useful ideas for preaching.
Focus on the Shepherd in Psalm 23 as your controlling metaphor; but move through into
the gospel lesson with the metaphor and suggest ways that Jesus is like that Psalmist
vision of Shepherd. Move then to the Acts lesson, that suggests that the Shepherd is back
from the valley of the shadow of death and continues to lead his sheep forward through the
generations into the full purpose of God.
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[1] The Threat of Life: (Augsburg Fortress, 1996), pp. 91-92.
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