Summary: "I AM the good shepherd. The good shepherd gives His life for the sheep" (John 10:11).

JESUS THE GOOD SHEPHERD.

John 10:11-16.

In John 10 Jesus effectively castigated the Pharisees for their failures as the spiritual shepherds of Israel. The image was familiar in a pastoral society, and echoed the Old Testament (e.g. Jeremiah 23:1-4).

JOHN 10:11. In the fourth “I am” saying of John’s Gospel, Jesus appears as the Good Shepherd who lays down His life for the sheep. The teaching of Jesus is that He is THE Good Shepherd who seeks out the lost sheep, and dies for His flock. As the promised Messiah, ‘His soul is made an offering for sin’ (cf. Isaiah 53:10).

JOHN 10:12-13. This is in contrast to those who are not shepherds at all, but merely hired helps. The Pharisees, whatever they imagined their pedigree to be, were like the kind of careless hired helps to whom Jesus is referring. Under their watch, for example, the Lord observed their charges to be ‘like sheep without a shepherd’ (cf. Matthew 9:36).

JOHN 10:14. Jesus repeats, “I AM the Good Shepherd.” The Good Shepherd knows His sheep, and is known by them. He knows our ‘going out, and our coming in’ (cf. Psalm 121:8). He cares for His flock, and actually came into this world to lay down His life for His people. Thus He is made known to His sheep.

JOHN 10:15. The mutual knowledge of Christ and His people is modelled upon His relationship with the Father. The self-sacrifice of Jesus is rooted in His relationship with the Father. The Good Shepherd laid down His life for those whom He calls out of darkness into everlasting light.

JOHN 10:16. Jesus is the Shepherd of Israel (cf. Psalm 80:1), but His flock includes those out of every nation, throughout all of time, who respond to His call. He is calling us by name, and we hear His voice. We are one flock, under one Shepherd.