The
Remnant of Israel Shall be led to Pasture
I am the Good Shepherd. Surely it is fitting that
Christ should be a shepherd, for just as a flock is guided and fed by a
shepherd so the faithful are fed by Christ with spiritual food and with his own
body and blood. The Apostle said: You were once like sheep without a shepherd,
but now you have returned to the guardian and ruler of your souls. The prophet
has said: As a shepherd he pastures his flock.
Christ said that the shepherd enters through the gate
and that he is himself the gate as well as the shepherd. Then it is necessary
that he enter through himself. By so doing, he reveals himself, and through
himself he knows the Father. But we enter through him because through him we
find happiness.
Take heed: no one else is the gate but Christ. Others
reflect his light, but no one else is the true light. John the Baptist was not
the light, but he bore witness to the light. It is said of Christ, however: He
was the true light that enlightens every man. For this reason no one says that
he is the gate; this title is Christ’s own. However, he has made others
shepherds and given that office to his members; for Peter was a shepherd, and
so were the other apostles and all good bishops after them. Scripture says: I
shall give you shepherds according to my own heart. Although the bishops of the
Church, who are her sons, are all shepherds, nevertheless Christ refers only to
one person in saying: I am the Good Shepherd, because he wants to emphasise the
virtue of charity. Thus, no one can be a good shepherd unless he is one with
Christ in charity. Through this we become members of the true shepherd.
The duty of a good shepherd is charity; therefore
Christ said: The good shepherd gives his life for his sheep. Know the
difference between a good and a bad shepherd: the good shepherd cares for the
welfare of his flock, but the bad shepherd cares only for his own welfare.
The Good Shepherd does not demand that shepherds lay
down their lives for a real flock of sheep. But every spiritual shepherd must
endure the loss of his bodily life for the salvation of the flock, since the
spiritual good of the flock is more important than the bodily life of the
shepherd, when danger threatens the salvation of the flock. This is why the
Lord says: The good shepherd lays down his life, that is, his physical life,
for his sheep; this he does because of his authority and love. Both, in fact,
are required: that they should be ruled by him, and that he should love them.
The first without the second is not enough.
Christ stands out for us as the example of this
teaching: If Christ laid down his life for us, so we also ought to lay down our
lives for our brothers.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From an exposition on John, by Saint Thomas Aquinas
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