Chapter 4
The Lord Our Shepherd
“The Lord is my shepherd, I
shall not want.”
Perhaps no aspect in which the Lord reveals Himself to
us is fuller of genuine comfort than the aspect set forth in the Twenty-third
Psalm, and in its corresponding passage in the tenth chapter of John.
The psalmist tells me that the Lord is my Shepherd, and
the Lord Himself declares that He is the good Shepherd. Can we conceive
of anything more comforting?
It is a very wonderful thing that the highest and
grandest truths of the religion of the Lord Jesus Christ are so often shut up in
the simplest and commonest texts in the Bible. Those texts with which we have
been familiar from our childhood, which we learned in the nursery at our
mother’s knee, which were used by those who loved us to explain in the simplest
possible way the love of our heavenly Father, and the reasons for our trusting
Him—these very texts, I have discovered, contain in their simple statements the
whole story.
I feel, therefore, that what we all need is just to get
back into the nursery again, and take up our childish verses once more, and,
while reading them with the intelligence of our grown-up years, to believe them
with all our old childish faith.
Let me carry you back then with me, my dear reader, to
the children’s psalm, that one which is so universally taught to the little ones
in the nursery and in the infant school. Do we not each one of us remember the
Twenty-third Psalm, as long as we can remember anything, and can we not recall
even now something of the joy and pride of our childish hearts when first we
were able to repeat it without mistake? Since then we have always known it, and
at this moment its words, perhaps, sound so old and familiar to some of you,
that you cannot see what meaning they can convey.
But in truth they tell us the whole story of our religion
in words of such wondrous depth of meaning that I very much doubt whether it has
ever yet entered into the heart of any mortal man to conceive of the things they
reveal.
Repeat these familiar words over to yourselves afresh:
“The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.”
Who is it that is your shepherd?
The Lord! Oh, my friends, what a wonderful announcement!
The Lord God of Heaven and earth, the Almighty Creator of all things, He who
holds the universe in His hand as though it were a very little thing, He is your
Shepherd, and has charged Himself with the care and keeping of you, as a
shepherd is charged with the care and keeping of his sheep.
If your hearts will only take in this thought, I can
promise you that your religion will from henceforth be full of the profoundest
comfort, and all your old uncomfortable religion will drop off forever, as the
mist disappears in the blaze of the summer sun.
I had a vivid experience of this at one time in my
Christian life. The Twenty-third Psalm had, of course, always been familiar to
me from my nursery days, but it had never seemed to have any special meaning.
Then came a critical moment in my life when I was sadly in need of comfort, but
could see none anywhere. I could not at the moment lay my hands on my Bible, and
I cast about in my mind for some passage of Scripture that would help me.
Immediately there flashed into my mind the words, “The Lord is my shepherd, I
shall not want.” At first I turned from it almost with scorn. “Such a common
text as that,” I said to myself, “is not likely to do me any good”; and I tried
hard to think of a more recherché one, but none would come; and at last
it almost seemed as if there were no other text in the whole Bible. And finally
I was reduced to saying “Well, if I cannot think of any other text, I must try
to get what little good I can out of this one,” and I began to repeat to myself
over and over, “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.” Suddenly, as I did
so, the words were divinely illuminated, and there poured out upon me such
floods of comfort that I felt as if I could never have a trouble again.
The moment I could get hold of a Bible I turned over its
leaves with eagerness to see whether it could possibly be true that such untold
treasures of comfort were really and actually mine, and whether I might dare to
let out my heart into the full enjoyment of them. And I did what I have often
found great profit in doing, I built up a pyramid of declarations and promises
concerning the Lord being our Shepherd that, once built, presented an immovable
and indestructible front to all the winds and storms of doubt or trial that
could assail it. And I became convinced, beyond a shadow of doubt, that the Lord
really was my Shepherd, and that in giving Himself this name He assumed the
duties belonging to the name, and really would be, what He declares Himself to
be, a “good shepherd who giveth his life for his sheep.”
He Himself draws the contrast between a good shepherd
and a bad shepherd, when He follows up His announcement “I am the good
shepherd,” with the words, “But he that is an hireling and not the shepherd,
whose own the sheep are not, seeth the wolf coming and leaveth the sheep and
fleeth; and the wolf catcheth them and scattereth the sheep.” And through the
mouth of His prophets the Lord pours down a scathing condemnation upon all such
faithless shepherds. “And the Lord saith unto me,” says the prophet Zechariah,
“take unto thee yet the instruments of a foolish shepherd....Woe to the idle
shepherd that leaveth the flock! The sword shall be upon his arm, and upon his
right eye; his arm shall be clean dried up, and his right eye shall be utterly
darkened.”
Again the prophet Ezekiel says: “Thus saith the Lord God
unto the shepherds: Woe be to the shepherds of Israel that do feed themselves!
Should not the shepherds feed the flocks? ... The diseased have ye not
strengthened, neither have ye healed that which was sick, neither have ye bound
up that which was broken, neither have ye brought back that which was driven
away, neither have ye sought that which was lost; but with force and with
cruelty have ye ruled them ... Therefore, O ye shepherds, hear the word of the
Lord: Thus saith the Lord God, Behold I am against the shepherds, and I will
require my flock at their hand, and cause them to cease from feeding the
flock.”
Surely one would think that no Christian could ever
accuse our divine Shepherd of being as faithless and unkind as those He thus
condemns. And yet, if the secrets of some Christian hearts should be revealed, I
fear that it would be found that, although they do not put it into words, and
perhaps hardly know themselves that such are their feelings about Him, yet at
the bottom they do really look upon Him as a faithless Shepherd.
What else can it mean when Christians complain that the
Lord has forsaken them; that they cry to Him for spiritual food and He does not
hear; that they are beset by enemies on every side and He does not deliver them;
that when their souls find themselves in dark places He does not come to their
rescue; that when they are weak He does not strengthen them; and when they are
spiritually sick He does not heal them?
What are all these doubts and discouragements but secret
accusations against our good Shepherds of the very things which He Himself so
scathingly condemns?
A dear Christian, who had just discovered what it meant
to have known that that was what He was called, but it meant nothing to me; and
I believe I read the Twenty-third Psalm as though it was written, ‘The Lord is
the sheep, and I am the shepherd, and, if I do not keep a tight hold on Him, He
will run away.’ When dark days came I never for a moment thought that He would
stick by me, and when my soul was starving and cried out for food, I never
dreamed He would feed me. I see now that I never looked upon Him as a faithful
Shepherd at all. But now all is different. I myself am not one bit better or
stronger, but I have discovered that I have a good Shepherd, and that is all I
need. I see now that it really is true that the Lord is my Shepherd, and that I
shall not want.”
Dear fellow Christian, I pray you to look this matter
fairly in the face. Are you like the Christian I have quoted above? You have
said, I know, hundreds of times, “The Lord is my shepherd,” but have you ever
really believed it to be an actual fact? Have you felt safe and happy and free
from care, as a sheep must feel when under the care of a good shepherd, or have
you felt yourself to be like a poor forlorn sheep without a shepherd, or with an
unfaithful, inefficient shepherd, who does not supply your needs, and who leaves
you in times of danger and darkness?
I beg of you to answer this question honestly in your
own soul. Have you had a comfortable religious life or an uncomfortable one? If
the latter has been your condition, how can you reconcile it with the statement
that the Lord is your Shepherd, and therefore you shall not want? You say He is
your Shepherd, and yet you complain that you do want. Who has made the mistake?
You or the Lord?
But here, perhaps, you will meet me with the words, “Oh,
no, I do not blame the Lord, but I am so weak and so foolish, and so ignorant,
that I am not worthy of His care.” But do you not know that sheep are always
weak, and helpless, and silly; and that the very reason they are compelled to
have a shepherd to care for them is just because they are so unable to take care
of themselves? Their welfare and their safety, therefore, do not in the least
depend upon their own strength, nor upon their own wisdom, nor upon anything in
themselves, but wholly and entirely upon the care of their shepherd. And, if you
are a sheep, your self also must depend altogether upon your Shepherd, and not
at all upon yourself.
Let us imagine two flocks of sheep meeting at the end of
the winter to compare their experiences—one flock fat and strong and in good
condition, and the other poor and lean and diseased. Will the healthy flock
boast of themselves, and say, “See what splendid care we have taken of
ourselves, what good, strong, wise sheep we must be?” Surely not. Their boasting
would all be about their shepherd. “See what a good shepherd we have had,” they
would say, “and how he has cared for us. Through all the storms of the winter he
has protected us, and has defended us from every wild beast, and has always
provided us with the best of food.”
Or, on the other hand, would the poor, wretched,
diseased sheep blame themselves and say, “Alas, what wicked sheep we must be, to
be in such a poor condition!” No, they too would speak only of their shepherd,
but how different would be their story! “Alas,” they would say, “our shepherd
was very different from yours! He fed himself, but he did not feed us. He did
not strengthen us when we were weak, nor heal us when we were sick, nor bind us
up when we were broken nor look for us when we were lost. It is true he stayed
by us in clear and pleasant weather, when no enemies were nigh, but in times of
danger or of storm, he forsook us and fled. Oh, that we had had a good shepherd
like yours!”
We all understand this responsibility of the shepherd in
the case of sheep; but the moment we transfer the figure to our religion, we at
once shift all the responsibility off the Shepherd’s shoulders, and lay it upon
the sheep; and demand of the poor human sheep the wisdom, and care, and power to
provide, that can only belong to the divine Shepherd and be met by Him; and of
course the poor human sheep fail, and their religious lives become thoroughly
uncomfortable, and even sometimes most miserable.
I freely confess there is a difference between sheep and
ourselves in this, that they have neither the intelligence nor the power to
withdraw themselves from the care of their shepherd, while we have. We cannot
imagine one of them saying, “Oh, yes, we have a good shepherd who says he will
take care of us, but then we do not feel worthy of his care, and therefore we
are afraid to trust him. He says he has provided for us green pastures and a
safe and comfortable fold; but we are such poor good-for-nothing creatures that
we have not dared to enter his fold, nor feed in this pastures. We have felt it
would be presumption; and, in our humility, we have been trying to do the best
we could for ourselves. The strong, healthy sheep may trust themselves to the
shepherd’s care, but not such miserable half-starved sheep as we are. It is true
we have had a very hard time of it, and are in a sad and forlorn condition; but
then we are such poor unworthy creatures that we must expect this, and must try
to be resigned to it.”
Silly as sheep are, we know well no sheep could be so
silly as to talk in this way. And here comes the difference. We are so much
wiser than sheep, in our own estimation, that we think the sort of trust sheep
exercise will not do for us; and, in our superior intelligence, we presume to
take matters into our own hands, and so shut ourselves out from the Shepherd’s
care.
Now the fact is simply this, if any sheep in the flock
of Christ find themselves in a poor condition, there are only two explanations
possible. Either the Lord is not a good Shepherd and does not care for His
sheep, or else, His sheep have not believed in His care, and have been afraid or
ashamed to trust themselves to it. I know not one of you will dare to say, or
even to think, that the Lord can be anything but a good Shepherd, if He is a
Shepherd at all. The fault, therefore, must lie just here; either you have not
believed He was your Shepherd at all, or else, believing it, you have refused to
let Him take care of you.
I entreat you to face this matter boldly, and give
yourselves a definite answer. For not only your own welfare and comfort are
dependent upon your right apprehension of this blessed relationship, but also
the glory of your Shepherd is at stake. Have you ever thought of the grief and
dishonor this sad condition of yours brings upon Him? The credit of a shepherd
depends upon the condition of his flock. He might make a great boast of his
qualifications as a shepherd, but it would all go for nothing if the flocks he
had charge of were in a diseased condition, with many missing, and many with
lean ribs and broken bones.
If an owner of sheep is thinking of employing a
shepherd, he requires a reference from the shepherd’s last employer, that he may
learn from him how his flock fared under this shepherd’s care. Now, the Lord
makes statements about Himself as a good Shepherd. He is telling the universe,
the world, and the Church, “I am the good shepherd”; and if they ask, “Where are
Thy sheep, what condition are they in?” can He point to us as being a credit to
His care? And is it not grievous if any of us refuse to let the Shepherd take
care of us, and so bring discredit upon His name by our forlorn condition? The
universe is looking on to see what the Lord Jesus Christ is able to make of us,
and what kind of sheep we are, whether we are well fed, and healthy, and happy.
Their verdict concerning Him will largely depend upon what they see in us.
When Paul was writing to the Ephesians that he had been
called to preach to the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ, and to make
all men see what was the fellowship of the mystery which had been hid in God
from the beginning of the world, he added the significant words that the object
of it all was “to the intent that now unto principalities and powers in heavenly
places might be known by the church the manifold wisdom of God, according to the
eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
Well may we be lost in amazement at the thought that God
has purposed such a glorious destiny for His sheep as to make known to the
universe His “manifold wisdom” by means of what He has done for us! Surely this
should make us eager to abandon ourselves to Him in the most generous trust for
salvation to the very uttermost, that He may get great glory in the universe,
and the whole world may be won to trust Him.
But if we will not let Him save us, if we reject His
care, and refuse to feed in His pastures, or to lie down in His fold, then we
shall be a starved and shivering flock, sick, and wretched, and full of
complaints, bringing dishonor upon Him, and, by our forlorn condition, hindering
the world from coming to Him.
I do not wonder that unbelievers are not drawn into the
church, when I contemplate the condition of believers. I do not wonder that in
some churches there are no conversions from one end of the year to the other. If
I were a poor sheep, wandering in the wilderness, and I were to see some poor,
wretched, sick-looking sheep peeping out of a fold, and calling me to come in,
and I were to look into the fold, and should see it hard, bare, and
uncomfortable, I do not think I would be much tempted to go into such a
fold.
Somebody said once that some churches were too much like
well-ordered graveyards: people were brought in and buried, and that was the end
of it. Of course you cannot expect living people to want to take up their abodes
in graveyards. We must have a fold that shows sheep in good condition if we
expect outsiders to come into that fold; and if we want to attract others to the
salvation of the Lord Jesus Christ, we must ourselves be able to show them that
it is a satisfying and comfortable salvation. No one wants to add to their
earthy discomforts by getting an uncomfortable religion, and it is useless to
expect to win outsiders by the sight of our wretchedness.
Surely, if you do not care for yourselves, you cannot
fail to care for the dishonor you bring upon your divine Shepherd by your poor
and wretched condition. You long to serve Him, and to bring Him glory; and you
can do it if you will but show to all the world that He is a Shepherd whom it is
safe to trust.
Let me help you to do this. First face the fact of what
a Shepherd must necessarily be and do in order to be a good Shepherd, and then
face the fact that the Lord is really, and in the very highest sense of the
term, a good Shepherd. Then say the words over to yourself with all the will
power you can muster, “The Lord is my Shepherd. He is. He is. No matter what I
feel, He says He is, and He is. I am going to believe it, come what may.” Then
repeat the words with a different emphasis each time:
The Lord is my Shepherd.
The Lord is my Shepherd.
The Lord is my Shepherd.
The Lord is my Shepherd.
Realize to yourself what your ideal Shepherd would be,
all that you would require from anyone filling such a position of trust and of
responsibility, and then know that an ideal far beyond yours, and a conception
of the duties of such a position higher than any you ever dreamed of, were in
the mind of our Lord when He said, “I am the good shepherd.” He, better than any
other, knew the sheep He had undertaken to save, and He knew the Shepherd’s
duties. He knew that the Shepherd is responsible for His flock, and that He is
bound, at any loss of comfort, or of health, or even of life itself, to care for
them and to bring them all home safely to the Master’s fold. Therefore, He said:
“And this is the Father’s will which hath sent me that of all which he hath
given me I should lose nothing, but should raise it up again at the last day.”
And again He said, “The good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep.” And still
again: “My sheep hear my voice, and I know them and they follow me, and I give
unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck
them out of my hand.”
Centuries before Jesus came to be the Shepherd, the
Father said: “Therefore I will save my flock. And I will set up one shepherd
over them, and he shall feed them, even my servant David; he shall feed them,
and he shall be their shepherd.” And it seems to me, I catch a glimpse of the
Father’s yearning love as I read these words; and I feel sure He laid help upon
One who is mighty; and that none, therefore, who are in this flock need fear any
evil.
He has undertaken His duties, knowing perfectly well
what the responsibilities are. He knows that He has to do with very silly sheep,
who have no strength to protect themselves, no wisdom to guide themselves, and
nothing to recommend them but their utter helplessness and weakness. But none of
these things baffle Him. His strength and His skill are sufficient to meet every
emergency that can possibly arise.
There is absolutely only one thing that can hinder Him,
and that is, if the sheep will not trust Him and refuse to let Him take care of
them. If they stand off at a distance, and look at the food He has provided, and
long for it, and absolutely trustworthy; and nothing complicated in obedience,
when we have perfect confidence in the power we are obeying.
Let me entreat you, then, to begin to trust and to
follow your Shepherd now and here. Abandon yourself to His care and guidance, as
a sheep in the care of a shepherd, and trust Him utterly.
You need not be afraid to follow Him whithersoever He
leads, for He always leads His sheep into green pastures and beside still
waters. No matter though you may seem to yourself to be in the very midst of a
desert, with nothing green about you inwardly or outwardly and you may think you
will have to make a long journey before you can get into any green pastures, the
good Shepherd will turn the very place where you are into green pastures; for He
has power to make the desert rejoice and blossom as the rose; and He has
promised that “instead of the thorn shall come up the fir-tree, and instead of
the briar shall come up the myrtle-tree”; and “in the wilderness shall waters
break out, and streams in the desert.”
Or perhaps you may say, “My life is all a tempest of
sorrow or of temptation, and it will be a long while before I can walk beside
any still waters.” But has not your Shepherd before this said to the raging
seas, “Peace! be still. And there was a great calm”? And can He not do it
again?
Thousands of the flock of Christ can testify that when
they have put themselves absolutely into His hands, He has quieted the raging
tempest, and has turned their deserts into blossoming gardens. I do not mean
that there will be no more outward trouble, or care, or suffering; but these
very places will become green pastures and still waters inwardly to the soul.
The Shepherd knows what pastures are best for His sheep, and they must not
question or doubt, but must trustingly follow Him. Perhaps He sees that the best
pastures for some of us are to be found in the midst of opposition or of earthly
trials. If He leads you there, you may be sure they are green pastures for you,
and that you will grow to be made strong by feeding in them.
But words fail to tell the half of what the good
Shepherd does for the flock that trusts him. He does indeed, according to His
promise, make with them a covenant of peace, and causes the evil beasts to cease
out of the land; and they shall dwell safely in the wilderness, and sleep in the
woods. And He makes them and the places round about them a blessing; and He
causes the shower to come down in its season; and there are showers of blessing.
And the tree of the field yields her fruit, and the earth yields her increase;
and they are safe in their land, and are no more a prey to the heathen, and none
can make them afraid.
And now you will probably ask me how you can get the
Lord to be your Shepherd. My answer is that you do not need to get Him to be
your Shepherd at all, for He already is your Shepherd. All that is needed
is for you to recognize that He is, and yield yourself to His control.
When the announcement is made in a family to the
children who have been longing for a little sister, that one has just been born
to them, they do not go on saying, “Oh, how we wish we had a little sister!” or,
“what can we do to get a little sister?” But they begin at once to shout for
joy, and to dance about calling out to everybody, “Hurrah! Hurrah! We have a
little sister now.”
And since likewise the announcement has been made to all
of us by the angel of the Lord: “Fear not, for behold I bring you good tidings
of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the
city of David, a Saviour which is Christ the Lord,” we have no need and no right
to go on crying out, “Oh, if I only had a Saviour!” or, “What shall I do to make
Christ my Saviour?” He is already born our Saviour, and we must begin at
once to rejoice that He is, and must give ourselves into His care. There is
nothing complicated about it. It is simply to believe it, and act as if it were
true. And every soul that will begin from today believing in the good Shepherd
and trusting itself to His care will sooner or later find itself feeding in His
green pastures, and walking beside His still waters.
What else can the Lord, who is our Shepherd, do with His
sheep, but just this? He has no folds that are not good folds, no pastures that
are not green pastures, and no waters but still waters. They may not look so
outwardly; but we who have tried them can testify that, let the outward seeming
be what it may, His fold and His pastures are always places of peace and comfort
to the inward life of the soul.
If you seem to have difficulties in understanding all
this, and if the life of full trust looks complicated and mysterious, I would
advise you not to try to understand it, but simply to begin to live it. Just
take our nursery psalm and say, “this is my psalm, and I am going to believe it.
I have always known it by heart, but it has never meant much to me. But now I
have made up my mind to believe that the Lord really is my Shepherd and that He
will care for me as a shepherd cares for his sheep. I will not doubt nor
question it again.” And then just abandon yourself to His care, as the sheep
abandon themselves to the care of their shepherd, trusting Him fully, and
following whithersoever He leads.
But we must not forget that while sheep trust
unconsciously and by instinct, we shall need to trust intelligently and of
purpose for our instincts, alas, are all against trusting. We shall have to make
an effort to trust. We shall have to choose to do it. But we can do this,
however weak and ignorant we may be. We may not understand all it means to be a
sheep of such a Shepherd, but He knows. And if our faith will but claim Him in
this blessed and wondrous relationship, He will care for us according to His
love, and His wisdom, and His power, and not according to our poor comprehension
of it.
It really seems to me as if we did not need any other
passage out of the whole Bible besides this nursery psalm to make our religious
lives full of comfort. I confess I do not see where there is any room left for
the believer to worry, who actually believes this psalm. With the Lord for our
Shepherd, how is it possible for anything to go wrong? With Him for our
Shepherd, all that this psalm promises must be ours; and when we have learned
thus to know Him, we will be able to say with a triumph of trust: “Surely
goodness and mercy shall follow me [pursue, overtake] all the days of my life,
and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever.” Even the future will lose
all its terrors for us, and our confidence in our Shepherd will deliver us from
all fear of evil tidings.
And I can only say, in conclusion, that if each one of
you will just enter into this relationship with Christ, and really be a
helpless, docile, trusting sheep, and will believe Him to be your Shepherd,
caring for you with all the love, and care, and tenderness that that name
involves, and will follow Him whithersoever He leads, you will soon lose all
your old spiritual discomfort, and will know the peace of God that passeth all
understanding to keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.