Today,
we keep mulling over one of the most beautiful and well known images
of Jesus' preaching: the Good Shepherd, his sheep and the gate. We
all keep in our memory the figure of that good Shepherd we were able
to look at, as children. An icon well beloved by the first fold, that
already belongs to the Christian sacred art at the time of the
catacombs. How many memories can arouse in us that young shepherd
with the wounded sheep on his shoulders! We have, quite often, seen
ourselves projected in the figure of that poor animal.
Only
a few days ago, we were still celebrating our Easter and, once more,
we have been reminded that Jesus did not speak in a figurative
language when He was saying that the good shepherd offers his life
for his sheep. For He really did it: his life was the price He paid
for our retrieval; with his life He bought ours, and thanks to that
deliverance we have been rescued: «I am the gate. Whoever
enters through me will be saved» (Jn 10:9). We find here
the great mystery of the ineffable love of God that reaches
unthinkable extremes to save each human creature. Jesus brings his
love to the extreme, to the point, of offering his own life. We can
still hear the echo of St. John's words in his Gospel, introducing us
to the moments of His Passion: «Before the feast of Passover,
Jesus knew that his hour had come to pass from this world to the
Father. He loved his own in the world and he loved them to the end»
(Jn 13:1).
Of
the words of Jesus, I would suggest our paying a deeper attention to
these ones: «I am the Good Shepherd. I know my own sheep and my
own sheep know me» (Jn 10:14); even more so, «The
sheep hear his voice (...) and the sheep follow him for they know his
voice» (Jn 10:3-4). It is true Jesus knows us, but, can
we also say we know Him well enough, that we love Him and we
reciprocate as we should?