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4th Sunday Easter Year C: My Sheep Will Never Be Lost

May 8, 2019

Discussion Guide 4th Sunday Easter C: My Sheep Will Never Be Lost- is here

Acts 13:14, 43-52; Rev 7:9, 14b-17; Gospel Jn 10:27-30

Image result for good shepherd sunday 2019Reflection Questions

• In the 50 days after Easter the Church listens continuously to the Acts of the Apostles (the gospel of the Church as it is sometimes called). Paul’s first missionary journey lasted some 13 years! He encountered violent abuse and persecution. But he could not stop sharing the message of God’s love, forgiveness and the truth revealed in Jesus. Do you know a missionary in the Church and the challenges they face? What do you think the mission is in your own country, parish?

• Shaking dust off ones feet was a ritual action Jews performed when returning from Gentile (non- believing) lands. When Paul and Barnabas did this action to the Jews and went to the Gentiles it would have been interpreted as a great insult. Sometimes it requires great courage to move outside traditional boundaries. Have you experienced a missionary zeal to go further than what is normal and acceptable to live and bring Christ to others? What happened?

• The Book of Revelation ‘unveils’ the future and provides a heavenly image of those who have endured great persecution and sacrificed their life for peace, justice, freedom. Their white robes symbolise these inner virtues. It is a picture of all the faithful – saints in Heaven. Have you recognised the freedom (and religious freedom) of your country and your life has been won at great cost by those who have gone before you. What do you think this great multitude would say to you today? What religious truths would you be willing to enter ‘great distress’ to defend?

• The context of John 10 is the great Jewish Feast of Dedication. It was a celebration of military victory of Judas Maccabaeus who led an army (164BCE ) against the occupying Greeks who had desecrated the Jewish Temple by putting the Greek god Zeus on the altar making it
unclean. (See Dan 8:13)They killed and chased out their oppressors, destroyed false idols, built a new altar and rededicated the Temple. In Jn 10 they ask Jesus if he is the promised Messiah – and will he raise up arms and inspire an Army to overcome the occupying Roman forces!? He responds: he is the Good Shepherd. Salvation and healing of the world will come through listening to his voice not the taking up of arms. A soldier or shepherd. What are the similarities and differences of these two images?

• A striking image in contemporary Jerusalem and nearby Bethlehem is young and old ‘shepherds’ daily walking their small flock of 15 sheep to grass or water. Tender and watchful care is given to the sheep. So familiar are the sheep with their shepherd they know their particular voice. In what ways do you listen to ‘God’? Have you experienced a desire to love and care so deeply for God’s family that you are willing to lay down your life and become a ‘shepherd’?

• What is one action that you will do to be ‘livingtheword’ this week?

web: www.livingtheword.org.nz   Email: nzlivingtheword@gmail.com   Livingtheword weekly download and resources are created by Fr Frank Bird sm, Priest of the Society of Mary and distributed by Marist Laity Auckland, NZ. www.maristlaitynz.org

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