Sunday, May 11, 2014

God calls us by name – Jn 10:1-10, Ps 23

Good Shepherd Sunday; Holy Cross Parish.

Many of you know that before I entered seminary I worked as a teacher in a prison.  When I first started working there, a lot of the other helping professionals in the prison recognized that there was something about the culture of that place, the marbled unity of grotesque beauty and darkness in search of light, that I needed to understand to be fruitful there, and the only way they could explain it was through stories.  This one was from a prison chaplain.  I never knew the inmate the story’s about, but it’s a pithy way of getting across in one short graced conversation what I saw so many times, on a much slower scale.  He was young, but a hulk of a man, apparently, intimidating.  By which, I learnt, the chaplain meant both that he looked intimidating, and that he often went out of his way to intimidate people.  He’d stand at the back of the chapel throughout Mass, defiant.  After several weeks of this, the chaplain approached him and asked: “What’s your name?”  “Striker,” came back the answer.  “That’s not a name, that’s a front, a claim, a committal offense.  What’s your name?”  “González.”  “That’s what the COs call you, I know.  But what’s your name?  What does your momma call you?”  The next answer, I won’t repeat in church.  That’s what his mother called him, something I won’t repeat in church.  “She’s mad with you a lot, huh?”  “Yeah.  I’m bad.”  It wasn’t a confession, it wasn’t a boast; it was just a flat statement of fact.  “But, I bet that wasn’t what she called you when you were a baby, huh?  What does your momma call you when she’s not mad with you?”  “The first name on my birth certificate is Napoleón.”  “Nice name.  But that’s not what I asked.  What does your momma call you when she’s not mad with you?”  Out of a face, I came to know so well, that could erupt either in tears or violence, but you knew was about to erupt, came: “Well, sometimes… she’d call me Napito.”  “Napito.  Can I call you that?”  “Sure, padre.  That would be firme.” 

To be called by the name our momma uses when she’s not mad with us… isn’t that what we all want?  To feel that safety, that care and concern, that loving intimacy, to feel known and loved not for who we are or what we’ve done (maybe even despite those things), but because of whose we are.  God is the Good Shepherd who calls each of us, his sheep, by name, and leads us out.

In the ancient world, there was a name for shepherds who named their sheep: “poor.”  It actually wasn’t that unusual for a poor shepherd who only had a few sheep to give them names, and call them by name.  That’s how Jesus is identifying himself here.  He’s putting himself squarely in the company of the poor shepherds, the ones who valued each sheep with immensely personal care and attention, who knew them by name.  But, he’s not a poor shepherd.  We read in Acts about one day when three thousand sheep were added to his fold!  On a universal, grandiose, cosmic scale, the Creator of the Universe, the pre-existent Word of God cares for us all, cares for each of us, with the personal, loving intimacy of a poor shepherd with just a few sheep.  He calls us each by the names our mommas use when they’re not mad with us.

And we’re changed by that, just as Striker melted when called Napito.  We hear that call not to statically bask in our Father’s love, but to be called out of our fear, our isolation, to leave behind the stone wall of the sheepfold that was separating us from darkness and follow behind the shepherd who calls us and leads us out, beyond the fold.  The shepherd who promises us, in our psalm, that we will not lack, but still dares to lead us through the valley of death.  The shepherd who trusts us enough to not blinker our eyes on that journey.  The shepherd who promises us a great banquet, but also assures us that we dine in the sight of our foes.

In Marty Haugen’s setting of the psalm we sang, he presents us a non-literal but richly evocative translation which proclaims the daring truth about God’s shepherding of us: “You have set me a banquet of love; in the face of hatred // crowning me with love beyond my power to hold.”  We can’t hold this embrace in a posture of self-interest.  It’s an embrace which leads us to embrace others. 


The psalmist put it: “You have anointed my head with oil, my cup has overflowed.”  Baptized flock: we have been anointed, priest, prophet and king, and the world needs that anointing to overflow from our cup.  Waiting in a dark valley, it needs the light that is Christ, the light shared with us at our baptism to illumine the darkness.  It needs to be called by name, to be embraced with the name its momma calls it when she’s not mad with it.  We need to be able to walk without awkwardness among the suffering, for we know that our Good Shepherd has laid down his life for us, his sheep, that sin and death and darkness are overcome.  We know that we are treated to a foretaste of that heavenly banquet here, gathered around this table, where once again we are called by name.  “Body of Christ.”  It’s not just what we receive.  It’s what we are.

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