11th Sunday
A traveller to the Holy Land once watched as several shepherds brought their flocks into a common sheepfold for the night. By morning, all the sheep seemed completely mingled together, impossible to distinguish one flock from another.
But then one shepherd began to walk away, and as he did so he gave a distinctive cry. At once, certain sheep lifted their heads and followed him. Then another shepherd called, and more sheep separated themselves from the flock and followed their master.
The traveller was astonished. Wanting to test it for himself, he borrowed a shepherd’s cloak and tried calling the sheep. Not one moved. But when the true shepherd called, even from a distance, the sheep immediately ran towards him.
Because they knew the shepherd’s voice.
It is an image that lies at the very heart of Christian discipleship. We live in a world filled with competing voices: voices of fear, distraction, temptation, division, and anger. Some voices flatter us; others confuse us; some slowly lead us away from the things that bring peace and truth.
The spiritual life is learning to recognise, amid all these voices, the voice of Christ, the Good Shepherd.
And sheep do not recognise the shepherd’s voice because they attended a lecture about him. They recognise it because they have lived with him, depended upon him, and learned to trust him. Recognition comes through familiarity born of relationship.
The same is true spiritually. Souls become attuned to Christ through prayer, silence, Scripture and the rhythms of a sacramental life. Over time, His voice acquires a distinctive and unmistakable character, enabling us to recognise truth amid falsehood, and leading us away from anxiety and despair into the deep peace that comes from God.
There are times, however, when we are reluctant to follow His voice. It is easy to trust a voice that leads us beside still waters and into green pastures; far harder when it calls us along the stony paths of disappointment, sacrifice, suffering, and, hardest of all, grief.
Yet, looking back over the tapestry of our lives, we often discover that it is precisely in those hesitant moments when we resisted God most strongly that we encountered unexpected grace and enlightenment.
There is wisdom here for all of us, including the children who today receive Holy Communion for the first time. As they do so, there is an echo of those sheep lifting their heads at the shepherd's call and stepping out from the crowd to follow him.
As they grow older, these children may come to see that following Christ often involves separating ourselves from the confusion of the flock, not always thinking as the crowd thinks or following the voice that shouts the loudest but taking the direction given by a voice which carries within it a wisdom that has guided souls through every age of history. A voice whose purpose is to guide us not merely towards comfort or success, but into the deeper joy and peace that come from remaining close to Him.
Today, when these children come forward to receive Christ in the Eucharist, it may seem like a small and ordinary action - walking in procession and receiving a host into their hands - yet hidden within that simplicity is something extraordinary: the Good Shepherd feeding His flock.
In the Gospel, Jesus looks upon the crowds with compassion because they were “like sheep without a shepherd.” It's another striking image. Sheep without a shepherd do not simply lack direction; they become vulnerable, wandering into danger, becoming scattered, and struggling to find safe pasture.
Christ presents Himself not as a distant ruler but as one who knows His sheep personally, seeks out the lost, carries the wounded, and lays down His life for the flock.
Last Sunday, driving through Ryedale with members of our 18–30 group, we encountered a flock of sheep being driven along the road by a farmer in a four-by-four shouting from behind them, banging a stick on the roof. But the shepherds of the ancient world did not drive sheep from behind; they walked ahead, and the sheep followed because they trusted where the shepherd was leading them.
So too with Christ. He leads not by coercion but by example, invitation, and love.
He does not remain distant from human suffering. In the humility of Bethlehem He entered fully into the confusion, pain, and complexity of human life. There is no darkness we experience into which He Himself has not already gone. Even through death He walked ahead of His people, opening a path that leads to eternal life.
And the Gospel also reminds us that sheep can wander. When we are lonely, fearful, exhausted, or wounded, we become vulnerable to false voices and empty promises. Their influence has been amplified immeasurably in our noisy digital age, where lives can become so crowded with distraction that people slowly lose the ability to hear the deeper voice of the Shepherd.
When this happens, prayer can begin to feel unfamiliar, silence uncomfortable, and even Mass can start to feel like an obligation rather than an encounter.
God rarely shouts above the noise. More often, He speaks in what Scripture calls “the still small voice,” as Elijah discovered at the mouth of the cave. Elijah expected to find God in the wind and the fire, yet God’s voice came instead in the quiet whisper of a gentle breeze. Indeed, some scholars translate that still, small breeze as silence itself.
If we never allow ourselves moments of silence, we may slowly become strangers not only to God’s voice but also to our own hearts.
Because holiness is not first about doing extraordinary things. It is about becoming so familiar with the voice of Christ that, amid the clamour of the world and the confusion of our own hearts, we still recognise when He is calling our name - even when He leads us somewhere we would not naturally choose.
After the Resurrection, Jesus warned Peter: “When you were young, you fastened your own belt and went where you would; but when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands, and another will fasten a belt around you and take you where you do not wish to go.” In those words Christ revealed something difficult but profoundly true: that the path to salvation often involves surrendering control and learning to trust where God leads.
In music, the bass note is often not the melody we notice first, yet it quietly holds everything together, giving shape, direction, and harmony to all the other parts of the score. If we allow the voice of Christ to be the bass note beneath all the changing rhythms of our life, then even our deepest fears will gradually lose their power over us, held and steadied by the quiet certainty of His presence.
And then, at the last, when the evening of our life comes and every other voice falls silent, we shall recognise the voice we have been hearing all along: the voice of the Good Shepherd calling us home into that eternal fold where no one is ever lost, no wound remains, and love itself will never end.
Few saints spoke of the end of our earthly journey with greater serenity and hope than St John Henry Newman. Like the sheep lifting their heads at the sound of their shepherds voice in the Holy Land, Newman understood that the Christian life is about becoming so familiar with the voice of Christ that, at the last, we follow Him without fear into the eternal fold of heaven.
When a priest is ordained he chooses some words to be published on a prayer card marking the occasion. Thirty three years ago, I used some words by Newman, words which have remained a quiet source of guidance and consolation to me ever since. I'd like to finish by sharing them with you now - I'm sure they'll be familiar to many:
“O Lord, support us all the day long,
until the shades lengthen and the evening comes,
the busy world is hushed,
the fever of life is over,
and our work is done.
Then, in thy mercy, grant us a safe lodging,
and a holy rest,
and peace at the last;
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.”