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In John Chapter 10 Jesus contrasts
Himself with all those who pretended, or had pretended, to be shepherds of
1.
He comes in by the door.
2.
He is the door.
3.
He is the Shepherd of the sheep-the
good Shepherd.
He comes in by the door. That is to
say, He submits to all the conditions established by Him who built the house.
Christ answers to all that is written of the Messiah, and takes the path of
God's will in presenting Himself to the people. It is not human energy and
power awakening and attracting the passions of men; but the obedient man who
bowed to Jehovah's will, kept the lowly place of a servant, and lived by every
word that proceeded out of the mouth of God, bowed in lowliness to the place in
which Jehovah's judgment had placed and viewed Israel. All the Lord's
quotations in His conflict with Satan are from Deuteronomy. Consequently He who
watches over the sheep, Jehovah, acting in
The sheep follow Him, for they know His
voice. There are many other voices, but the sheep do not know them. Their safety
consists, not in knowing them all, but in knowing that they are not the one
voice which is life to them-the voice of Jesus. All the rest are the voices of
strangers.
He is the door for the sheep. He is
their authority for going out, their means of entering in. By entering in, they
are saved. They go in and out. It is no longer the yoke of ordinances, which,
in guarding them from those without, put them in prison. The sheep of Christ
are free: their safety is in the personal care of the Shepherd; and in this
liberty they feed in the good and fat pastures which His love supplies. In a
word, it is no longer Judaism; it is salvation, and liberty, and food. The
thief comes to make his profit on the sheep by killing them. Christ is come
that they might have life, and that abundantly; that is, according to the power
of this life in Jesus, the Son of God, who would soon have this life (whose
power was in His Person) in resurrection beyond death.
The true Shepherd of Israel-at least of
the remnant of the sheep-the door to authorise their
coming out of the Jewish fold, and to admit them into the privileges of God by
giving them life according to the abundance in which He was able to bestow
it-He was also in special connection with the sheep thus set apart, the good
Shepherd who thus gave His life for the sheep. Others would think of
themselves, He of His sheep. He knew them, and they knew Him, even as the
Father knew Him, and He knew the Father. Precious principle! They could have
understood an earthly knowledge and interest on the part of the Messiah on
earth with regard to His sheep. But the Son, although He had given His life and
was in heaven, knows His own, even as the Father knew Him when He was on the
earth.
Thus He laid down His life for the
sheep; and He had other sheep who were not of this
fold, and His death intervened for the salvation of these poor Gentiles. He
would call them. Doubtless He had given His life for the Jews also-for all the
sheep in general, as such (v. 11). But He does not speak distinctly of the
Gentiles until after He has spoken of His death. He would bring them also, and
there should be but one flock (not "one fold," there is no fold now)
and one Shepherd.
Now this doctrine teaches the rejection
of
Chapter 8, therefore, is the
manifestation of God in testimony, and as light; chapters 9 and 10, the efficacious
grace which gathers the sheep under the care of the Son, and of the Father's
love. John speaks of God when he speaks of a holy nature, and man's
responsibility-of the Father and the Son, when he speaks of grace in connection
with the people of God.
Observe, that the wolf may come and
catch [2] the sheep, if the shepherds are hirelings; but
he cannot catch* them out of the Saviour's hands.
At the end of the chapter, the Jews
having taken up stones to stone Him, because He made Himself equal with God,
the Lord does not seek to prove to them the truth of what He is, but shews that, according to their own principles and the
testimony of the scriptures, they were wrong in this case. He appeals again to
His own words and works, as proving that He was in the Father and the Father in
Him. Again they take up stones, and Jesus definitely leaves them. It was all
over with
[1]
Love and obedience are the governing principles of divine life. This is
unfolded in the First Epistle of John as to ourselves.
Another mark of it in the creature is dependence, and this was fully manifested
in Jesus as man.
[2]
The words catcheth and pluck in verses 12, 28 and 29
are the same in the original.
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John 10
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Darby’s Synopsis