April 24, 2026

Jesus Our Good Shepherd

Jesus Our Good Shepherd

 Today the Church gives us one of the most comforting and revealing images of Jesus: the Good Shepherd. In the Gospel (John 10:1–10), Jesus does not simply say He has sheep—He says the sheep know His voice. That is where everything begins.

Because faith is not first about rules, structures, or obligations—it is about recognition. It is about hearing a voice and knowing: this is the One who loves me.

Jesus says, “The sheep hear his voice. He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out.” This is deeply personal. God does not deal with us as a crowd, but as individuals. He calls you by name. Not in general, not vaguely, but personally, intentionally, lovingly.

And yet, if we are honest, many voices compete for our attention today. The voice of culture, the voice of fear, the voice of success, the voice of pleasure, the voice of anxiety. These voices promise life, but often lead to confusion, emptiness, or restlessness.

That is why Jesus makes a clear distinction:

“The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.”

So the question becomes very practical:

Whose voice are we listening to?

The Good Shepherd does not shout over the noise. His voice is often gentle, steady, persistent. We hear it in Scripture, in prayer, in the quiet movements of conscience, in the teachings of the Church, and even in moments of suffering where God draws us deeper.

But to recognize His voice, we must become familiar with it. A sheep does not recognize the shepherd by accident—it learns the voice by staying close.