Following the Good Shepherd: Embracing Abundant Life

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1. "Jesus' ministry has long been understood to be for the marginalized and the downtrodden. This man, as you may have remembered from last week, spent the majority of the whole of his life blind, completely dependent on the financial gifts and generosity of others. They didn't have social networks and social infrastructure as we do today. And so this man would have been entirely dependent on other people giving and caring for him, this placing him in a position of low social status." [02:30] (33 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2. "There's nothing more that the suffering and the oppressed want than the world to be made right. And this man has finally tasted of it. He's now been both physically oppressed and judgmentally in society been oppressed. And Jesus has released him from both. And he makes a statement to the man. He says in the end of John chapter nine, for judgment, I have come into this world so those who do not see may see. And those who see would become blind." [03:50] (28 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3. "Jesus is saying that if we cannot see and will not admit our own need for help, we're actually more blind than we could possibly begin to imagine. But those that will admit their blindness need help for guidance and will be given it, and so hence the transition into shepherding language. Those of us that will admit our need for leading and our inability to see and understand the world, there is guidance available in the good news." [09:57] (25 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4. "Jesus' own claim, is repeated in a more extended form, that I am the door. If anyone enters through me, he will, not in the future, he will be saved and will come in and will go out and find pasture. He promises both salvation and sustenance, not as some far off thing, but immediately. His declaration, I have come so they may have life and have it abundantly, is an immediate statement with immediate benefit, not just some investment promise for later in eternity in afterlife." [12:34] (31 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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5. "Jesus is claiming every other way to the good life, religious, material, social, fill in the blank, will leave you wanting, but if we will follow the good shepherd, the one who is willing to lay his life down for us, we will find life, and life abundantly. He states it here, and follows through with the offer, that in order to defeat darkness in our world, and in our own lives, he will give his own life in order to do that." [20:50] (24 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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6. "The point of calling Jesus the good shepherd is to emphasize the strange and compelling power of his love for us and displayed in his life, but as well as in his death and his resurrection. I think there's a deep truth. There, many of us know well, many of us that are listening, we have heard and seen of the goodness of Jesus, but we also then have heard and seen people in our lives who exemplified this well. And the way their lives beautifully testify of the way of Jesus draw us in." [22:21] (28 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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7. "There are two kinds of Christians. Those who admit they have a lot more room to grow in the way of following Jesus and liars. Because we all are terrible at it. There's so much more room for us to grow in living in the way of Jesus. And we often struggle with this idea of how or why are we not able to follow him better. We get frustrated with ourselves and often depleted and tired in the endeavors." [23:42] (25 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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8. "The way that we are able to grow in this relationship is found kind of in between the lines of and the words of Jesus. Jesus stated, I am the good shepherd and I know my own and my own know me. It cannot be that we just hear the voice of Jesus and get our marching orders and then go off on our own. It's instead that there is a two-way dynamic necessary for following the good shepherd." [26:12] (24 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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9. "We want to be self-sufficient, especially here in modern Western culture. We want to be able to do it, but we don't and we fail at that all the time. There's this need to open ourselves up to Jesus. Confession time for me. We just got back from vacation. And Natalie and I were talking about something. And she was speaking specifically about a situation in my life where I was struggling." [27:20] (25 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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10. "We come to this place of needing to examine our lives and go, do I actually trust Jesus' call of exclusivity and take it seriously? That is an easy thing to say, but the minute that we actually stop and examine our lives and process this, what are the other ways that we are thinking it is okay to live or even good to live when Jesus claims exclusivity? He is the only way to life and life abundantly." [28:17] (25 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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