“The
thief does not come except to steal, and to kill, and to destroy. I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly” (John 10:10).
The tenth
chapter of John is about Jesus, the Good Shepherd. A shepherd is one who cares
for and watches over his sheep to protect, feed and guide. In this chapter
Jesus contrasts His purpose in life and ministry with that of our enemy, the
devil. He calls the devil a thief whose sole purpose is to rob, steal and
destroy. In contrast, Jesus says that His purpose is to make provision for those
who follow Him to have “life” and to have
it “more abundantly.”
The word “thief”
means embezzler, pilferer, and the picture that emerges is that our enemy
operates in the shadows, in the dark. Those who embezzle do so very quietly, in
secret. A few years ago I was helping a church in Alabama conduct an outreach
program and while I was there the pastor discovered that his secretary had
embezzled thousands of dollars from the church. She took a few hundred dollars
at a time by taking advantage of the trust and confidence of the leadership.
She used a check request system to her personal advantage and no one noticed
for many months. The devil is an embezzler, a pilferer. His most devastating work
in the life of a believer is not pornography or promiscuity (as bad as they are)
but it is stealing away truth, stealing away our dreams and promises, stealing
away the abundant life that God has given us. All of a sudden we realize that
our dreams and promises are gone—a robbery has taken place and we weren’t
paying attention.
A shepherd is
one who tends, guides, cherishes, feeds and protects his flock. The shepherd
watches over the “life” of his sheep, every part of it. I don’t know much about
shepherding but I’ve attempted to understand Jesus’ frequent references to
being a shepherd. I have done a lot of reading and research in an attempt to
get a grasp on the meaning of the word “shepherd” as it’s used in the Bible. One
of the things I learned is that Holy Land shepherds often constructed hut-like
buildings where they put the sheep at night for protection. In John 10:1 Jesus
refers to this as the sheepfold. Once the sheep were inside and settled down, the
shepherd closed the door and made his bed right inside, across the threshold.
No intruder could get at the sheep without first going through the shepherd.
When we stay
tightly connected to the Shepherd of our life, the enemy is not going to be
able to steal away our “abundant life.” It is His pleasure to protect the door
of our life and not allow the thief to enter. When our life in Him is casual,
the door is open to the enemy’s pilfering.
In verse 10,
Jesus says that He has come that we might have a real, genuine, full life. He
then goes on to say about this life, “That
they may have it more abundantly.” It has taken me a while to understand
that the life Jesus was referring to was more about me than it was about the
circumstances of my life. Our world is conditioned to perceive “abundant life”
as being made up of things: possessions, money, position, even our physical
appearance and health. The truth is that these are blessings but they are not
life; they are the cosmetics rather than the substance of the “abundant life.”
A person who has life and has learned to live it abundantly is a person who has
learned to live the life God has given him or her to the fullest extent
possible. Some of the most “abundant lifers” in Christ have very little in the
way of possessions; others have tremendous physical struggles but they have
learned to live life fully and completely in the Lord and they are happy and
fulfilled people. I recently read Philip Yancey’s book Where is God When it
Hurts? and I was very
inspired and moved by his chapter on Joni Eareckson Tada. In spite of her
extreme physical limitations, Joni lives out, very clearly, the abundant life
Jesus was talking about.
Speaking to the
Pharisees about a life bearing good or bad fruit, Jesus said, “Out of the
abundance of the heart the mouth speaks”
(Matthew 12:34, NKJV). The original word here for abundance and the word abundant
in John 10:10 both come from the same Greek root word meaning “to be
furnished so richly that the person has an overflow.” That’s the life Christ
wants for us and has provided for us—and it is the one the enemy wants to
steal. The abundant life’s dwelling place is in the heart and that is what we
are to guard and nurture; everything else, such as money, possessions and
position, are just peripheral and cosmetic.
I choose to live
the abundant life in Christ. I don’t have a lot of things but I have a full and
peaceful heart centered in Christ. Also, my life is filled with family and
friends I dearly love, so what more could I ask? My life truly is full and
abundant!
Amen! Thank you for the reminder! It's important to keep our priorities in line.
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