Fourth Sunday of Easter The Call, The Good Shepherd, The Leader First Reading : ( Acts 2:14,36-41 ) :At the first sermon three thousand people were converted Second Reading : ( 1 Pet 2:20-25) : Christ is our model Gospel : ( Jn 10:1-10 ) : Jesus is the good shepherd Chinese Classics The story of Bai Le and the Thoroughbred (1) “Some people are alive but they are already dead; Some people are dead but they are still alive. Some people, they live but other people cannot live; Some people, they live so that more people can live better.” (2) Jesus said : ‘I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep. The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly. ‘ ( Ref Jn 10:1-10) Jesus is the Good Shepherd who loves his sheep. He also hopes the leaders of the Church are good shepherds who loves their Christians, their own flock. There is a story about Bai Le in the Book of the Warring Kingdoms(1). An old thoroughbred horse pulling a big and heavy cart full of salt arrived at Tai Heng Shan. Because it was going uphill, the horse had to pull very hard. Its waist was bent and its tail was hanging down; its legs were bleeding and it was spitting saliva. Sweat was pouring down its legs. Halfway up the hill it could not move anymore. Bai Le was just passing by. He got down from his carriage and went to the horse. He felt so much pity for the horse that he cried. Then, he took off his coat and covered the horse with it. This old and weak thoroughbred raised its head and neighed long and loud because it finally had found Bai Le who really understood him and sympathized with him. We should follow Jesus' example to care for the sheep, or Bai Le's example to pity the thoroughbred. However, there are so-called leaders, so-called shepherds who really are not good shepherds or good leaders at all. A contemporary Chinese poet has written a poem about leaders: “Some people are alive but they are already dead; Some people are dead but they are still alive. Some people, they ride on people's head and proclaim: Oh, how great I am! Some people, they bend their backs, and work like cattle and horses for the people. Some people, they carve their names on rocks, hoping for immortality; Some people, they would rather be wild grass, waiting for earth's fire to burn them. Some people, they live but other people cannot live; Some people, they live so that more people can live better.(2) Those who ride on people's head will be thrown down by the people; Those who work like cattle and horses for the people will be forever remembered by the people. ” (Zang Ke Jia) A good shepherd is someone who “lives so that more people can live better.” The Church today needs many good shepherds like this. Traditionally good shepherds refer to bishops and priests and this relates to the question of ‘vocation.’ But what is vocation? ‘Vocation' is not an abstract, inconceivable thing. A vocation requires certain objective conditions. In Latin, it is expressed by “3 S's”, i.e. Sanitas (Good health), Sanctitas (Virtue), and Scientia (Knowledge). If we want to pursue a vocation we must have at least good health, not in need of continuous medication; we must have ordinary virtue, not uncontrollable bad habits, we must have that kind of knowledge, which is capable of completing secondary school education. We can say simply that if we have these ‘3 S's’, i.e. health, virtue and knowledge as the basic requirement, then we might consider our interest in religion, the spiritual life, Nature and life, and if we have a tendency to religious life, prayer, Scripture study. If the answer is positive, then we have the fundamental conditions for a vocation. If I want to go further and share all this with others and hope the world would be a better place and more spiritual, I am very close to possessing all the necessary conditions for a vocation. With the appropriate health, virtue and knowledge, identifying with religious matters, eager that more people would be interested in God and in life, I may be ready to choose the priestly or religious life. To enter the convent or seminary does not mean we are ready to immediately become a priest or nun. This is only to test one's longstanding interest in religious matters, whether one genuinely has the determination to become a priest or a nun. Usually we would be in the seminary or convent for some years, three to four, eight or nine or permanently, depending on whether one genuinely has a vocation. If we ourselves find this suitable and the seminary or convent does so also, then I can become a priest or make final vows as a nun. A vocation basically is a kind of ‘contract’, a contract between myself and the Church: I choose the Church and the Church chooses me. Today many people find that in the secular world. One can witness to one's faith in the secular life too, whether married or single, becoming a priest or doctor, a grocer or housewife, all of us can arrive at a peak of holiness. It is correct to say that there are many routes to holiness and many kinds of vocation. But what I would like to invite all today is to seriously think about the more narrow definition of vocation. Do I have a vocation to become a priest or a nun? Am I willing to try it? An Irish teacher, always earnestly encouraged the students to ‘Give God a chance.’ So I now seriously ask all of you: “Are you willing to give God a chance? Do you want God to give you the opportunity to be a priest or a nun?” Would you say with me. ‘O God, what do you wish me to do? I put my future into your hands. If you would like me to be a priest or a nun, I am ready to respond to your call. O Lord, I am here, please call upon me! Lord, I am here, please send me out! (1)伯樂與千里馬。 (2)有的人活著,他已經死了;有的人死了,他還活著。有的人,他活著別人就不能活;有的人,他活著為了多數人更好地活。 |