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Jesus Is the Good Shepherd (I AM Series Part 4)

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  In John 10:11, Jesus deepens the shepherd imagery He has already introduced: “I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.” This is not a gentle or sentimental image. It is a declaration that reveals the heart of Christ’s mission and the nature of His authority. If “I am the gate” speaks of access and safety, “I am the good shepherd” speaks of leadership, sacrifice, and the kind of care that does not withdraw when it is costly. In this statement, Jesus does not merely describe Himself. He distinguishes Himself from every false shepherd and every failed form of leadership. To understand the weight of this claim, we must consider the biblical background, the immediate context, and what it reveals about who Jesus is and what He has come to do. The Biblical Background: God as Shepherd Shepherd imagery runs deeply through the Old Testament and is consistently associated with God’s care for His people. Psalm 23 declares, “The Lord is my shepherd,” present...

The King Who Came to Die (The Gospel in Three Days — Part 1: Palm Sunday)

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  The Arrival of the King Matthew 21 records one of the most significant moments in the life of Christ. Jesus enters Jerusalem riding on a donkey as crowds gather around Him, spreading cloaks on the road and laying down palm branches. They cry out, “Hosanna to the Son of David! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!” This moment is not accidental or merely emotional. It is the fulfillment of prophecy, as Zechariah had written centuries earlier: “Behold, your king is coming to you; humble, and mounted on a donkey.” Jesus is deliberately presenting Himself as the promised King, the long-awaited descendant of David. The King has arrived in Jerusalem, and the people recognize that something significant is happening, but they do not yet fully understand what kind of King He truly is. The Expectations of the Crowd The word “Hosanna” means “Save us now,” and the crowd is right to cry it out. They long for deliverance, but their understanding of salvation is limited. They are exp...

Jesus Is the Gate for the Sheep (I AM Series Part 3)

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  In John 10:7, Jesus makes another striking declaration: “Very truly I tell you, I am the gate for the sheep.” At first glance, this statement may seem less dramatic than “bread of life” or “light of the world.” But it is not a soft or secondary image. It confronts how people think about access to God, spiritual safety, and who they trust to lead them. If Jesus is the gate, then not every path leads to life. And not every voice that claims to guide is safe. The Immediate Context: Spiritual Blindness and False Shepherds John 10 follows directly after John 9, where Jesus heals a man born blind. The response to that miracle reveals something deeper than physical sight. The man who was blind comes to see and believe, while the religious leaders, confident in their knowledge and authority, reject both him and Jesus. They claim to see, but remain spiritually blind. Jesus then shifts to shepherd imagery, not to change the subject, but to explain what has just taken place. Not all who cla...

Jesus Is the Light of the World (I AM Series Part 2)

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In John 8:12, Jesus does not offer a suggestion or a poetic image for reflection. He makes a declaration that confronts every person who hears it: “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” This is not language meant to inspire from a distance. It is a claim that demands a response. Like His statement in John 6—“I am the bread of life”—this moment reveals something essential about who Jesus is and what humanity truly needs. To understand it rightly, we must look carefully at the setting, the meaning of light throughout Scripture, and what Jesus is claiming about Himself. Because this is not simply a comforting image. It is a dividing line. The Setting: Light in the Temple Jesus speaks these words during the Feast of Tabernacles, one of Israel’s most significant celebrations. Each evening, large lamps were lit in the temple courts, casting light across Jerusalem. These lights were not decorative; they pointed back to t...

Jesus Is the Bread of Life (I Am Series Part 1)

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The Bread That Truly Satisfies: Understanding John 6 John chapter 6 begins with a miracle everyone loves — the feeding of the five thousand. A massive crowd gathers around Jesus, hungry and far from food, and with five loaves and two fish He provides more than enough for everyone. It is a moment of abundance, compassion, and unmistakable power. But John makes it clear that the miracle is not the main point. It is a sign — something meant to point beyond itself. What follows is one of the most important conversations in the Gospel of John, where Jesus moves the crowd from thinking about physical bread to confronting a deeper spiritual reality. From Full Stomachs to Empty Hearts After the miracle, the crowd searches for Jesus again. At first glance, this seems like devotion. But Jesus immediately challenges their motives:  “You are looking for me, not because you saw the signs I performed but because you ate the loaves and had your fill.” (John 6:26) They were impresse...