We Can Trust Our Shepherd

 

READ: Psalm 23:1-6

Your rod and your staff protect and comfort me (v.4).

“A rod and a staff-they feel like strange comforts. You think of a sheep in a dark valley with predators all around, and the push of a rod or a wrench of a staff are the only encouragements. They can be a comfort ultimately, but at the time they don’t feel like it.” A friend and I were discussing Psalm 23, highlighting an often overlooked part of it. How, I wondered, can we find consolation in these images of correction? (v.4).

King David, having grown up a shepherd boy, knew well the tools of the trade. In the ancient Near East, shepherds would carry a rod-a short, heavy stick-to keep the sheep safe from predators and to discipline them when they went astray. The staff, easily recognisable with its distinctive hook, was a gentler tool. It could be used to place a newborn into its mother’s lap without transferring the shepherd’s scent onto the lamb, to lift a sheep up to higher ground or to guide a sheep in a new direction through careful placement on the sheep’s side.

As I considered these instruments, I thought about how God might use them in my life. For instance, when I feel anxious, I might not sense His presence. Yet I may experience some sort of rescue, like the Shepherd’s crook that pulls the sheep up to high ground, reminding me that God is with me (vv.2-4). Other times when I act out in irritation or selfishness, I can sense the loving discipline of the Shepherd.

This helps me to repent and be free of sin’s shame. I find myself not ostracised, but nestled among His flock.

That Jesus is the Good Shepherd who knows His sheep should bring us confidence and comfort (see Psalm 23:1; John 10:1-18). He laid down His life for us, so we can trust Him when He uses His staff and rod.

— Amy Boucher Pye

 

*This article is repurposed from ymi.today, a part of Our Daily Bread Ministries

 

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