Shepherding Our Flock | Sheep have Problems

Sheep Have Problems

SheepFlock 360x240I love sheep and grew up with them in New Zealand. My father was a world champion sheep shearer and designed the way shearing is performed across the world. I love sheep because out of all the animals in the world God calls us His sheep and His lambs.

Years ago, I read an article about a New Zealand sheep farmer who diversified to also raising goats. He noticed that the goats leave their little kids for hours while they go off to forage for food, whereas the ewes never go any further than earshot from their little lambs. I thought of all the mothers who leave their little ones to go off for hours to their jobs and careers. This is goat mothering. I would rather be a sheep mother and belong to God's company, wouldn't you?

God always calls those who belong to him His sheep and lambs, but refers to those who don't belong to Him as the goats. I am challenged with the words of Jesus, "When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory: And before him shall be gathered all nations: and he shall separate them one from another, as a shepherd divides his sheep from the goats: And he shall set the sheep on the right hand, but the goats on the left ... And these shall go away into everlasting punishment" (Matthew 25:31-33, 46).

I no longer call children "kids." Words have power. The character of the goat is independent and proud. They love to stand on the highest point, whereas the sheep are a humble and submissive animal. When the shearer grabs the sheep, drags it over the shearing board, and then begins to shear off all its wool with a very sharp comb and cutter, it doesn't fight, struggle, or even cry out. It sits between the shearer's knees and submits to the shearer. Jesus Himself is likened to a sheep as He submitted Himself to the cross to die for our sins (Isaiah 53:7).

However, although sheep are such lovely animals, they do have problems!

1. Sheep Go Astray Easily

If a sheep gets lost, it has no way of finding its way back home. It is completely bewildered. A dog, cat, or most other animals have a homing instinct. Often they can be lost for days but eventually turn up again. Not the sheep! It's lost until the shepherd finds it. That's why they need a shepherd.

Our children (our sheep and lambs) also cannot survive on their own. They need a shepherd mother to watch over them. God created mothers to care for children just as He ordained shepherds to watch over sheep. It is interesting that the two greatest leaders God raised up, Moses and King David, were shepherds (Exodus 3:1; 1 Chronicles 17:7 and Psalm 78:70-72).

Motherhood is the greatest vocation God has given to women. Rather, it is who we are. It is who God divinely created us to be, innately and physically. God proclaimed the status of motherhood before there was ever a mother in the world. It was already in His heart and plan (Genesis 2:24 and 3:20).

Dear mother, do not be lured away by the humanistic voices all around you, in the church and in the world. Listen to God's voice. Listen to your heart. You are needed for your children. No one else will ever love and care for your children like you do. No one else will ever be sensitive to their physical needs and especially their innermost needs as you will. Someone else can always replace you in your career, but no one can adequately replace you as the mother of the children God has given you. You were born for this mission. It is your destiny. You are in the perfect will of God.

Zechariah 11:17 tells us that the shepherd who leaves his flock is a worthless shepherd.

2. Sheep Cannot Protect Themselves

Sheep are defenseless. That's why New Zealand is such a big sheep farming country. There are no predators in the whole of the country--no coyotes, cougars, mountain lions, or bears. Not even a snake! The Middle Eastern shepherd watches over his flock all through the day and guards his sheep fold at night.

Mother, you also are the guardian of your little flock. In fact, you have a greater task than the shepherd of the sheep. He guards their lives, but you must guard your children's spirit, soul, and body. It's a 24/7 job! You can't watch over them too much. 1 Peter 5:8 tells us we must "Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil walks about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour." He wants to devour your children. He wants to get hold of their minds and infiltrate them with subtle deceptions against God and His truth. He wants to mar their spirits and take away their purity. He wants to destroy their souls.

This is why Satan hates mothers being in the home. They stand in his way. He wants them out of the way so he can do his work. He wants their children in day cares and the public education system that is becoming more and more foreign to everything that is biblical. King David cried out that if we want our sons to be like plants grown up in their youth (mature and steadfast) and our daughters to be strong and beautiful like the pillars in a palace we have to get rid of all that is foreign to God and His Word (Psalm 144:11-13).

Paul's prayer for the Thessalonian believers is a great vision for your children. Pray and make it your passion that their "whole spirit, soul, and body be preserved blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Thessalonians 5:23).

Mother, you have to be both tender and courageous. We lovingly nurture our children, but if an enemy comes to attack them, we will fight tooth and nail to save them. This was the heart of David as he shepherded his flock. If a lion or bear tried to steal one of his lambs, he'd bravely go after it with a club and rescue it from its very jaws, and yet he was tender towards the flock he loved (1 Samuel 17:34-37). We need this same kind of spirit.

3. Sheep Cannot Find Proper Food

Sheep spend most of their day eating, but they'll eat anything they see, even poisonous weeds. This is why they need a shepherd to lead them to safe, green pastures. The Middle Eastern shepherd not only "feeds his flock," but "waters his flock." Sheep can't find water for themselves, either. If a well dries up, the sheep will stand and stare at the dry mud until they die! They must have a shepherd to lead them to quiet springs of water.
It is the same with mothers. Our children will eat all the junk food they can get if we don't provide nutritious and wholesome food for them. They'll also eat poisonous weeds of lies and deception if we are not constantly on guard.

One of the biggest tasks of a shepherd is to provide good, green, and healthy pasture for his flock. This is also one of our biggest mothering tasks. Each new day we have to plan, prepare, and provide wholesome food for children's bodies. It is a negligent mother who does not care what her children eat. It is an ignorant mother who thinks that endlessly cooking and preparing nutritious meals is wasting her time. It is a powerful part of her mothering.

It is just as important to plan and prepare food for their souls and minds. It is a careless mother who lets them have unlimited electronic access and does not lead them to food that nourishes and stimulates their minds.

However, most important of all, she must plan, prepare, and provide fresh food each day for their spirits. We are responsible to feed our children three nourishing meals each day, but what about their spirits? Are we faithful to nourish them as well? Or, are our children growing tall in body, but with tiny starving spirits? Making Family Devotions happen each day in your home will provide opportunity to nourish their spirits. Did you notice I said, "Making it happen"? Yes, it doesn't just happen. You as the mother of the home have to make it happen. You prepare the way for your husband to read God's Word to your children.

Ezekiel 34:2 says, "Should not the shepherds feed the flocks?"

4. Sheep Cannot Keep Themselves Clean

Cats, dogs, and most other animals keep themselves clean. Not the poor sheep. They haven't got a clue. Sheep have to be docked (their tails taken off to help them keep clean), dipped to prevent insects and ticks which negatively affect their health, and crutched (shearing the wool from around their tails to save them from becoming flyblown).

Would your children bother to clean their teeth if you weren't around? We not only have the responsibility to keep their bodies clean, but their minds and spirits, too. Once again, we need to daily wash them in God's Word. Ephesians 5:26 tells us that "He cleanses us with the washing of water by the word."

5. Sheep Do Not Function Independently

Sheep have a flocking instinct. A sheep on its own is sad and cranky. If a sheep gets separated from the rest of the flock, it becomes distressed. It will run up and down the fence bleating or agitatedly walk around and around in circles (and if a ewe is separated from her lamb, she becomes VERY distressed, and vice versa). When the shepherd finds the sheep and brings it back to the flock, it becomes happy, secure, and contented again.

We also are not born for independence. God planned for children to be raised in families. Just as a flock loves to be together, so He wants us to live our lives together in peace and harmony.

Ask a child what they would like? They may want a toy they have seen advertised on TV, but what they really want is another baby brother or sister--a friend for life. Another sibling to add more joy and strength to the flock. Have you ever seen a 1.8 flock of sheep? Or even two or three? We need a few more to make a flock, don't we?

Psalm 103:41-43 says, "Yet he sets the poor on high, far from affliction, and makes their families like a flock. The righteous see it and rejoice, and all iniquity stops its mouth. Whoever is wise will observe these things, and they will understand the lovingkindness of the Lord." When the righteous see God blessing and increasing a family, they rejoice. They are wise enough to know it is the lovingkindness of the Lord.

The Bible says that God...

Feeds His people like a flock (Isaiah 40:11; Jeremiah 23:4 and Ezekiel 34:15).
Gathers His people like a flock (Jeremiah 23:3 and 31:10).
Guards His people like a flock (Jeremiah 31:10).
Guides His people like a flock (Psalm 78:52).
Holds us responsible for our flock (Proverbs 27:23 and Ezekiel 34:10).
Increases His people like a flock (Ezekiel 36:37).
Leads His people like a flock (Psalm 77:20 and 80:1).
Makes families like a flock (Psalm 107:41-43; Ezekiel 34:31 and 36:38).
Makes His flocks to lie down in safety (Isaiah 17:2 and Jeremiah 33:12).
Saves His people like a flock (Ezekiel 34:22; and Zechariah 9:16).
Seeks out His people like a flock (Jeremiah 34:12).

May we be faithful shepherd mothers to the little flocks God has given to us.

NANCY CAMPBELL

Shepherding Our Flock | The Sound Of Nurture

THE SOUND OF NURTURE

sound of nurtureGod is uniquely into sound. All His creation sounds. In Revelation 1:15, John describes God’s voice as the sound of many waters! Imagine those sound waves! Down through the ages of history there has been sound, from the sound of Rachel weeping for her children, to the snorting of horses in battle, to the sound of modern-day atomic warfare.

But let’s focus on the sounds that warm the heart. The rustling of the wind in the trees, the ominous cry of a seagull, the pound of waves on the shoreline, the haunting cry of a loon on a northern lake, the crackling of cedar chips in the fireplace on a cold night, the sweetness of a child’s song while playing contentedly, the thrill of violin, violas, cellos, clarinets, bassoons and trumpets in harmonious crescendo of a Mozart symphony, rain on a tin roof as if a thousand tap shoe cleats were dancing, and even the familiar sound of distant thunder. These are but a few I've heard and love.

Yet, there is a sound that took me by surprise. For almost eight years, I lived on a ranch in the beautiful, yet rugged terrain of northern British Columbia, Canada. Caribou country to be precise. Our old log home was set on a hill overlooking sloping hills, and the winding Fraser River. Nancy and Colin and their daughters, Serene and Pearl, spent one wonderful white winter Christmas with us in this home. Evangeline came separately on a previous occasion, but that’s another story of riding horses in the last western frontier of the Chilcotin!

I was raised in New Zealand with a father who was famous for sheep and wool. Little did I realize I would tend my own flock of sheep on a different continent. These woolly creatures became my joy, and I began to experience something of the Shepherd’s heart to the sheep. Once a year, lambing season came, and it was full-on, hands-on, round-the-clock, checking, and rotating mother ewes and lambs, not to mention constantly cleaning pens.

I’ll never forget the first year. Our large barn was like one giant nursery. It was in this milieu I discovered “the sound." As I loitered at each pen, watching the ewe with its new-born, I noticed the mother’s bleat change. Instead of a baah, it had become a soft, gentle mmmm, mmmm mmm, over its young. It was a delightful and surprising sound. It warmed my heart. It was the “mother coo," so to speak! You could take a tough ewe, put her in a pen with her newborn and she would transform into a gentle cooing dove! Mind you, don’t try to take her young! This now gentle sounding ewe would at the same time, stamp her hoof and get ready to do battle!

All we like sheep! It’s in them, it’s in you.

Mother, can your “little lambs” hear the sound? The sound of nurture… the sound of protection... mmmm, mmm, mmmmmm!

KATE MARCHINIAK
Kingston Springs, Tennessee, USA

Kate is Nancy Campbell's sister.

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Shepherding Our Flock | The Qualities Of A Shepherdess

The Qualities of a shepherdessHow wonderful that God reveals Himself to us by different names. If we only knew Him by one name, we would not understand the complete fullness of who He is.

One of the beautiful and tender names of God is Jehovah-Ra'ah, the Lord my Shepherd, the one who bends down to tend our needs (Psalm 113:5-9) and who protects us and gather us up in His arms (Isaiah 40:11). This name God speaks of the intimate relationship we can experience with Him, for the word "shepherd" also means "to be a friend, a companion, to keep company with."

A Bedouin shepherd in Israel testified that even if he were blindfolded he would know each one of his sheep by feeling their faces.

Our Shepherd wants to have an intimate and tender relationship with us. The psalmist calls God, "MY Shepherd," and repeatedly the Great Shepherd of the sheep calls us "MY flock."

As a Shepherdess, we teach our children that He wants to be their personal Savior and Shepherd. We will be careful not to do anything in our home that will grieve our Shepherd who wants to be intimately involved in everything we do.

Our Shepherd has a great shepherding heart and He wants us to shepherd our little flock in the same way He shepherds His flock. Shepherding is an enormous undertaking and from the Scriptures and the Hebrew meanings of the word "shepherd" we find that it includes the following tender and powerful ministries. You will see that a shepherd must be both brave and tender. Let God teach you as you read them.

It means befriending with an intimate relationship, binding and bandaging up the hurt and broken, bravely fighting off all enemies, bringing back the straying and wandering ones, carrying the lambs close to your heart, comforting, encouraging the weary, eliminating fear in the dark and anxious times, feeding, gathering in your arms and to your heart, gently leading, guarding and watching over your flock, guiding your flock on the "right track," healing the sickly, increasing the flock, keeping them safe, leading to rest and rich green pastures, nourishing, persevering until you find the lost, preparing a table, protecting, providing, rescuing when they turn to by-paths, restoring (renewing, reviving, and refreshing), ruling with wisdom and discretion, sacrificing and laying down your life for your flock, saving your flock, searching and seeking the lost ones, strengthening the weak, and tenderly folding your flock. My, what an amazing mission you have as a shepherdess.

Embrace this beautiful role. It is not insignificant. I would suggest you read the above paragraph over and over. It is too much to comprehend in one reading. Did you know that shepherding is talked about in the Bible from Genesis to Revelation? God chose two of the greatest leaders of all time from shepherding the sheep, Moses and King David (Exodus 3:1-10 and Psalm 78:70-72). God looks for parents who will shepherd after His own heart (Jeremiah 3:15). And because our little flock is really His flock, He requires them at our hand (Ezekiel 34:10). He wants us to diligently know the state of our little flock (Proverbs 27:23).

How can we be the shepherdess He wants us to be? We certainly can't do it in our own strength and wisdom, but be encouraged for Micah 5:4 tells us that Jesus Christ will "stand and feed in the strength of the Lord, in the majesty of the name of the Lord his God." If that is how He shepherds, that's the only way we can do it, too. You can do it in HIS strength.

Nancy Campbell
www.aboverubies.org

 

Shepherding Our Flock | The Shepherdess

shepherdessandsheep

"Shepherdess and Sheep” by artist Camille Pissarro, 1887.

"Now while he was still speaking with them, Rachel came with her father’s sheep, for she was a shepherdess" (Genesis 29:9).

Another name for mother should be "shepherdess." We are the shepherdess of our home and of our little lambs.

The shepherdess doesn't let her lambs go astray. She guards them and keeps her flock together. When an enemy comes to take her sheep, she fights for them. She is on guard to all who would attack her flock. She will take her lamb out of the enemy’s mouth.

She is on alert and not taken to idleness. She builds a hedge of protection for her sheep by her diligence in watching over them. When a lamb goes astray, she searches until she finds her lamb. She rejoices when her lamb is found.

She makes sure her sheep are fed. She anticipates their needs. She knows her lambs by name. She knows each of their cries when they are in distress. She runs to them.

She gives them a sense of belonging. She makes sure they have a place of rest and play under her watch. When they are weak, she carries them in her arms. She will climb the highest mountain to get to them if they are stuck. When they are sick she nurses them back to health.

She leads her sheep. They know her gentle voice and they follow her. Her lambs know she is to be trusted.

She instructs her sheep, blesses them, and gathers them together. She leads them down the right path with loving discipline.

The shepherdess stays with her sheep. She is not out frolicking in the next field, while they run astray. The shepherdess is good to her sheep. She shows them mercy and love. She is generous and she blesses them beyond measure.

She prays diligently for her sheep. She is their shepherdess for life.

She cultivates her field. She removes the rocks and thorns. Their dwelling place is free from fear.

She is greatly loved by her flock. They are always around her. They feel joy when they see their shepherdess. She has a long term vision for the future of her flock, given to her by the Master Shepherd. She provides them a place to call home so they will be strong and healthy.

She is a shepherdess. She is a mother, guided by the Most High Shepherd.

"So he shepherded them according to the integrity of his heart; and guided them by the skillfulness of his hands" (Psalm 78:72).

"He will feed His flock like a shepherd: He shall gather the lambs with His arm, and carry them in His bosom, and shall gently lead those that are with young" (Isaiah 40:11).

Aanna Chamberlain Freeland

Anna Chamberlain Freeland

ASHLEY MUNIZ
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 http://thewallofgodstruth.blogspot.com/2013/07/the-shepherdess.html

Shepherding Our Flock | Scriptures About Shepherding

SCRIPTURES ABOUT SHEPHERDING

These Scriptures go with the article, BUILDING A HOME TO HONOR THE NAME OF THE LORD.

FROM GENESIS TO REVELATION

Shepherding is spoken about in the Bible from Genesis to Revelation (Genesis 4:2--Revelation 7:17).

WOE TO US IF WE LEAVE OUR FLOCK

As a shepherdess, God does not want us to leave our flock. A true shepherd always stays with his flock.

Ezekiel 34:2 says, "Woe to the shepherds... that do feed themselves! should not the shepherds feed the flocks?"

Zechariah 11:17 says, "Woe to the idol shepherd that leaveth the flock!"

WHAT A WONDERFUL SHEPHERD

God is our MIGHTY Shepherd (Genesis 49:24).

God is our PERSONAL the Shepherd (Psalm 23:1).

God is our LEADING Shepherd (Psalm 80:1 and Isaiah 40:11).

God is our FEEDING Shepherd (Isaiah 40:11).

God is our GATHERING Shepherd (Isaiah 40:11 and Jeremiah 31:10).

God is our PROTECTING Shepherd (Jeremiah 31:10--"shamar" meaning to hedge about, to guard, to protect, to preserve).

God is our SEEKING Shepherd (Ezekiel 34:12 and Luke 15:1-7).

Jesus is our GOOD Shepherd (John 10:11, 14).

Jesus is our GREAT Shepherd (Hebrews 13:20).

Jesus is our CHIEF Shepherd (1 Peter 5:4).

OUR SHEPHERD LEADS US TO GREEN, GOOD, AND FAT PASTURE

Psalm 23:2; Ezekiel 34:14-15 and Revelation 7:17

A SHEPHERD DOES NOT HAVE ONLY ONE OR TWO SHEEP, HE HAS A FLOCK

God wants us to have a vision for a "flock" too.

Psalm 77:20; 80:1; 107:41-43; Proverbs 27:23; Isaiah 40:11; 63:11; Jeremiah 13:20, 23:1-3; 31:10 Ezekiel 34:2-3, 6, 15, 22, 31; 36:37-38; Micah 7:14; Zechariah 9:16; 10:3; Matthew 26:31; Luke 12:32; Acts 20:28-29 and 1 Peter 5:2-3.

GOD CALLS US "MY FLOCK."

Psalm 74:1; 79:13; 95;7; 100:5; Jeremiah 23:2-3; 50:6; Ezekiel 34:6, 8, 15, 17, 19, 22 and 31.

GOD ALSO CALLS US HIS...

Beautiful flock (Jeremiah 13:20).

Holy flock (Ezekiel 36:38).

WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO SHEPHERD YOUR LITTLE FLOCK?

From the Scriptures and the Hebrew meanings of the word "shepherd" we find that it includes all the following tender and powerful ministries:

Befriending, the Hebrew word "shepherd" means "to be a friend to, a companion, to keep company with, to be intimate" (John 10:3, 14 ).

Binding and bandaging up the hurt and broken (Ezekiel 34:16).

Bravely fighting off all enemies (1 Samuel 17:34-37).

Bringing back the straying and wandering ones (Ezekiel 24:16).

Carrying the lambs close to your heart (Psalm 28:9 and Isaiah 40:11 NET). "To carry" means “to lift up, to carry, to support.” Check out Deuteronomy 1:31; 32:11; 33:27; Isaiah 46:3-4; 63:9-10; and Hosea 11:3. Deuteronomy 33:27 NCV says, "His arms will hold you up forever."

Comforting (Psalm 23:4 and Isaiah 40:11).

Eliminating fear in the dark and anxious times (Psalm 23:4; 78:53 and Jeremiah 23:4).

Encouraging the weary (Ezekiel 34:4).

Feeding (Genesis 48:15;1 Samuel 17:15; 2 Samuel 5:2; 1 Chronicles 11:2; 17:6; Psalm 23:5; 28:9; 37:3; 78:71-72; Proverbs 10:21; Isaiah 40:11; Jeremiah 3:15; 23:4; 50:19; Ezekiel 34:2, 8; 14-16, 23; Micah 5:4; 7:14; Zephaniah 3:13; Acts 20:28 and1 Peter 5:2).

Gathering (Isaiah 40:11; Jeremiah 23:3; 31:10; and Ezekiel 34:13).

Gently leading, (Genesis 33:13-14 and Isaiah 40:11).

Guarding and watching over the flock (1 Samuel 17:34; Jeremiah 31:10 and John 10:7-10).

Guiding your flock on the "right track" (Psalm 23:3; 78:52-53).

Healing the sickly (Ezekiel 34:16).

Increasing the flock (Jeremiah 23:3; Ezekiel 36:38--the shepherd always wants to increase his flock).

Keeping them safe (Psalm 23:2; Jeremiah 33:12; Ezekiel 34:22, 25 and 27-29).

Leading to rest and rich green pastures (Psalm 23:2-3; 77:20; 78:52-53; 80:1; Isaiah 49:10; 63:11-14; Jeremiah 31:9; and John 10:3-4).

Nourishing (Ezekiel 34:16).

Persevering until you find the lost (Luke 15:1-7).

Preparing a table (Psalm 23:5).

Protecting (1 Samuel 17:34-37).

Providing (Psalm 23:1, 5 and Jeremiah 23:4).

Rescuing when they turn to by-paths (Ezekiel 34:16).

Restoring--reviving, renewing, and refreshing (Psalm 23:3).

Ruling with wisdom and discretion (1 Chronicles 11:2; Matthew 2:6; Acts 20:28 and 1 Peter 5:2-3).

Sacrificing and laying down my life for the flock (John 10:11, 15).

Saving your flock (Ezekiel 34:22 and Zechariah 9:16).

Searching and seeking the lost ones (Ezekiel 34:11-12, 16 and Luke 15:3-7).

Strengthening the weak (Ezekiel 34:16).

Tenderly folding your flock (John 21:15-17).

What an amazing mission you have!

 

Love from NANCY CAMPBELL
www.aboverubies.org

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