SHEPHERD DOG
« The thief
comes to steal and kill and destroy »…
John 10, 10
A frightening thing tumbles
down the mountain and sends flying clouds of dust. It’s like a hairy rocket
with a smoldering look which slavers and shows fearsome teeth. It barks like a
devil and jumps into the air, trying to eat us alive, my horse and I.
That thing is a shepherd dog
that watches over the sheep, takes their defense and protects them. It never allows anyone to come near the flock,
neither a wolf, nor a weasel; no one except the shepherd. Never in my life had
I ever seen an animal neither so furious nor so devoted to other animals.
To transform it into a
fearsome defender of sheep, the puppy immediately at birth is taken away from
its mother and entrusted to an ewe that suckle it like she would her own lambs.
In that way, the puppy, while remaining a dog, becomes the brother of the
sheep, if not by blood, at least by milk.
The Pope said to the
priests: Be near the people, near the poor like a shepherd is with his sheep. Make sure that you smell like sheep…
And I would add: let us be inspired by the shepherd
dog.
Let us put aside that model
of those little teachers and bureaucrats in charge of holy things on which most
priests of our generation were cut out. At all cost, that style has to change. For the Nicodemuses
of a certain age, it could be rather an impossible
mission, but not for the younger generation.
Let us free our future
pastors and pastoral agents from the ancient moulds which are excessively
academic and monastic and make sure that they get their formation by mixing
with everybody, especially with the poor, the little ones, those put aside and
excluded.
May they draw the
inspiration of their spirituality from what the wounded and those marginalized
in society are living, suffering and are hoping for. May they be infected with
their pain and their anger, their hopes and their joys. May the vast world
situated under the little middle class become their world; and may they stick
to them like the world of the sheep to the shepherd dog. May they build their theology from that point
of departure instead of receiving it already cooked in the cloisters of our
church institutions.
Of what Gospel will they be
witnesses if they do not practice themselves to look at the world with the eyes
of the poor and of the marginalized, with their thirsts, their dreams and also
their anger?
These future pastors must at
all cost learn to bare their teeth in the defense of the little ones and be
ready to swallow (with the horse and all) the injustice which, each day, is taking
the shirt off their back. Most especially, they have to learn to detect the
gross dupery of the great system which presents itself to humanity and to the
planet as the remedy for all evils when it is in itself the main cause of it
all.
This story of a shepherd
dog, of course, is only a metaphor. Human beings are not sheep and the pastor
is not a dog. Jesus who said «blessed are the meek» would certainly not appreciate
seeing his disciples transform themselves into ferocious animals like that
enraged dog which I have described earlier…
Yet, let us remember at
least what follows: Jesus and the prophets (who did not sniff at metaphors) had
their heart overflowing with compassion and love for peace, but they were never
afraid of barking.
We also, at times, we bark, but
who exactly do we frighten: the nasty wolves or…only the sheep which bleat in
their own way?
Eloy
Roy
Este artículo es digno de un premio Nobel de literatura.
ReplyDeleteGracias por tan bellas reflexión Eloy. Sois un genio con la secreta. Rezo por ti. Espero dios de bendiga muchísimo para q sigas pues con mucha salud. Saludos desde Kenya nene. Abrazos Che..