God’s flock needs a shepherd. The lost sheep need someone to seek them. The weak sheep need someone to feed them. All sheep need someone to lead them. So, we see COMPASSION FOR THE SHEEP in this text. “But when He saw the multitudes, He was moved with compassion for them, because they were weary and scattered, like sheep having no shepherd.” (Matt.9:36). The compassionate Shepherd, Jesus Christ is concerned for His flock. May God give is the eyes of Jesus to see the need and the heart of Jesus to seek their care!
Yet, notice what He does not do. He focuses first on the need for more shepherds instead of the immediate needs of more sheep. In His humanity, He had accepted the limitations of a body. His Divine omnipresence had been set aside to embrace the restrictions of a physical presence. While Jesus never ceased to be God, He became man—perfect man.
Now, we are not perfect. If the flesh confined Jesus to one location at a time, then we certainly have those some limits. What is required is not one shepherd running around in a frenzy, collapsing totally exhausted, depressed with the realization that few needs have been met in comparison to the many who had no ministry.
What Jesus said to do was to take the compassion for the sheep and turn it to INTERCESSION FOR MORE SHEPHERDS. “Then He said to His disciples, ‘The harvest truly is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Therefore pray the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into His harvest.’” (Matt.9:37-38).
God’s sheep are everywhere. It is a global field of labor. What we cannot do, God can do, and it is prayer that brings the power of God into human experience. God will use those who shepherd a local congregation to raise up and call to response those He is convicting by His Spirit to answer this call. We need more preachers, more missionaries, more evangelists, more teachers—spiritual leaders of every kind. Doubtless, many shepherds need to do more and can, but they can never do enough alone.
Those shepherds who excel are not merely concerned about adding more sheep to their flock, but multiplying their ministry by raising up many shepherds. It begins with the burden—compassion to see like Jesus—and brings down the blessing—through intercession as Jesus demanded.
Thank God for every baptism a pastor has performed. Rejoice in it. Yet, how many would have been reached, if you had spent more time praying to the Lord of the Harvest and seeing more respond to the call to Gospel ministry?
May God give us compassion that leads to intercession which ends in multiplication!
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