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Emphasis

Fourth Sunday of Easter - A

Wayne Brouwer
"A grave is a sobering thing," said Wordsworth. We try to mark each with snippets of meaning that will defuse the scandalous superficiality of life that Emily bemoaned in Thornton Wilder's Our Town. "If I was so quickly done for," asks the wee voice etched on a child's grave memorial, "what on earth was I begun for?"
Schuyler Rhodes
Remember the movie, Field of Dreams? Kevin Costner plays the lead role of an Iowa farmer named Ray Kinsella who is haunted by a voice that says to him, "Build it and they will come." After several sleepless nights Ray (Kevin) finally figures out what "it" is --"it" is a baseball diamond. Ray, much to the consternation of his wife, begins plowing down his cornfield and spends what little money the family has to build a lighted ball field -- in the middle of Iowa!

Once built, players from the infamous 1919 Chicago Black Sox baseball team begin to show up. The team had thrown a World Series game that year and were banished for life from baseball. Ray's field was their chance at redemption and Ray's chance to confront the demons of a bad relationship with his father. The...
R. Craig Maccreary
People have all sorts of travel styles. I am constantly amazed at those who can just pick up and go on their journeys with minimal amounts of preparation and packing. For me, even the simplest of journeys requires hours of preparation. When recent security concerns required the average traveler to show up at the airport hours before their planned flight I remained largely unaffected. I had been doing that for years. You never know when a mix up might land you at the wrong place or the wrong time. It is best to allow time just in case. Requiring a passport for all air travel was no big deal for me. I have had one for years in which I slip the phone number of the American Counsel at my destination. You just never know. Currency exchange required: done before I leave the...
Remember the movie, Field of Dreams, from a few years back? Kevin Kostner plays the lead role of an Iowa farmer named Ray Kinsella who is haunted by a voice that says to him, "Build it and they will come." After several sleepless nights Ray (Kevin) finally figures out what "it" is --"it" is a baseball diamond. Ray, much to the consternation of his wife, begins plowing down his cornfield and spends what little money the family has to build a lighted ball field -- in the middle of Iowa!

Once built, players from the infamous 1919 Chicago Black Sox baseball team begin to show up. This team had thrown a World Series game of that year and were banished for life from baseball. Ray's field was their chance at redemption and Ray's chance to confront the demons of a bad relationship with...
We do not give much thought to shepherds and sheep these days. Many preachers dread the lessons for this Sunday because they cannot -- rightly -- bring themselves to continue the analogy of the Scriptures that the people are sheep. To so portray human beings as animals -- not even animals in the first cars on the brain train -- is an insult to us modern folks who pride ourselves in making our own decisions and exercising our freedom. Besides, how many of our listeners have ever seen a sheep except on a mural above the altar in Jesus' arms or in the movie Babe?

Two of the lessons for today -- the second and the Gospel in addition to the Psalm -- take us smack into the ancient world of sheep and shepherds. As they do, they focus not so much on the sheep as on the Shepherd...

Three weeks after Easter, the "Fourth Sunday of Easter," ought to be a time in which the glow of Easter morning, the odors of the garden, the bread of the upper room, the ecstasy of being around in the face of divine disclosure ought to have kept its sway.

Not so: almost immediately, for all the living hope and holy awe, for all the mutual support and gladness of heart, the disciples get reintroduced to the real world. Often this takes the shape of being alert to outsiders who would deceive them, would tear apart their communities. At other times it seems as if civil authorities are persecuting them. Certainly they are religious deluders and challengers.

What this all amounts to: Easter and the preaching of the resurrection is not a one-shot venture. The...
Wayne Brouwer
There are two themes that run through the passages for today. On the one hand there is the "Call of the Wild" (like Jack London's 1903 novel), in which we are commanded to follow our Shepherd Jesus through what might be trackless wastes and difficult places in responding to the great challenge of faith. On the other hand, there is the "Call of the Safe" (like Larry Crabb's great book on small groups, The Safest Place on Earth [Word, 1999]), which places us in the middle of a community of care and grace.

George MacDonald helps us understand both of these homing calls in his children's tale, "Papa's Story." Papa tells of a shepherd who brings his flock home late on a stormy evening. One lamb is missing, however. So, after supper, the shepherd calls for Jumper the dog,...
Wayne Brouwer
Thomas Long told about the examination of ministerial candidates in a North Carolina presbytery. One elderly minister always kept quiet through the bulk of the ordeals, according to Long, and then invariably asked the same final set of questions just at the close of each examination.

“Look out that window,” he would order the candidates. “Tell me when you see someone walking out there.” So they did. When someone walked by he would say, “Now, describe that person to me theologically.”

Each person’s answer would be a bit different from the others, of course. Yet they consistently could be reduced to just two basic ideas. One group of ministers-to-be would say something like “Well, there goes a sinner who is on his way to hell unless he repents!”

...
Mark Ellingsen
God takes charge! This is “Good Shepherd Sunday.” It is a Sunday for celebrating the various ways in which God has been in charge.

Acts 2:42-47
The First Lesson is a report of the concluding events of the day of Pentecost, part of the second half of a two-part history of the church (the first half being the Gospel of Luke) traditionally attributed to Luke, a physician and Gentile associate of Paul (Colossians 4:14; 2 Timothy 4:11; Philemon 24). The author’s concern is to stress the universal mission of the church (1:8) and so to validate the ministry of Paul. There is also a concern in both Acts and Luke to stress the work of the Holy Spirit.
Wayne Brouwer
You remember the story... Abraham was a great old man, probably 125 or so! God had come to him in the past in strange and wonderful ways. When he wore a younger man’s clothes, the VOICE had called him on a journey with no fixed destination. But the beckoning was always one of blessing: “I’ll give you land beyond measure! I’ll make sure you have a child, old as you are! Your descendants will populate these hills and valleys like rain!”

Well, the land sort of took him in. Moreover, after some fits and starts, he and Sarai did get a child. And even though his pension plan was still not entirely clear, life in these later years was peaceful and prosperous. After all, there was Isaac. His boy’s name meant “laughter!” and that’s certainly what he brought Abraham these days. Life had...

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For over 45 years, Emphasis has provided subscribers with scripturally sound, lectionary-based commentaries and sermon illustrations that connect with the people in the pews.

For each week, Emphasis writers delve into the heart of the lectionary readings, providing you with several fresh, solid ideas -- based squarely on the lectionary texts -- for creating sermons that speak powerfully to your audience. They look for overall themes that hold the readings together. Then, they zero in on the themes and the specific scripture links, suggesting directions for the sermon and worship service. Since a single idea each week may not provide what you are looking for at that particular time, writers suggest several, giving you the opportunity to select the one that matches your specific needs.

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New & Featured This Week

The Immediate Word

Dean Feldmeyer
Christopher Keating
Thomas Willadsen
Katy Stenta
Mary Austin
George Reed
Nazish Naseem
For April 26, 2026:
  • The Master’s Voice by Dean Feldmeyer. Jesus is the shepherd who calls us by name to follow him into his kingdom.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
During World War II, a number of British regiments from this part of East Anglia were sent to the Far East. Many young men were taken prisoner by the Japanese, and were incarcerated in Japanese prisoner of war camps.

Their treatment in these camps was brutal, and many lost their lives. Those who survived until the end of the War emerged emaciated, beaten, traumatised and often cowed.

StoryShare

David O. Bales
Larry Winebrenner
Contents
"These Christians and Their Money" by David O. Bales
"Shepherds and Thieves" by Larry Winebrenner
"The Cry and the Answer" by Larry Winebrenner


* * * * * * * *


These Christians and Their Money
by David O. Bales
Acts 2:42-47
C. David Mckirachan
Keith Hewitt
Contents
"Tea and Crumpets Committee" by C. David McKirachan
"Too Good to Be True" by Keith Hewitt


* * * * * * *


Tea and Crumpets Committee
by C. David McKirachan
Acts 2:42-47

SermonStudio

Carlos Wilton
(See Lent 4, Cycle A, and Easter 4, Cycles B and C, for alternative approaches.)

It is one of the best-known and best-loved passages of the Bible. Generations have memorized it, in Sunday school or at the knee of parents or grandparents. It is one of the first Bible passages we learn, and -- as common as it is at funerals -- it is among the last words said over us when we die. Psalm 23 has been a source of strength and comfort for many.
William E. Keeney
"Very truly, I tell you, anyone who does not enter the sheepfold by the gate but climbs in by another way is a thief and a bandit. 2The one who enters by the gate is the shepherd of the sheep. 3The gatekeeper opens the gate for him, and the sheep hear his voice. He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out. 4When he has brought out all his own, he goes ahead of them, and the sheep follow him because they know his voice.
Russell F. Anderson
BRIEF COMMENTARY ON THE LESSONS

Lesson 1: Acts 2:42--47 (C); Acts 2:14, 36--41 (RC)
(Look at Lesson 1 for Easter 3)

Lesson 1: Acts 6:1--9; 7:2a, 51--60 (E, L)
Tony S. Everett
The week before classes began, Harold, a high school history teacher, fell off a step ladder and injured his back. For the next three months he was forced to wear a plaster cast around the entire upper part of his body. The cast fit so well underneath his shirt and sport coat that it was not at all noticeable.
David O. Bales
Last summer my wife and I enjoyed visiting our friends Dick and Mary in Montana. They have about 45 quarter horses and they were thrilled to show us the herd and take us along one evening to feed them. That evening we also helped get a three-month-old filly into the barn in order to medicate a cut on her face. The filly was a little skittish, but we got her into the barn and into a large stall and then Dick tried to get a halter on her head to hold her still in order to clean and medicate the cut.
Robert J. Elder
Now here is what I often think of as a passage of scripture with high potential for use as a brick--bat. At least it is often employed that way by folks who think the way the church moves ahead is by making people feel guilty and bad about things that are not their fault. Sometimes preachers read this and find it almost too tempting to stand before their congregations and extol the glories of the church in the New Testament version of the "good old days," so that everyone pretty much feels extra lousy that the good old days appear to be long--gone enough as to be well nigh unrecoverable.
Albert G. Butzer, III
I know a woman who says that her husband has a listening problem. Incidentally, this is not autobiographical. To be sure, he does have a hearing problem and wears hearing aids to compensate, but his real problem - at least according to his wife - is not a hearing problem but a listening problem. She says to him, "I'm going to the store, so would you please turn the oven to 350 degrees at 5:30 and put in the casserole." "Sure," he replies, "no problem." But when she comes home, the dinner is still cold. By the way, did I remember to tell you that this is not autobiographical!
Richard E. Gribble, CSC
Once upon a time, a great and loving king ruled over a vast territory. There was something very strange about this kingdom, however. Everything was the same. The people ate the same food, drank the same drink, wore the same clothes, and lived in the same type of homes. The people even did all the same work. There was another oddity about this place. Everything was gray - the food, the drink, the clothes, the houses; there were no other colors.
Wayne H. Keller
A Celebration Of Resurrection

Invitation to the Easter Celebration
Amy C. Schifrin
Martha Shonkwiler
Prayer Of The Day
P: Gracious Father, you sent your Son so that we might have life and have it abundantly. May we seek such goodness in our lives and desire it for others, so that gathered as one flock, all people would find their rest in our great shepherd, Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, now and forever.
C: Amen.

Intercessory Prayers
Begin each new petition with:
Shepherd of our hearts ...
Shepherd of our communities ...
Shepherd of our nations ...
Shepherd of our churches ...

Emphasis Preaching Journal

Wayne Brouwer
There are two themes that run through the passages for today. On the one hand there is the "Call of the Wild" (like Jack London's 1903 novel), in which we are commanded to follow our Shepherd Jesus through what might be trackless wastes and difficult places in responding to the great challenge of faith. On the other hand, there is the "Call of the Safe" (like Larry Crabb's great book on small groups, The Safest Place on Earth [Word, 1999]), which places us in the middle of a community of care and grace.
R. Craig Maccreary
People have all sorts of travel styles. I am constantly amazed at those who can just pick up and go on their journeys with minimal amounts of preparation and packing. For me, even the simplest of journeys requires hours of preparation. When recent security concerns required the average traveler to show up at the airport hours before their planned flight I remained largely unaffected. I had been doing that for years. You never know when a mix up might land you at the wrong place or the wrong time. It is best to allow time just in case.

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Good morning! Do you like stories? (get responses) Jesus told stories like this a lot. Sometimes when he wanted to teach people about things that were complicated, he would tell them a story about something they already knew about. Talking about something familiar to them helped them understand something unfamiliar.
When he has brought out all of his own, he goes ahead of them, and the sheep follow him because they know his voice. (v. 4)

Good morning, boys and girls. Jesus thought of himself as a shepherd. Do you know what a shepherd does? (let them answer) That's right, a shepherd watches and protects sheep. Jesus must have known a lot about shepherds because he taught us that sheep trust the shepherd with their lives. When a shepherd speaks, the sheep listen. The sheep know the shepherd's voice and follow him to safety.
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