Why Are We Poor Little Lambs Who Have Lost Our Way?

November 30, 2017 Off By Donna Wuerch

Remember singing “We’re poor little lambs who have lost our way. Baa, baa, baa”? That little song represents many of us who wander off from their shepherd.
The cartoon here is funny but, the message is clear and VERY real to our lives. Jesus said, “My sheep listen to my voice, and I know them, and they follow me:” John 10:27. Wonder if He had in mind how difficult “listening for His voice” would be in 2017, and especially at this time of the year? More than ever, we really need to hear His voice. We need His wisdom, comfort, guidance, peace, and direction. Of course, we long to hear His voice, but in the busy-ness, the clamor and the many activities and distractions of everyday life, we may often, be hard-pressed to find that quiet PLACE to hear the voice of our Shepherd. Even when we manage to find that place, “noise” — our cell phones, emails (so many advertisements that beckon us to call now, buy now, order now), radios, computers, TV, etc. — keep us distracted from hearing our Shepherd’s voice.

It’s time to find that place where His voice comes through loud and clear to us. He has that place — and we can find it, but it’s up to us, to disregard the distractions to “Be still — to hear and know our God.” I’m not referring to a far off island in the middle of no-where. It’s possible to find that place, if only for a few minutes in our day, to “Come away with Him”!

What if everything we’re needing — the decisions we need to make, what job we should take; what school our kids should go to; what diet or fitness routine we should be on; what part of town we should live in, etc. All of these answers, and more, are found and answered by our Shepherd. If “The Lord is my Shepherd, He promised, I would never want.” so maybe we need to “tune-in” to our Shepherd, and “tune-out” what’s NOT!

Before the little shepherd boy David became King David, he wrote Psalm 23. He was where there were no distractions, other than the lion and the bear, but because he had been in the quiet green pastures with HIS Shepherd, he could take on the distractions with a fervor and defeat them. What if we hung out in the “green pastures” of our Good Shepherd? If we did, the distractions and the opposing forces that come to defeat us, would be silenced and rendered “null and void”. We would sing with David “The Lord is MY Shepherd. There is NOTHING that I want.”