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John 10:15 is where the Good Shepherd imagery opens into something deeper than metaphor. Jesus says, “Even as the Father knows me, and I know the Father, I lay down my life for the sheep.” In this episode, we explore how Jesus roots His care for you in His relationship with the Father, and why that matters when your inner world is tired, suspicious, or still bracing for rejection.
This is not Jesus being kind in a sentimental way. This is divine communion spilling over into divine care. The knowing Jesus describes is not surface level awareness. It is covenant knowing, steady love, faithful presence. And when He connects that knowing to laying down His life, He anchors the goodness of God in the cross. Not as a last minute solution, but as the unified heart of the Father and the Son made visible.
We also talk about how this changes spiritual formation. If you try to change without grace, you end up proud or crushed. But when you live from the self giving love of Jesus, your soul becomes safer. Repentance becomes honest instead of anxious. Obedience becomes trust instead of striving. And worship becomes steady attention to what is true about God, not performance to earn what you already have in Christ.
If you have ever wondered whether God is reluctant, distant, or only tolerating you, John 10:15 answers with clarity. The Shepherd’s voice is rooted in the Father’s heart, and His leadership is marked by sacrifice, not extraction.
By Ryan LocheJohn 10:15 is where the Good Shepherd imagery opens into something deeper than metaphor. Jesus says, “Even as the Father knows me, and I know the Father, I lay down my life for the sheep.” In this episode, we explore how Jesus roots His care for you in His relationship with the Father, and why that matters when your inner world is tired, suspicious, or still bracing for rejection.
This is not Jesus being kind in a sentimental way. This is divine communion spilling over into divine care. The knowing Jesus describes is not surface level awareness. It is covenant knowing, steady love, faithful presence. And when He connects that knowing to laying down His life, He anchors the goodness of God in the cross. Not as a last minute solution, but as the unified heart of the Father and the Son made visible.
We also talk about how this changes spiritual formation. If you try to change without grace, you end up proud or crushed. But when you live from the self giving love of Jesus, your soul becomes safer. Repentance becomes honest instead of anxious. Obedience becomes trust instead of striving. And worship becomes steady attention to what is true about God, not performance to earn what you already have in Christ.
If you have ever wondered whether God is reluctant, distant, or only tolerating you, John 10:15 answers with clarity. The Shepherd’s voice is rooted in the Father’s heart, and His leadership is marked by sacrifice, not extraction.