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In this transition episode of Formation to Transformation, Ryan Loche walks back through the “Good Shepherd” thread we’ve been tracing verse by verse, and explains why it matters for real life and real formation.
We began in Psalm 23 because it is not background poetry. It’s a confession that retrains your reflexes, reshapes what you reach for under pressure, and anchors you in the steady care of God in valleys, conflict, and uncertainty. Then we moved into John 10:1–18 because Psalm 23 gives the picture, and Jesus gives the person. In John 10, Jesus does not borrow shepherd language for comfort. He claims it, clarifies the difference between shepherd voices and thief voices, and grounds God’s goodness in sacrifice: “The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.”
Now we’re capping the shepherd theme in John 20 with Mary Magdalene, because this is where theology becomes embodied. In the garden, in grief, in confusion, the risen Jesus speaks one word, “Mary,” and everything Jesus said about voice, recognition, and being known comes to life. Resurrection is not only a doctrine. Resurrection is presence. Jesus is still shepherding, still calling, still gathering what has been scattered.
If you’ve been walking with us through Psalm 23 and John 10, this episode sets up why John 20 is the landing point of the whole arc: the Shepherd who laid down His life is alive, near, and personal.
By Ryan LocheIn this transition episode of Formation to Transformation, Ryan Loche walks back through the “Good Shepherd” thread we’ve been tracing verse by verse, and explains why it matters for real life and real formation.
We began in Psalm 23 because it is not background poetry. It’s a confession that retrains your reflexes, reshapes what you reach for under pressure, and anchors you in the steady care of God in valleys, conflict, and uncertainty. Then we moved into John 10:1–18 because Psalm 23 gives the picture, and Jesus gives the person. In John 10, Jesus does not borrow shepherd language for comfort. He claims it, clarifies the difference between shepherd voices and thief voices, and grounds God’s goodness in sacrifice: “The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.”
Now we’re capping the shepherd theme in John 20 with Mary Magdalene, because this is where theology becomes embodied. In the garden, in grief, in confusion, the risen Jesus speaks one word, “Mary,” and everything Jesus said about voice, recognition, and being known comes to life. Resurrection is not only a doctrine. Resurrection is presence. Jesus is still shepherding, still calling, still gathering what has been scattered.
If you’ve been walking with us through Psalm 23 and John 10, this episode sets up why John 20 is the landing point of the whole arc: the Shepherd who laid down His life is alive, near, and personal.