Transforming Lives Bible Radio Show
EP #204 — “Relationship: Shepherd and the Sheep”Host: Dr. Bishop Virginia Singleton (Dr. V)
Scripture Focus: John 10:1–5; 1 Corinthians 11:1Broadcast: Tuesdays at 8:00 PM EST | Positive Power XXI Christian Media
Episode DescriptionIn this teaching episode, Dr. Bishop Virginia Singleton explores the biblical foundation for a healthy spiritual covering and discipleship through the theme: “Relationship: Shepherd and the Sheep.” Using John 10:1–5, Dr. V explains how the true shepherd enters by the door, calls the sheep by name, and leads with clarity—while thieves, robbers, and strangers represent false leadership, manipulation, and spiritual danger.
Anchoring the lesson with 1 Corinthians 11:1, Dr. V highlights the role of godly leadership: believers should follow leaders only insofar as those leaders faithfully follow Christ. This episode is both a warning and an invitation—calling listeners to deepen their relationship with Jesus Christ, the Good Shepherd, and to recognize the difference between spiritual guidance and spiritual control.
Opening Moments
- Dr. V welcomes listeners back and invites the audience to worship with her at Divine Church of Deliverance (Florence, SC).
- She expresses gratitude for listeners and acknowledges Jerry Royce Live / Positive Power XXI Christian Media for providing a platform for the Word.
- The episode opens with heartfelt prayer—asking God to cleanse, empower, and prepare listeners’ hearts to receive the Word.
Key Scriptures Read
Corinthians 11:1
“Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ.”Dr. V’s emphasis: Follow leadership that models Christ, not leadership that seeks power, applause, or control.
John 10:1–5
- The door
- The sheepfold
- The shepherd’s voice
- Calling the sheep by name
- Refusing the voice of strangers
Teaching Outline
1) The Foundation: Following Leadership With Discernment (1 Corinthians 11:1)Dr. V explains Paul’s instruction to the Corinthian church:
- Spiritual leadership is meant to be imitated only when it imitates Christ.
- A leader’s role is not to make followers dependent on the leader, but to point people to Jesus.
- Dr. V warns that some leadership can become dangerous when people begin treating the leader as the “source” rather than Christ.
Takeaway: You can respect leadership—but your devotion belongs to Jesus.
2) The Sheepfold and the Door: How True Shepherds Enter (John 10:1–2)
Dr. V breaks down Jesus’ teaching:
- Anyone who tries to enter the sheepfold “another way” is identified as a thief and a robber.
- False leaders may “backdoor” their way into influence through:
- manipulation
- force (spiritual pressure)
- confusion
- control tactics
- exploitation of followers’ trust
Dr. V clarifies that spiritual violence can occur when leaders persuade people to advance their personal agendas rather than God’s Word.
Takeaway: Where the entry is wrong, the leadership will be wrong.
3) Marks of a True ShepherdDr. V outlines qualities of a godly shepherd/pastor:
- Divinely called and appointed—not self-made.
- Motivated by consecration, not personal gain
- Protects the flock instead of exploiting them
- Teaches truth with clarity and responsibility
- Serves with sacrifice and love
- Knows the people and carries their burdens with compassion
Dr. V stresses: Shepherds don’t “own” God’s people. The flock still belongs to God.
Takeaway:
True leadership reflects God’s heart, not ego.
4) “He Calls His Own Sheep By Name” (John 10:3)Dr. V emphasizes that the relationship is personal, not generic:
- Shepherds know their flock and can call them by name.
- Sheep respond to their shepherd because they recognize trust and familiarity.
- Spiritual growth is often tied to consistent, accountable spiritual covering, with clear, safe communication.
Takeaway:
The sheep respond to the voice because there is a relationship.
5) Why the Shepherd Goes Before the Sheep (John 10:4)
Dr. V explains that shepherds lead from the front:
- They guide the sheep toward good pasture and safe water.
- The sheep follow because they trust the direction and recognize the voice.
- A shepherd cannot lead effectively from behind if the flock cannot clearly follow.
Takeaway: Godly leadership doesn’t push people—it leads people.
6) “A Stranger Will They Not Follow” (John 10:5)
A major warning in this episode:
- Sheep flee from strangers because they do not recognize their voice.
- Dr. V connects this to discernment:
- believers must learn the voice of Christ
- and avoid being pulled by voices that confuse, flatter, manipulate, or divide
She addresses the danger of becoming “leader hoppers”—moving from voice to voice until you lose spiritual clarity.
Takeaway:
A strong relationship with the Shepherd protects you from strange voices.
Supporting Scriptures Highlighted
Jeremiah 23:1–4 — God Against False Shepherds
Dr. V references God’s judgment against leaders who:
- scatter the sheep
- neglect them
- fail to visit or care for them
- destroy spiritual stability
But God also promises restoration—He will set faithful shepherds over the flock, and the people will no longer live in fear or lack.
John 10:10–15 — The Good Shepherd vs. the Hireling
Dr. V contrasts two kinds of leadership:
The Good Shepherd
- gives life
- sacrifices
- protects
- knows the sheep
The Hireling
- runs when danger comes
- cares more about payment than people
- abandons the sheep in crisis
- allows wolves to scatter the flock
Key line: “The hireling flees because he is a hireling, and cares not for the sheep.”
Luke 4:18–19 — The Shepherd’s Ministry
Dr. V connects shepherding to Christ’s mission:
- preach the gospel to the poor
- heal the brokenhearted
- proclaim deliverance
- restore sight
- set the bruised free
Takeaway: A shepherd’s role is restoration—not condemnation.
Salvation Invitation and Heart Check
Dr. V invites listeners to make a decision:
- Develop a relationship with Jesus Christ now.
- Tomorrow isn’t promised.
- Jesus is forgiving and full of mercy.
- Confession restores fellowship
She closes with 1 John 1:8–10 (NIV), emphasizing that:
- Denying sin is self-deception.
- confession brings cleansing
- God is faithful to forgive
Dr. V also references David’s posture of repentance (Psalm 51 theme):
“Create in me a clean heart… take not Your Holy Spirit from me.”
Episode Highlights
- How to identify true spiritual leadership
- Why sheep must recognize the shepherd’s voice
- The danger of manipulation and spiritual control
- Why does a relationship protect believers from deception?
- The call to stop drifting and deepen consistency in Christ
- A clear invitation to salvation and restored fellowship with God
Practical ApplicationThis week’s walk-through:
- Ask God: “Who have You assigned to watch over my soul?”
- Test every voice you follow against Scripture and the character of Christ.
- Strengthen your spiritual discernment through prayer and consistent intake of the Word.
- If you’ve drifted, return relationship can be restored.
Closing
Dr. V thanks listeners, her supporters, her church family, and her husband. She encourages the audience to stay connected for the next program (Da Testimony with Paula Brion) and reminds everyone:
God loves you. God forgives you. Develop a relationship—because that’s what He desires.