+ 4th Sunday of Easter – April 26th, 2026 +
Series A: Acts 2:42-47; 1 Peter 2:19-25; John 10:1-10
Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church
Milton, WA

In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Life is full of doors. Front doors. Back doors. Sliding doors. Garage doors. Car doors. Little cat and dog doors. Sliding and swooshing doors that make you feel like you’re a Jedi or a wizard. Round doors that lead to holes in the ground. Wardrobe doors that lead you into a new, undiscovered country.
Most doors in life serve an ordinary, yet noble purpose. An entryway. A portal. A sentry. A defense against the wolf outside. A fortress for those inside. A warden against wind and weather.
Life is full of doors. Then Jesus comes along in John 10 and says that he is door full of life for you. He is greater than any other door. He is the door that gives all other doors their door-ness.
“Truly, truly, I say to you, I AM the door of the sheep.
Jesus speaks a living metaphor. Alive, having put the lid on the coffin of sin, death, and Satan. Alive in the light radiating from the open door of his empty tomb. It’s not that he’s like a door. Resembles a door. Or represents a door.
Jesus is the gate.
“Truly, truly, I say to you, I AM the door of the sheep.
Jesus draws upon other doorways in his divine drama. Jesus’ words trace and then fill in with greater color and clarity the promises God has been making all along.
Jesus is the promised Son, born of a woman, who has come ordering the cherubim at the gates of Eden to stand down. Paradise is opened in Him, his promise and passion.
Jesus is the door of Noah’s ark, which kept the water from the gates of the deep and the vault of the heavens at bay, and is now flung wide open after the flood into the new creation.
Jesus is one who opened Jacob’s eyes to see angels ascending and descending around the Son of God as He repeated the promise of Abraham to Jacob. “How awesome is this place! This is none other than the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven.”
Jesus wounds bring us rescue and redemption, deliverance, and a doorway. His pierced hands are the portal, his wounds the wardrobe that opens up into the new creation, the good pastures of his grace and peace. Jesus’ resurrection from the grave is the guarantee and down-payment that our death is but a doorway he leads us through to himself.
“Truly, truly, I say to you, I AM the door of the sheep.
This is what the Pharisees and religious leaders in his day, and in John 10, failed to understand.
Not only did they lack faith in Jesus. But they lacked a liturgical imagination that comes with faith in Christ.
Jesus isn’t teaching us about architecture or agriculture. Jesus is speaking liturgically. Sacrificially.
The way into the temple, into the Father’s presence, into the atonement, into the blood of the Lamb which marks the doorposts is Jesus. Jesus is the door for you. And he leads you to the Father through his sacrifice on the cross.
I am the door. If anyone enters by me, he will be saved and will go in and out and find pasture.
Jesus is the gateway to the temple. And he is the temple. And the sacrifice. The Shepherd King and the who calls, gathers, leads you out of sin, through himself, into his good pasture.
Peter says it this way: He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we might die to sin and live to righteousness. By his wounds you have been healed. For you were straying like sheep, but have now returned to the Shepherd and Overseer of your souls.
Jesus is the gate, the door. The entryway to God’s peace and presence. By wood and blood and nails and spear he leads you into the sheepfold, the temple, the church, the people of God, the flock of the Good Shepherd. There are no other doors. No holes in the wall we can squeeze through on our own.
Try as they will, the Pharisees cannot enter through their own righteousness, rule-keeping, or law-abiding ways. Neither can we.
Jesus calls them thieves, robbers. Wolves in sheep’s clothing. False shepherds. The pharisees only wanted to take. Jesus came to give his life. They steal. He offers his life freely. They kill by their lack of faith and false hopes, false teaching. Jesus’ word is life. They destroy and only offer death. Jesus brings life. Life in abundance. Life eternal. Life in Him who is the door. Life for you.
Jesus is the Door. And Jesus is your Door. Your Gate. The Shepherd who leads you in and out through him. The same doorway he opened in that watery portal of your baptism. Jesus is, and always shall be your door. Your entryway to the fields of salvation. Jesus is your defense against the prowling wolf. Your safe haven is in his wounds.
I am the door. If anyone enters by me, he will be saved and will go in and out and find pasture.
Here he brings us the good grazing on his grace. Here he prepares a table for us that defeats our enemies of sin and death and Satan. Here his cup overflows with goodness and mercy for you. Here, Jesus the Door, opens the way of everlasting life, and salvation for you.
Here, in His house, is where Jesus the Door opens the way of life and throws the gates of his grace and kingdom wide open.
The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. But I came that you may have life and have it abundantly.
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.



