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Sunday, April 26, 2026

Daily Devotions for Sunday, April 26, 2026: Called by Name, Led in Peace

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The Daily Devotional

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Called by Name, Led in Peace

“My sheep hear my voice. I know them, and they follow me.” — John 10:27

Reflection

The Fourth Sunday of Easter is often called Good Shepherd Sunday, and year after year the Church returns to these tender and steady images: green pastures, still waters, the Shepherd’s voice, the open gate, the flock gathered in safety. In a restless world, these readings offer not urgency, but assurance. Psalm 23 reminds us that the Lord is not distant from our need. John 10 tells us that Christ is not merely a teacher speaking to a crowd, but a Shepherd who knows his own and calls them by name. This is deeply personal language. Jesus does not lead by noise, fear, or force. He leads by presence, by trust, and by a voice his people come to recognize.

That matters because so much of life feels uncertain. We live among many voices. Some call us toward anxiety. Some push us toward bitterness. Some tell us that safety lies in control, that peace comes only if we can manage every detail and foresee every danger. Yet the risen Christ speaks differently. His voice does not stir panic. His voice does not shame the weak or crush the weary. His voice leads. His voice gathers. His voice brings life. Even when the path is narrow, even when the valley is shadowed, even when the future feels hidden from view, the Shepherd remains faithful.

There is something beautiful in the way Jesus speaks of his sheep. He does not say that they are driven ahead from a distance without care. He says that he calls his own by name and leads them out. That is the language of relationship. To be known by Christ is not to be reduced to a number in a crowd or a problem to be solved. It is to be seen fully and loved still. It is to belong. The Shepherd knows the fears we hide, the burdens we carry, the griefs we do not always name aloud, and even the secret weariness that settles into the soul after long seasons of strain. And still he says, in effect, “Come with me. Stay near. I will lead you.”

A simple everyday picture helps bring this home. Imagine a traveler driving at night along unfamiliar roads in a rural place. The signs are fewer now. The cell signal is weak. The darkness is thick beyond the reach of the headlights. At every fork in the road there is hesitation. Every wrong turn seems costly. But then the traveler hears the calm voice of someone trusted riding beside them: “Not this road. Take the next turn. Stay left here. You’re all right. Keep going. We’re almost there.” The darkness does not vanish all at once. The road does not become broad and easy in an instant. But fear begins to loosen its grip because the traveler is no longer relying on guesswork alone. A trusted voice changes the journey.

So it is with Christ. Often he does not hand us a full map of the future. Often he gives only enough light for the next faithful step. Yet his guidance is not less real because it is daily. In fact, it is often in the daily nearness of Christ that we learn trust. He teaches us not merely to admire the image of the Shepherd, but to live as people who listen for him. We hear his voice in Scripture. We hear it as the Holy Spirit presses truth into our hearts. We hear it when his words call us back from resentment, pride, despair, or fear. We hear it when he leads us toward mercy, patience, honesty, and hope. The Shepherd’s care is not abstract. It meets us in decisions, in relationships, in ordinary burdens, and in quiet mornings when we wonder how we will make it through the day.

The reading from Acts shows what life under the Shepherd’s care can begin to look like in community. The believers devoted themselves to teaching, fellowship, breaking bread, and prayer. They shared what they had. They praised God with glad and generous hearts. This was not perfection, but it was the visible fruit of being gathered by Christ. Sheep who hear the Shepherd’s voice do not simply survive as isolated souls; they are drawn into a life of mutual care. That too is part of abundant life. Christ leads us not only beside still waters for our own comfort, but into a people among whom his peace becomes visible.

The brief historical remembrance of John Calvin’s passing on April 26, 1564, can quietly serve this day’s theme. Whatever one’s tradition, Calvin’s life reflected a serious trust in the authority of Scripture and the sovereignty of God. Beneath the theological rigor was a conviction that believers are safest not in their own wisdom, but under the faithful rule and mercy of God. That truth still steadies the heart. The Shepherd’s voice is trustworthy because the Shepherd himself is trustworthy. We are not preserved by the strength of our grip on him, but by the steadiness of his hold on us.

That is good news for weary Christians. Some today may feel lost. Some may feel battered by the world’s harshness. Some may be carrying regrets, grief, or confusion about what comes next. Good Shepherd Sunday does not tell us to pretend the shadows are not real. Psalm 23 speaks honestly about dark valleys. First Peter speaks of suffering and of Christ bearing our wounds. But the gospel promise is that we do not walk these roads alone. The Shepherd has gone before us. The gate stands open in him. The risen Christ still calls his people by name, and his voice still leads toward life.

So today, listen for the familiar voice of Jesus. Return to the Shepherd who does not exploit, scatter, or abandon. Trust the One who leads with scars in his hands and mercy in his heart. Follow him in the next small act of faithfulness. Rest in his care when the road feels uncertain. He knows you. He has not forgotten you. And under his steady shepherding, even anxious hearts can learn again to walk in peace.

Prayer

Good Shepherd, risen Lord Jesus, thank you for knowing us by name and for leading us with patience, mercy, and love. When we are anxious, quiet our hearts. When we are uncertain, teach us to trust your voice above all others. Gather the scattered, strengthen the weary, comfort the wounded, and lead us in paths of peace and faithfulness. Help us to rest in your care, to follow where you lead, and to become people through whom your gentleness and goodness are seen in the world. Keep us near to you, and bring us ever more deeply into the abundant life you promise. Amen.


Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA

The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.