“Shepherd
The Flock Marked For Slaughter”
This is what the Lord my God says: “Shepherd the flock
marked for slaughter. Their buyers slaughter them and go unpunished. Those who
sell them say, ‘Praise the Lord,
I am rich!’ Their own shepherds do not spare them. For I will no longer have
pity on the people of the land,” declares the Lord.
“I will give everyone into the hands of their neighbors and their king. They
will devastate the land, and I will not rescue anyone from their hands.”
So I shepherded the flock marked for slaughter, particularly
the oppressed of the flock. Then I took two staffs and called one Favor and the
other Union, and I shepherded the flock. In one month
I got rid of the three shepherds.
The flock detested me, and I grew
weary of them and said, “I will not be your shepherd. Let the
dying die, and the perishing perish. Let those who are left eat one another’s
flesh.”
Then I took my staff called Favor
and broke it, revoking the covenant I had made with all the nations. It was
revoked on that day, and so the oppressed of the flock who were watching me
knew it was the word of the Lord.
I told them, “If you think it best,
give me my pay; but if not, keep it.” So they paid me
thirty pieces of silver.
And the Lord said to me, “Throw it to the potter”—the handsome price
at which they valued me! So I took the thirty pieces
of silver and threw them to the potter at the house of the Lord.
Zechariah
11:4-13
Now an
accomplished writer, Caitlin describes the depression she battled after
fighting off an assault. The emotional violence cut deeper than her physical
struggle, for she felt it proved “how undesirable I was. I was not the kind of
girl you wanted to get to know.” She felt unworthy of love, the kind of person
others use and toss aside.
God
understands. He lovingly shepherded Israel, but when He asked them what He was
worth, “they paid me thirty pieces of silver” (Zechariah 11:12). This was the
price of a slave; what masters must be reimbursed should their slave be
accidentally killed (Exodus 21:32). God was insulted to be offered the lowest
possible value—look at “the handsome price at which they valued me!” He said
sarcastically (Zechariah 11:13). And He had Zechariah throw the money
away.
Jesus
understands. He wasn’t merely betrayed by His friend; He was betrayed with
contempt. The Jewish leaders despised Christ, so they offered Judas thirty
pieces of silver—the lowest price you could put on a person—and he took it
(Matthew 26:14–15; 27:9). Judas thought so little of Jesus he sold Him for
nearly nothing.
If people
undervalued Jesus, don’t be surprised when they undervalue you. Your value
isn’t what others say. It’s not even what you say. It’s entirely and only what
God says. He thinks you are worth dying for.
How
would you describe your value? Who can you help to grasp true value?
I’m grateful that I’m valued by You,
God!
Our Daily Bread – December 16, 2019