Homily for the
4th Sunday of Easter
April 26, 2026
John 10: 1-10
The Fountains, Tuckahoe
St. Francis Xavier, Bronx
Our Lady of the Assumption, Bronx

Good Shepherd mosaic
(Mausoleum of Galla Placidia, Ravenna)
“The
shepherd calls his own sheep by name and leads them out” (John 10: 3).
From
all the Scripture readings today, you may have figured out that today’s Good
Shepherd Sunday. It’s also World Day of
Prayer for Vocations.
God
gives everyone a vocation, a particular, personal path by which we are to come
to the “verdant pastures” and “restful waters” where we shall be secure for
eternity, “dwelling in the house of the Lord” forever.
For
most of you, that vocation is marriage and family life. For some, it may be a single life devoted to
serving Christ as a teacher, medical professional, or some other form of
contributing to the welfare of society, however glorious or humble that service
may be, so long as it’s done in Christ.
But
our prayer today is especially for those vocations that directly serve the
Church, vocations that take up Christ’s role of shepherding his sheep and
leading them to those green pastures and pure waters. We pray for priests, sisters, deacons,
brothers, and other men and women who are consecrated to God’s service.
God
chooses such people; they don’t decide it on their own. Our prayer is that they may recognize his
choice and respond “yes” to it; and that after responding they may follow his
path faithfully. We pray, then, for the
men who are already bishops, priests, and deacons, the women and men who
already belong to religious orders and other forms of consecrated life. And we are grateful to them for their
commitment to the Lord.
And
we pray that more young women and men will hear God’s call and answer it, to
become shepherds like Jesus, the Good Shepherd, who thru them will care for
God’s flock, keep it safe from thieves and wolves and the enemy of our souls,
and lead the sheep to heaven.
You
know every well how much Jesus needs priests, nuns, deacons, and religious
brothers to lead parishes, teach the faith, care for the sick, counsel the
troubled, preach the Gospel in places where Jesus is unknown. You see how parishes are being closed or
consolidated because there aren’t enuf priests to serve them all. It’s far, far worse in many parts of the
world, where priests travel over huge territories to bring the sacraments to
the faithful perhaps once a month. You
see how Catholic schools have to close because there aren’t enuf sisters and
brothers to staff them at a cost working families can afford. (When I was in Catholic elementary school in
Tampa ca. 1960, I think my parents paid $5 or $10 a month for tuition; the
internet tells me that’s equivalent to about $55 or $110 today—which won’t get
you even a week in Catholic school now.
We have to admit that one reason tuition was so affordable is that nuns
were grossly underpaid back then.)
Is
God not calling young people to his service now? Or are we not listening?
Church
vocations arise out of Catholic families, for the most part. That means that Catholic families have to
foster them, encourage them. If you want
priests and nuns, do more than pray that someone else’s children will answer
the call. Plant the thought in your own
children or grandchildren. Bring them to
church, teach them to pray, and explain our faith to them. Hold up the noble example of priests, sisters,
and deacons you know or know about. Encourage,
but don’t pressure—in any direction, whatever their inclinations or talents
might be.
Of
course, priests, deacons, and sisters, for their part, have to try to be noble
examples—in spite of being sinners, as we all are. And that’s why it’s important that you pray
for us, as we pray for you.
God
doesn’t call men to be priests or women to be sisters because they deserve it
or because they’re talented or because they’re good-looking or for any such
reason. He calls for his own reasons,
which we can’t fathom. And then he
supplies the grace the individual needs so that he or she may be ready and able
to call the Lord’s sheep by name and lead them out, walking ahead of them (John
10:4), guiding and protecting them.








