Running head: SHEEP AND SHEPHERD
New Testament Background: Sheep and Shepherd
Elizabeth M. Cole
Big Sandy Community and Technical College
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Introduction
In the United States, very few people have experienced or witnessed live sheep and lambs,
a shepherd, or know anything about shepherding. I chose this topic to learn more about it myself
and to share this information with others, to help them comprehend and appreciate the meaning
in the New Testament.
Sheep
Sheep were one of the most common domesticated farm animals during Bible times. There
are over five hundred mentions of sheep in the Bible; most of the Old Testament references are
literal, and almost all the New Testament references are metaphorical, with Christ as the
shepherd and his followers as the flock (Kohler-Rollefson, 2011).
The earliest evidence for domestication of sheep dates back to 9000 BCE. Wild sheep do
not have significant wool, so sheep were not utilized for wool production until 4000 BCE
(Kohler-Rollefson, 2011). They were raised not only for their meat, but also wool, milk and
dairy products (yogurt, butter, cheese), skins (fleeces), bones, and horns, and dung (Borowski,
Sheep, 2000). Horns were used as containers for oil and as musical instruments (Kohler-
Rollefson, 2011). In fact, we call some modern wind instruments “horns” because of this ancient
origin from the sheep’s horn.
Sheep prefer flat or slightly hilly, rolling grassy land, and they graze on grasses and plants
down to the root (Kohler-Rollefson, 2011). They can graze on the barley and wheat fields of
stubble after harvest time (Kohler-Rollefson, 2011). Much of the land in Israel and surrounding
areas has adequate grass cover to support sheep grazing; even the desert can become pasture land
after the rainy season, when it blooms (McKenzie, 1995). Sheep need to be watered only once a
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day (McKenzie, 1995), and perhaps twice a day in morning and evening in the heat of the
summer (Borowski, Herding, 2000).
The ordinary Israelite or Jew would only eat mutton at a festival (McKenzie, 1995), not on
a daily basis (Borowski, Sheep, 2000). The male sheep or ram was the sacrificial animal, and the
fat was esteemed as nutritious and a delicacy (McKenzie, 1995). Today, we look to reduce fat in
our diets, but in biblical times, it was a challenge for people to eat enough calories. Milk was a
major form of nutrition and often mentioned with another whole and complete food, honey, and
together these were offered in sacrifice in many ancient societies—hence the Promised Land
being referred to as a land flowing with milk and honey as in Exodus 3:8 (Borowski, Sheep,
2000).
Shepherd
The shepherd dedicated himself to tending the sheep in his flock, either as a nomad or in a
designated property (Borowski, Herding, 2000). Nomads would shelter their sheep in pens built
of thorny plants, and fixed-property shepherds would have built pens of stone, or even in the
animal pen portion of the ground floor of the house (Borowski, Herding, 2000). Sheltering could
take place in caves. The shepherd would have a heavy cloak to protect against the elements, a
rod or staff, a food bag, and a sling to fend of wild animals such as lions, bears, and wolves
(Mattingly, 2000). Sometimes they use dogs to help herd the sheep (Mattingly, 2000). Sheep are
meek animals and require constant care and supervision; they learn the voice of the shepherd and
follow only that shepherd and not a stranger (Mattingly, 2000). The shepherd would have to
count the sheep and make sure they were all there, and if any had wandered off, they would go
seek them out and bring them back to the flock (Mattingly, 2000). Special attention was given to
ewes about to deliver, lambs, and sick or injured animals (Mattingly, 2000).
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Biblical Imagery
The first shepherd mentioned in the Bible was Abel, and other important shepherds were
Abraham, Jacob, and David (Hahn, 2009). In the ancient world, the shepherd was often a
metaphor for a ruler, and this was clearly used in reference to David (Kaiser, Garrett, & Wanner,
2005). The metaphor was also applied to gods, such as Shamash and in Genesis and the Psalms,
to Israel’s god Yahweh (McKenzie, 1995). It is also used for royal officers, elders, religious
leaders, and all who have authority over the people (McKenzie, 1995). Psalm 23 is a notable
example of the trustful relationship Israel has in Yahweh as the shepherd (Hahn, 2009). When
leadership is poor or absent, Israel is likened to sheep without a shepherd; Ezekiel 34 is an
important prophecy of the one shepherd God will provide, a messianic descendent of David who
will feed them and be their shepherd (Hahn, 2009). In Matthew 9, Jesus has compassion on the
people as sheep without a shepherd (Kohler-Rollefson, 2011). In John 10, Jesus talks about
himself as the Good Shepherd who lays down his life for the sheep; this theme is echoed in the
other three Gospels, in Matthew 18, Mark 6, and Luke 15 (Hahn, 2009). Jesus entrusts his flock
to Peter in John 21, and his ministers are to be shepherds (Acts 20, Ephesians 4, 1 Peter 5)
(Hahn, 2009). Indeed, the word pastor is Latin for shepherd (McKenzie, 1995). Jesus discusses
the Last Judgment as sorting the sheep from the goats in Matthew 25 (McKenzie, 1995).
Conclusion
This paper was intended to describe sheep and shepherds to students of the Bible who are
not familiar with these things, to aid their comprehension of what they read and hear in the Old
and New Testaments—whether the passage intends a literal or metaphorical meaning.
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References
Borowski, O. (2000). Herding. In D. N. Freedman, A. C. Myers, & A. B. Beck (Eds.), Eerdmans
Dictionary of the Bible (pp. 576-577). Grand Rapids, MI: W. B. Eerdmans.
Borowski, O. (2000). Sheep. In D. N. Freedman, A. C. Myers, & A. B. Beck (Eds.), Eerdmans
Dictionary of the Bible (p. 1203). Grand Rapids, MI: W. B. Eerdmans.
Hahn, S. (2009). Catholic Bible dictionary. New York: Doubleday.
Kaiser, W. C., Garrett, D. A., & Wanner, J. D. (Eds.). (2005). Archaeological Study Bible. Grand
Rapids, MI: Zondervan.
Kohler-Rollefson, I. U. (2011). Sheep. In M. A. Powell (Ed.), The HarperCollins Bible
Dictionary (Revised and Updated). New York: HarperCollins.
Mattingly, G. L. (2000). Shepherd. In D. N. Freedman, A. C. Myers, & A. B. Beck (Eds.),
Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible (p. 1208). Grand Rapids, MI: W. B. Eerdmans.
McKenzie, J. L. (1995). Dictionary of the Bible. New York: Touchstone.
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Figure Captions
Figure 1. Christ as the Good Shepherd, from the Catacomb of Priscilla, mid-second to mid-third
century AD.
Figure 2. Christ as the Good Shepherd, marble, 92 cm high, ca. 300 AD, from Vatican Museum
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Figure 3. Good Shepherd icon, from Eastern Christianity
Figure 4. L’Innocence, by 19th
century French Academy painter William Bouguereau, depicting
the young Virgin Mary holding the child Jesus and a lamb.