Building Bridges, Not Walls.
Homily for the Fourth Sunday of Easter
April 26, 2026
There were two brothers who were living on adjoining farms who developed a bitter conflict. It was their first serious rift in forty years of farming side-by-side, sharing machinery, and trading labor and goods as needed. They had never had a quarrel—that is until now.
It began with a small misunderstanding that grew into a major difference, and finally exploded into a bitter exchange of words, followed by separation and silence.
One morning there was a knock on the back door of the elder brother John’s house. He opened it to find a man with a carpenter’s toolbox standing on the stoop. “I’m looking for a few days’ work,” said the itinerant carpenter. “Perhaps you might have some small jobs?”
“Well, I believe I do,” said the older brother. “Look across the creek at that farm. “That’s my neighbor, in fact it’s my younger brother’s place. Last week there was a meadow between our farms, that is, until he took a bulldozer and punched a hole in the river levee. Now there’s this creek between us. Well, he may have done this to spite me,” said the older brother, “but I’ll go him one better. See that pile of lumber over there by the barn? I want you to build me a fence—an eight-foot-tall fence—so I won’t have to look at his place any more. Okay?”
“I think I understand the situation, “ replied the carpenter. “Show me your tool shed, and I’ll do you a job that will please you.”
John was going into town for supplies, so he helped the carpenter get the materials ready and headed off for the day. The carpenter toiled all day, measuring, sawing, pounding nails. Around sunset, the farmer returned home just as the carpenter was finishing the project.
The farmer stood aghast, his jaw dropped. There was no fence, but a bridge. A bridge now spanned the creek! It was a terrific piece of woodworking too—handrails and all. And, to John’s amazement, across the bridge came his younger brother, arms outstretched.
“You are quite a craftsman and a brother,” said the younger brother, “to have built this bridge after all I’ve said.” The two brothers met in the middle of the bridge and warmly embraced one another. As they turned, they saw the carpenter packing up his tools. “No, wait!” both brothers shouted. “Stay on a bit longer. We have some other projects to discuss with you.”
The carpenter replied, “Thanks, but I must be moving on. You see, I have other bridges that need building.”
In today’s beautiful Psalm we read, “beside restful waters he leads me; he refreshes my soul. He guides me in right paths for his name’s sake.”
I love walking beside restful waters—waters of harmony, neighborliness, and mutual respect. But the waters have been turbulent lately—stirred up by distrust, animosity and vengeful politics. I feel the need, now more than ever, to have a guide to show me right paths—paths that lead to peace, community, and a deep sense of security. How do I find such a guide?
In today’s gospel, Jesus speaks of a shepherd—a shepherd who will be followed because the sheep recognize his voice. “They will not follow a stranger;” he says, “they will run away from him, because they do not recognize the voice of strangers.”
Do you want restful waters? Do you want a trustworthy guide? Then, seek his voice. Refuse to build walls while he’s building bridges.
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