Add parallel Print Page Options

12 The hired hand,[a] who is not a shepherd and does not own sheep, sees the wolf coming and abandons[b] the sheep and runs away.[c] So the wolf attacks[d] the sheep and scatters them.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. John 10:12 sn Jesus contrasts the behavior of the shepherd with that of the hired hand. This is a worker who is simply paid to do a job; he has no other interest in the sheep and is certainly not about to risk his life for them. When they are threatened, he simply runs away.
  2. John 10:12 tn Grk “leaves.”
  3. John 10:12 tn Or “flees.”
  4. John 10:12 tn Or “seizes.” The more traditional rendering, “snatches,” has the idea of seizing something by force and carrying it off, which is certainly possible here. However, in the sequence in John 10:12, this action precedes the scattering of the flock of sheep, so “attacks” is preferable.

12 Another man may take care of sheep so that he gets money. But the sheep do not belong to him. A man like that is not the shepherd. If a wolf comes, a man like that runs away when he sees it. He leaves the sheep in danger. Then the wolf attacks the sheep. It causes them to run away in all directions.

Read full chapter