April 26, 2026 – 4th Sunday of Easter
Click here for the readings (https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/042626.cfm)
What do you need to be happy? A stable job, enough income, good health, a peaceful family, and a secure future? Who does not want that? These are not wrong desires. In fact, they are real and valid. Yet, despite striving for these things, we could still feel restless, anxious, and dissatisfied.
Why is that? Sometimes, even if we have something, we still feel that something is missing. And this is where the Psalm today speaks so deeply to us, “The Lord is my shepherd; there is nothing I shall want.”
This is not a statement of having everything materially. It is a statement of contentment, of trust, of knowing that one is cared for, guided, and loved no matter what.
To understand this, we turn to the image of the shepherd in today’s Gospel on this 4th Sunday of Easter.
In biblical times we were remined that the sheep depended entirely on the shepherd, for food, protection, direction, and safety. The shepherd knew each sheep personally. He called them by name. The sheep, in turn, recognized his voice and followed him because they trusted him.
This relationship is very important. Happiness and contentment do not come from having more, but from knowing whom we follow.
Moreover, Jesus says in the Gospel, “I am the gate… whoever enters through me will be saved.” He also says that He came so that we “may have life and have it more abundantly.” This fullness of life is not just material abundance. It is a life rooted in peace, meaning, and relationship with God. This fullness of life is what this Easter Season brings to us.
But let us also be honest. Many times, we may follow other “voices” and not the voice of the Lord. In John’s Gospel, this is called as the “voices of the stranger.”
This means, we may follow the voice of comparison that makes us believe, “I need to have what others have.” We may follow the voice of insecurity that makes us think, “I am not enough unless I achieve more.” We may follow the voice of pleasure that tells us, “I will be happy if I get what I want.”
And in following these voices, we could become restless. We become dissatisfied and even become anxious. In a way, we become like sheep that wander away.
The reflection reminds us that even if we are intelligent and capable beings, we can still become unmindful and self-centered. We may focus only on what benefits us. We may ignore the needs of others. We may fail to recognize what is wrong or unjust around us. We may even wander into places that harm us like vices, unhealthy relationships, or isolation, thinking that these will give us comfort.
And yet, these do not lead us to happiness. Remember, true happiness is not found in wandering. Rather, it is found in being led.
This is why we need the Good Shepherd. In the first reading, Peter boldly proclaimed Jesus as Lord and Christ. And when the people heard this, they were “cut to the heart.” They realized that they needed to change. They needed to return and needed to be led again.
This is also our invitation today and that is to return to the Shepherd.
And in the second reading, we are reminded that Jesus suffered for us. He did not abandon us. Even when we were lost, He came to bring us back. He is the Shepherd who lays down His life for His sheep.
This tells us something powerful now. We are not alone. We are not forgotten. We are being led.
And when we begin to trust this, something changes in us. We too begin to find peace even in uncertainty and in fear. We begin to feel content even with what we have. We begin to live with gratitude instead of complaint. Because we know that the Lord is our Shepherd.
Indeed, happiness is not about having everything we want. Rather, it is about trusting that with God, we already have what we truly need and there is nothing we shall want
And from this trust, we are also called to become shepherds to others. Not by controlling, but by serving others. Not by manipulating, but by caring others. Not by seeking power, but by giving ourselves for the sake of others. Hinaut pa.










