St Titus Brandsma
(Acts 2:14a, 36-41; 1Pet.2:20b-25; Jn.10:1-10)
Our world is full of voices – some loud and compelling, others angry or threatening – on TV, social media, the news and advertising.
Some promise answers or belonging or success, while others tell us who to fear and who to blame. They all want our attention.
The danger isn’t hearing all these voices. The danger is following the wrong one.
That’s why today’s story of the Good Shepherd is so important. Jesus doesn’t say, ‘My sheep understand my teaching,’ or ‘My sheep agree with me.’ He says something much more profound: ‘My sheep hear my voice. I know them, and they follow me.’
As the Good Shepherd, Jesus does not argue, force, or manipulate anyone. He simply offers a steady voice that can be recognised, trusted, and loved.

Do you remember the story of the Pied Piper? It’s apparently based on truth, but he’s a colourful character with a fine voice and a magical flute that draws in the crowds. However, when true leadership is needed, he disappears and all who follow him are lost.
The Pied Piper is like the patron saint of manipulators. By contrast, the Good Shepherd never abandons his flock.
We can see this reflected in the life of St Titus Brandsma.
Titus was born in the Netherlands in 1881. His parents were devout Catholic farmers who had six children, five of whom entered religious life. Titus became a Carmelite priest, a university professor, and a journalist.
When the Nazis occupied the Netherlands in 1940, they tried to control public opinion by forcing Catholic newspapers to publish their propaganda. But through his writing and teaching, Titus actively resisted. He strongly believed that truth matters, and that constant lies damage the soul.
As a spiritual advisor to the Dutch Catholic journalists’ association, he urged journalists to ignore the Nazis’ demands, but in 1942 he was arrested. The Nazis offered to let him live quietly in a monastery if he urged Catholic newspapers to publish their propaganda. He refused, and was sent to Dachau concentration camp.
In Dachau, the voices heard were cruel commands, and names were replaced by numbers. But Titus continued to live by a different voice. He urged the other prisoners to have hope and he prayed with them.

In July 1942, the camp nurse gave him a lethal injection of carbolic acid. As she did so, he gave her a hand-made rosary he’d received from another prisoner who’d been executed. ‘I’ll pray for you,’ he said.
His gentleness moved her heart profoundly and brought her back to the faith. She was present at his beatification 43 years later, in 1985.
Titus died, but in mourning his loss we remember the Good Shepherd’s words: ‘No one takes them out of my hand’ (Jn.10:11).
Titus Brandsma understood something that is so important today: not every confident voice tells the truth, and not every repeated message deserves our trust. Some voices stir fear, some divide and some dehumanise.
It may seem easier to follow than resist, but these voices don’t lead to life.
Jesus calls himself the Good Shepherd because he does the opposite. He doesn’t manipulate, he doesn’t abandon, and he doesn’t trade truth for safety. Instead, Jesus knows his sheep, he stays and he gives life.
Witnesses who survived Dachau said that Titus kept telling others about God’s commitment to his people. Indeed, we must always trust God.
Today’s Gospel is not just for saints or heroes. It’s for anyone who’s struggling to navigate our noisy world. And it asks a simple question: whose voice do you trust when it really matters?

That question brings us, finally, to St Mary Magdalene. On Easter morning, she’s standing outside the tomb, grieving and confused. She sees Jesus, but doesn’t recognise him. It’s only when he says her name: ‘Mary,’ that everything changes.
Our Risen Lord isn’t recognised by argument or force, but by a voice that speaks personally, gently, and truthfully. For those who feel confident in faith, that voice calls us to courage: to resist the lies, to speak the truth with love, and to refuse the easy tune of the Pied Piper.
But for those on the margins of faith, those wary of any religion, or unsure of what to believe anymore, this Gospel is reassuring.
Jesus, the Good Shepherd, does not shout or compete for attention. And he doesn’t disappear when things get messy. He simply calls his own by name.
And today, he’s still speaking: through our conscience, through quiet truth, and through love that will never abandon us.
Even in our noisy world, his voice can still be heard.
If we’re willing to listen.



























