Second Sunday in Easter
Isaiah 26:1–9, 19
Psalm 111
I John 5:1–5
John 20:19–31
Hallelujah! He is risen!
He is risen indeed! Hallelujah!
It’s been a week since the Resurrection, but our Gospel passage begins on Resurrection Sunday. The day is drawing to a close when Jesus appears in the locked room where the disciples were hiding.
From the other Gospels, we know Jesus had a very busy Sunday. He walks out of the tomb; he meets with Mary Magdalene; he walks to Emmaus and expounds the Hebrew Scriptures with two disciples. Those two disciples convince Jesus to stop and lodge with them because the sun is setting. When they sit down to eat and Jesus blesses the bread, they recognize him! Then Jesus vanishes! Where did he go?
These two disciples from Emmaus drop their matzah (it’s still the Feast of Unleavened Bread) and take off running back to Jerusalem. They literally run a 10K (or more). They get to the place and bang on the locked door and tell everyone they’ve seen Jesus. But the two are not believed. The disciples in Jerusalem do not believe. Mary Magdalene told them she saw Jesus. Now, these two guys show up panting from a long run to tell everyone they saw Jesus in Emmaus. But they don’t believe.
Let’s imagine we’re in that room. Three days before, you saw your most trusted confidant – with whom you lived closely for three years, the one you hoped was fulfilling all the promises of God – you saw him tortured and killed. You’re afraid, grieving, and confused. These reports that Jesus lives, even from other trusted friends, do not compute. The sun is setting. Another miserable day over.
Suddenly you hear a most familiar voice, “Shalom aleichem!” In Texan, “Peace, y’all!”
Peace! Shalom!
They’re still not sure. Are they seeing things? Is this a ghost?
No! Jesus shows them his wounds. In Luke, Jesus invites them not only to see but to “handle” him. “Then the disciples were glad when they saw the Lord.” What an understatement! The disciples were overjoyed! They rejoiced! They celebrated!
Is anybody watching The Chosen, the TV show about the life of Jesus? They haven’t depicted this scene yet, but I can just see all the disciples mobbing Jesus, hugging him, grabbing him, a loud huddle of joy and tears, laughter and shouts of joy!
Our very compact Gospel passage has a lot going on. Jesus says again, “Shalom aleichem.” He commissions them. He breathes on them to receive the Holy Spirit. He deputizes them to forgive sins. Then the text fast-forwards a week.
In the Eastern tradition, the Second Sunday of Easter is called “Thomas Sunday.” Perhaps better than Thomas Sunday, we could call this day Skeptics’ Sunday.
Thomas gets a lot of grief for not being with the others a week before and for not believing their report. He famously says to them: “Unless I see in his hands the mark of the nails, and place my finger into the mark of the nails, and place my hand into his side, I will never believe.”
We do not know a lot about Thomas. Only three of his comments are recorded, all of them by John. Thomas speaks up during Jesus’s farewell speech. He also pipes up when Jesus tells the disciples they are going to Bethany to see to “sleeping” Lazarus. Then he speaks aloud his skepticism the week after the Resurrection.
Since we do not have time to unpack all three Thomas passages, I encourage you to read them later and chew on them. Go to BibleGateway.com, search for “Thomas” and read the passages in John. What I see is a man with the courage to be honest about his questions. He’s more honest about his doubts about the resurrection than the others are.
The other disciples did not believe Mary Magdalene nor the two brothers from Emmaus. Most of the disciples, too, needed to handle Jesus and examine the wounds, to see him and touch him. Thomas is no different than the others. And the others haven’t come all that far in their faith after their first encounter with the risen Jesus. Eight days later, the doors are still locked. They are still afraid. That fear won’t really be cured until Pentecost.
A week after the resurrection, Jesus visits the disciples in Jerusalem again, and again greats them, “Shalom, y’all!” But Jesus has come for Thomas. “Put your finger here, and see my hands, and put out your hand, and place it in my side. Do not disbelieve, but believe.”
Thomas obeys his Teacher and believes. He makes what may be the clearest declaration of Jesus’ divinity recorded in the Gospels: “My Lord and my God!”
When you live in a foreign country, you quickly learn the words for hello and goodbye and thank you, please, yes and no. For us Christians, if you start attending church in the local language, you can quickly pick up the words used in worship. That’s what happens with Christians who spend more than a few weeks in Israel. Some of the Hebrew vocabulary I learned first were words of worship.
The Gospels are recorded in Greek, but Jesus and the disciples spoke Aramaic, or as some contend, closely related Hebrew. When I hear Thomas’ exclamation in Hebrew, his identification of Jesus as God is clear: “Adonai vElohai!” Adonai is the reverential euphemism for the sacred name of God. Elohai, my God, shows up in Psalm 143 and 145. Thomas declares that Jesus of Nazareth is Adonai his God.
“Have you believed because you have seen me?” Jesus replies. “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.”
Sometimes we read this as a slight on Thomas for needing to see and touch Jesus for himself. But all the disciples needed that. The eleven, even Mary Magdalene who was told by an angel that Jesus was alive, needed to see him for themselves before they really trusted.
Rather than a slight, I see a blessing for us who sit here as believers two millennia later. I’ve taken much encouragement from this blessing. I have taken it for myself and thanked God for the blessing of faith, a faith that comes not by seeing him directly but by seeing his working through history and in my life, by knowing that he is with me, the whole of every day. Believer, I encourage you to see that Jesus is speaking about you in this blessing. Blessed are you who have not seen and believe and know him.
Thomas’ authenticity in verbalizing his doubt speaks into our age of skepticism. Too often in the church, we are afraid of questions. We do harm when we shut down the seeking skeptic. When I worked as a newspaper photographer, I was assigned to a story about Islam growing among the Hispanics of southern California. The young man I photographed had been raised in a Christian home in Mexico. He struggled with the concept of the Trinity and went to talk to his pastor. The pastor rebuffed him, told him to stop asking questions, and just believe. This shepherd lost a sheep that day, and the young man eventually forsook Jesus and turned to Islam.
When Jesus exhorts Thomas, “Do not disbelieve but believe,” he is standing before Thomas inviting him to investigate.
If you have questions about Jesus, about the Bible, about the Resurrection, investigate. Jesus comes back for the doubter. Jesus comes near to the questioner. Jesus is ready to show himself to you, to exhort you to trust him. Ask and it shall be given to you.
You are not alone in your questioning. One famous former skeptic is the Christian apologist Lee Strobel. Strobel was an atheist who set out to disprove the Gospels using his skills as an investigative journalist. At the end of his research, he came to know the risen Messiah. His resulting book The Case for Christ was recently made into a film. C.S. Lewis became an atheist when his mom died and later returned to faith. His wife, Joy Davidman, was an atheist Jew who eventually came to know Jesus as the Messiah of Israel. There is a list on Wikipedia of atheists-turned-Christians.
For those of us who have skeptics in our lives, how do we minister to them? Our “job is to get to know people, not objections.” We are to love people, love them where they are. We are to show them Jesus as he is revealed to us in the Scriptures, in our everyday lives. We are to share our stories of how Jesus came to us in our need, our questions, our sin, and revealed himself to us. Remember, we are merely messengers. We do not change anybody’s mind. We do not persuade anyone. That is the job of the Holy Spirit. Our charge is to manifest Jesus in this world, to be his healing hands. We carry Jesus within us, by the infilling of the Holy Spirit. When we walk into a room, we bring Jesus with us. We are Christ-bearers. The rest is up to him, in how he meets our skeptic friends and satisfies their questions.
I ran across a blog post by a young man named David Reed titled “How did a skeptic like me become a Christian? After 26 years of being a perfectly convinced atheist, I accidentally became a Christian last year. What on earth is going on?” In the article, he “comes out” as a Christian and sketches his unlikely path. When he and his fiancee were engaged, they decided to do pre-marital counseling at a church despite being atheists. They found it useful and practical and were not pressured into converting. He writes, “I found the preparations, and the process of getting married to be a huge learning curve in how to love someone — and be loved — unconditionally. Christians call this grace: unearned love that cannot be repaid and that you do not deserve. Nothing could better describe the love we received from our friends and family in the weeks around our wedding. It is totally overwhelming to experience grace — and it left me searching for answers.”
After the honeymoon, he began looking into Christianity and learning more about Jesus. He watched the Alpha Course, he read C.S. Lewis’ Mere Christianity. He asked God to show him. He writes:
There are plenty of reasonable arguments and evidence for God. But my heart did not need a proof on paper. I needed to know and witness God in my life. And there are two ways in which God responded to my need to be shown that he exists.
Firstly, through Jesus. The single most remarkable aspect of Jesus’s ministry is the one we most often take for granted. Unlike any other religious thinker that has ever lived, Jesus puts himself forward as evidence for the existence of God. If you know me, Jesus claims, you know the Father.
The more I read about Jesus, the more I have come to trust this wild and dangerous claim. His ministry is too precise to be the work of a madman, and too high in its moral calling to be the work of an imposter. The only alternative is to take him at his word. Once you do, the great mystery — God and our reason for being here — steps out from behind the curtain.
And secondly, I asked. One of the most extravagant — preposterous — claims Jesus makes about God is the absolute assurance of an answer to spiritual searching. Ask and it shall be given to you. Having found my fiercest defense against religion defeated by the evidence, I finally got on my knees and asked God, if he was real, to make himself known in my life.
He has.
As we gather to eat from Jesus’ table, confess not only your sins but your questions. Jesus is ready to meet you and satisfy your hunger and thirst for him. Amen.
Cover photo by Lew Lawrence, OP, via Flickr (cc)