2d Sunday of Easter
April 14, 1985
John 20: 19-31Acts 4: 32-35
1 John 5: 1-6
St. Joseph, Florida, N.Y.
I was away for a family celebration this past weekend. Herewith a homily from the archives.
“Jesus came and stood among them and said to them
‘Peace be with you.’ When he had said
this, he showed them his hands and his side” (John 20: 19-20).
The Incredulity of Thomas
(Maerten De Vos)
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1. Who is
Jesus? Jesus is the one whom the Father has
raised up from the grave; the one “who came by water,” i.e., who was pointed
out in the ministry of John the Baptist and in the water jars of Cana; the one
who came also “in blood,” i.e., who was pointed out in the sacrifice of Calvary
(1 John 5:6). Jesus is the “child of
God” (1 John 5:1) whom the Father has anointed as Lord, king, savior of
mankind. Jesus is the one whom Thomas
confesses to be his Lord and his God, not only because he sees him alive but also
because Thomas recognizes that Jesus has conquered pain and death. It is a wounded and scarred Jesus who stands
before the eleven, who stands triumphant before us.
2. What
does Jesus do? Jesus is the wounded
healer. Only the one who has suffered can bring peace. “Without the shedding of blood there is no
forgiveness,” the Letter to the Hebrews tell us (9:22). Jesus bestows peace upon all those who will
allow him to be present to them. He
bestows the Holy Spirit for the forgiveness of sins (John 20:21-23) and the reconciliation
of mankind with our Father. He enables
us to love the Father and one another and, in this love, to obey the Father’s
wishes; in this love, to overcome the world of sin, of pain, and of death, as
he did (l John 5:2-5). Jesus makes us
one heart and mind with all God’s children (Acts 4:32; John 5:1-2).
3. What
does Jesus expect of us? He expects,
first, that we will believe in him without seeing him in his risen and wounded
body, as Thomas did (John 20:29). Then
he expects that we will live our faith by loving our brothers and sisters (1 John
5:2), not just in word but in deed. How
shall we love in deed? The first
Christians give us the example: “No one
said that any of the things which he possessed was his own…. There was not a needy person among them … and
distribution was made to each as any had need” (Acts 4:32,34-35). They showed a practical oneness, a practical
faith, a practical love, a practical initiation of their Lord Jesus by their
generosity with this world’s goods. And
so their faith became “the victory that overcomes the world” (1 John 5:4).
Such a generosity toward the needy in our own
community or around the world not only unites us to Christ and to our brothers
and sisters. It also makes us like
Christ, wounded healers. For giving does
hurt a little, but it heals so much!
I heard just 2 days ago of a family in Paterson
that agreed not to exchange Christmas gifts, but instead to give the money for
famine relief in Ethiopia; they gave over $1,000! “We are the world,” indeed, when Christ makes
us one: the wounded, self-emptying
Christ, the risen Christ, the Christ who gives us his peace and his Holy
Spirit, the Christ who challenges us to believe in him and to overcome the
powers of sin and selfishness and death with him.
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