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Sermons:
-
Peace Be to You,
John 20:19-31,
by Rev. Dr. Cynthia Huling Hummel (see
below)
- From the 12
Apostles Sermon Series:
Thomas, the Doubter, or the Brave?
John 20:19-31, by Rev. Frank Schaefer
Proof of Life
John 20:19-31, Rev. Karen Goltz
Dealing with Doubt John 20:19-29,
by
Dr. David Rogne
Where Were You on Good Friday?
John 20:19-31,
by Rev. Randy L Quinn
No interview John 20:19-31, by Thomas Hall
What a Fellowship! Acts 4:32-35, by Rev. Thomas
Hall, 1 John 1-2:1
Doubting or
Courageous Thomas? John 20:19-31. by Susan Russel
Believing
is Seeing, John 20:19-31, by HW in HI
Taking Doubts to Christ, John 20:19-31, by annonymous
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Peace Be to You
based on John 20:19-31
by Rev. Dr. Cynthia Huling Hummel
One of the
things that surprised me when I moved to a small town in upstate New York, was
how many people I’ve met who don’t lock their doors. It is not at all unusual
for someone to say to me, “Well, Pastor if we’re not home when you get
there, just go on in and sit down. There’s some cold pop in the frig. So help
yourself. And please help yourself to the cookies on the kitchen counter, too.”
I remember
going over to a church member’s house not so long ago. She told me that she
may or may not be home, but that the door would be open. I had something that I
didn’t want to leave outside in the rain and so I tried the door and sure enough
it was unlocked. Not only did I walk in the back door, but her “watchdog”
nearly licked me to death. Even thinking about that unlocked door gives me the
willies. Imagine, I just walked into that house.
I’m just not
used to unlocked doors. It’s probably because I’m from NJ: the “locked door
state”. When I lived there, we had not one, not two, but three locks on most of
the doors to our house. There was the regular lock that was part of the
doorknob. But we also installed a dead bolt in case someone jimmied the first
lock. And we also installed a chain, so you could open the door a little, but
still be safe. But that wasn’t all. We also had a peep hole too, so that we
wouldn’t have to unlock the door to see who was there. But there’s more! We
also installed one of those motion lights that come on if anyone approaches the
door. We decided, if we were going to be robbed that we weren’t going to make
it easy for the intruder! We’d make them work for it..
To this day,
I have a nightly door locking ritual. I usually check the doors more than
once, because I can’t remember if Iocked them or not. You know how that is.
You’re lying in bed thinking, “Did I or didn’t I?” And finally you just get up
to check to see if the door is locked, because you cant fall asleep worrying
about it. Now some people might think I’m paranoid- who knows, maybe I am.
But not without cause. I’ve been robbed. So thank goodness for locks. Yes,
locked doors give us a great sense of security.
The reading
that we’ve just heard from John’s gospel, the lectionary reading for the day is
about locked doors and locked hearts. It’s about doubt and it’s about faith.
Let’s spend some time together discovering what the text has to say to us about
living our lives in doubt and in faithfulness. John tells us that it was
evening on “that day- the first day of the week”. In other words it was Easter
night. It had been a long and difficult weekend of pain and loss. Jesus had
been crucified and buried on Friday. That morning, Mary had discovered the tomb
empty and she ran to tell Peter and the others and described how she had seen
Jesus. Jesus had even called out her name. It was all too strange and too
wonderful and so difficult to even begin to comprehend.
But one thing
the disciples knew for certain was their fear. They has seen what had happened
to Jesus and were terrified of what might happen to them and so they hid. They
locked themselves away because they were afraid of what the Jewish authorities
might do. Yes, the doors were locked and the disciples were locked in fear.
And it’s precisely then, that Jesus comes to them. He knows that they are
terrified and he comes through the locked doors to unlock their fear and their
faith. And so one of the first questions that comes to us is: What is it that
you and I are fearful of? Where in our lives are we feeling that we are locked
up or locked out? Maybe we’re locked into a bad relationship or locked into a
dead end job. Or perhaps you are deadlocked in an addiction. And perhaps we’ve
locked someone out of our lives who wants to help us. Where is it that we need
Jesus to enter and to bring us peace? Jesus has the power to unlock our fears!
We need only ask!
When Jesus
enters, he greets his disciples with the peace and he shows them his hands and
his side. And when the disciples see these things, they recognize and rejoice,
because they realize who it is! They have this incredible “aha” moment when
Jesus’ resurrection is made real to them. Isn’t it interesting that Jesus
doesn’t come to them healed. Jesus comes to them wounded. His resurrection
did not erase or eradicate his scars. Jesus comes to his followers, with the
scars of his Good Friday experience. And He is known to them by his scars.
Jesus is the wounded healer who comes to bring them peace and healing.
I’ve been
thinking about each of us and the scars that we each carry. Some of the scars
are on the outside and some are on the inside. I would say most of us, have
known the pain of a “good Friday experience in our lives” and we can’t erase
those experiences that have wounded us deeply. But somehow with God’s help and
the help of others, we get to our Easter and to our resurrection experience .
Yes, each of us is scarred. We carry the memories of where we’ve been and what
we’ve been through. If we can learn to live with our scars, we may discover
that they can bless us in some unexpected way. Our scars are part of who we are
and whose we are. And in spite of our brokenness, we can be whole people of
God.
I was thinking
about “Megan” who discovered a few years ago, that she had breast cancer. She
had a double mastectomy, chemo and radiation. It was devastating. Well Megan
recently celebrated a special anniversary as a cancer survivor and she visits
other women who are facing the same diagnosis she faced. She shows them her
scars and brings them hope and healing. Megan remembers the pain of her Good
Friday and the joy of her Easter.
Jesus entered into
the locked room where the disciples were hiding. He unlocked their fear and he
commissioned them with something as simple as his breath. He breathed God’s
Holy Spirit into them and gave them the power to forgive or retain sins.
Unlike the account that we hear in Luke /Acts, they receive God’s Holy Sprit
that first Easter evening. The disciples through their experience of seeing
Jesus and experiencing this spirit-filled event- moved from fear to faith.
Well all but one. Thomas wasn’t there on that Easter evening and Thomas wasn’t
gonna buy it. And because Thomas questioned the others, he has been nicknamed
doubting Thomas, as if it were a bad thing to have doubts.
I think that
we’ve been too hard on Thomas all these years. I think that maybe a better way
to frame the story is to consider that the story of Thomas is a story that
encourages us to ask our questions. It’s okay to express our doubts. Someone
once said that open doubts make for open minds and opened doors. It is good and
even healthy to express our confusion and our uncertainties and maybe one place
that it should be encouraged is the church. I think of that wonderful gospel
hymn: Just as I am though tossed about, with many a conflict, many a
doubt. Fighting’s and fears within, without. O lamb of God I come, I come!
Some who have
doubted have changed the course of history and have brought us truth. Look at
Galileo, who doubted that the earth was at the center of the universe. I love
Thomas because he asks for what he needs to move forward in his faith journey.
Thomas speaks up. He says, “I need to touch Jesus’ wounds to believe.” I don’t
think that Thomas should be a pariah, but a role model for all of us in the
faith community. What’s really interesting is that Jesus returns so that Thomas
can have the same experience that the others had. And it appears from the
gospel account that that is precisely why Jesus came again: to help Thomas move
from doubt to faith.
What doubts
do you have? What questions of faith are you wrestling with? Maybe we
need to be more like Thomas and ask for what we need that will move us along
that doubt/faith spectrum! When Thomas touches Jesus and believes, Jesus says
to him, “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet come to believe.” It is
not a put down, but a reality. Those folks are indeed blessed.
Finally, John
tells us that Jesus did many other signs in the presence of his disciples and
not all of them were written down. But these things were written so that we
might come to believe in the Lordship of Jesus the Christ, the Son of God- that
though believing, that we all might have life in his name! Yes, Jesus came
through the locked doors to unlock the disciples fear. He breathed God’s peace
upon them and commissioned them. And Jesus returned again, like the shepherd
looking for the lost sheep, like the woman looking for her lost coin, like the
Father looking for the prodigal, Jesus came to Thomas that he might not be left
behind , but would be able to experience the joy of the resurrection
experience. Amen!