“THANK YOU, THOMAS”
The
Risen Jesus makes many appearances in the four Gospel accounts, and in John 20,
which was part of yesterday’s lectionary readings, he makes three
appearances. The first was to Mary
Magdalene, who is the primary witness to the Resurrection. The second comes to the disciples who are
huddled in fear in a room that same night – the males have chosen not to
believe Mary when she tells them: “I have seen the Lord!” They are now stuck in Jerusalem, abandoned by
their crucified teacher, afraid to make a move.
Will they be arrested next? Will
they be crucified next?
Then
Risen Jesus appears to them in the room, bringing a profound greeting in a
fear-dominated, violence-dominated, money-dominated world: “Peace be with you!” It is great and freeing news – at the center
of their world is not Rome, but the Risen Jesus. John’s Gospel makes a point of telling us
that Thomas was not present at this second appearance of the Risen Jesus. When the other disciples tell him, as Mary
had told them previously, “We have seen the Lord!”, Thomas responds with words
that have marked him forever: “Unless I
see the mark of the nails in his hand, unless I can put my finger in his side,
I will not believe.” Thomas has come to
be known as “Doubting Thomas,” because he is so skeptical. He knows that things like Resurrection and new
life don’t happen in our kind of world.
At best, all that “Resurrection talk” is only about life after death,
and at worst, it’s just Marx’s idea of the opiate of the people, to help us
deal with all the deluge and debris of life – violence and greed and domination
and injustice. Thomas knows that death
rules over Jesus – it’s over. Jesus is
dead, crucified by Rome. Rome rules –
Hail, Caesar!
And,
we probably should not be chastising Thomas for his doubts – we should be
thanking him instead. Because he speaks
for us too. We should be thankful that
the Biblical narrative is not an heroic saga of women and men who are always
strong, always on target: the biblical
view is that the first disciples were a lot like us. We long to believe in a Risen Jesus, but our
hearts and imaginations are captured by death.
Like Thomas, our inability to believe is not a matter of rebellion. It’s a matter of the way we see the world –
how we see ourselves, how we see others, how the power systems work, how we see
reality. Like Thomas, the power of death
makes us unable to believe in a Risen Jesus, unable to believe in a new
order. We long to hear “Peace be with
you,” but we believe “Peace won’t be with you, friends – it’s dominate or be
dominated.” Thomas lives where we live,
and so we should be saying “Thank You, Thomas,” instead of “Doubting Thomas.”
But,
the story tells us that the Risen Jesus is coming for Thomas. John’s Gospel tells us that Jesus appears for
a third time a week later, and this time Thomas is in the room where it
happens. The Risen Jesus knows the
struggles of Thomas, and he knows our struggles. The Risen Jesus invites Thomas into this new
world of the Resurrection, just as he invites us too. He appears to Thomas not to chastise him or
to ridicule him. He appears to Thomas so
that Thomas can believe, so that Thomas can enter into this new worldview of
the Resurrection. Risen Jesus is not
asking Thomas to skip over the Crucifixion, nor is he asking Thomas to leave
the pain of the world behind. Rather he
is asking him to have a new vision in a world of deep pain and injustice. The Risen Jesus invites Thomas into a new
way of seeing himself, a new way of seeing the world. “Come on Thomas, touch the marks of the nails
here – peace be with you, my brother.”
And, Thomas does – he too comes to believe in the power of the
Resurrection.
And,
of course, we want some of that stuff too, especially in these days. We want some of that Risen Jesus – we want to
recognize him standing right in front of us, too. We long to live in a vision of life dominated
by grace and love and justice, but we carry Thomas in us too. Death is so powerful, the pain is so deep,
and the world is so disappointing. Like
Thomas, we find ourselves saying:
“Unless we can touch the mark of the nails….”
This
Biblical story reminds us that Jesus knows our stories and knows our struggles
– we are so much like Thomas. We’re
Doubting Thomas, Unrecognizing Mary and Denying Peter - we long to believe in life, but we are
captured by death. The Easter story
reminds us each year that the Risen Jesus is coming for us, coming to us from
the margins to invite us into a new way of seeing ourselves, a new way of
seeing others, a new way of seeing the world.
I’ll visit some of those places next week, but for now, let’s thank
Thomas and be on the lookout for the Risen Jesus standing right in front of us.
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