Jesus holds us to His Word and Sacraments
10The fear
of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom. All who do his precepts have good
understanding. (Ps 111:10, EHV)
John
20:19-31 19On the evening of that first day of the week, the
disciples were together behind locked doors because of their fear of the Jews.
Jesus came, stood among them, and said to them, “Peace be with you!” 20After
he said this, he showed them his hands and side. So the disciples rejoiced when
they saw the Lord.
21Jesus said to them
again, “Peace be with you! Just as the Father has sent me, I am also sending
you.” 22After saying this, he breathed on them and said, “Receive
the Holy Spirit. 23Whenever you forgive people’s sins, they are
forgiven. Whenever you do not forgive them, they are not forgiven.”
24But Thomas, one of
the Twelve, the one called the Twin, was not with them when Jesus came. 25So
the other disciples kept telling him, “We have seen the Lord!”
But he said to
them, “Unless I see the nail marks in his hands, and put my finger into the
mark of the nails, and put my hand into his side, I will never believe.”
26After eight days,
his disciples were inside again, and Thomas was with them. Though the doors
were locked, Jesus came and stood among them. “Peace be with you,” he said. 27Then
he said to Thomas, “Put your finger here and look at my hands. Take your hand
and put it into my side. Do not continue to doubt, but believe.”
28Thomas answered
him, “My Lord and my God!”
29Jesus said to him,
“Because you have seen me, you have believed. Blessed are those who have not
seen and yet have believed.”
30Jesus,
in the presence of his disciples, did many other miraculous signs that are not
written in this book. 31But these are written that you may believe
that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have
life in his name.
I showed the painting of the Incredulity of Saint Thomas by Caravaggio to my 7th
grade Catechism class. After reading John 20:19-31 about Jesus appearing to the
disciples in the locked room, I asked them what they noticed about the painting.
They remembered that the room was full of disciples, yet the artist only
focused on Jesus, Thomas, and two other disciples.
I commented that Caravaggio intensified the drama of
the encounter by creating a dark background and providing a light from Jesus’ over
Jesus’ right shoulder. The light focuses the attention on the wounds of Christ
and the expressions of the disciples. The three disciples do not question
Christ’s identity, but are fascinated by His wounds.
Caravaggio paints Christ without a halo or any other
sign of His divinity. The wounds are all that are needed to identify the
crucified and now resurrected Savior.
The students said they were disgusted and disturbed by
the image. They especially focused upon Thomas poking His finger into Jesus’
wound created by the soldier’s spear. One student commented that he doesn’t
like anyone touching his hands if he gets a paper cut. He couldn’t imagine
Jesus enjoying a disciple poking and prodding deep within His wound.
I knew they would be focused on Thomas’ hand. I think
that’s where most people focus upon. I instructed them to focus instead on
Jesus’ hands. With His right hand, Jesus is pulling aside His cloak to display
His wounded side. With His left hand, Jesus is pulling Thomas’ hand into His wound.
On Easter evening, when Jesus appeared in the locked
room, Thomas was absent. When the disciples told him they had seen the Lord
alive, Thomas sternly replied, “Unless I see the nail marks in his hands, and
put my finger into the mark of the nails, and put my hand into his side, I will
never believe” (John 20:25).
A week later, Jesus once again appears in the room.
This time Thomas is present. Jesus holds Thomas’ hand to His side and says to
him, “Put
your finger here and look at my hands. Take your hand and put it into my side.
Do not continue to doubt, but believe” (John 20:27).
Thomas had earlier
doubted the disciples’ pronouncement because he had allowed His feelings to
overtake His faith and the facts of the resurrection. After Jesus cleared out
the temple courts, the Jews asked Him by whose authority He was doing this.
Thomas heard Jesus talk about His death and resurrection by referring to His
body as a temple: “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up
again” (John 2:19).
When the religions
leaders demanded a sign from Jesus to prove that He was the Messiah, Thomas
heard Jesus answer them: “An evil and adulterous generation wishes for a sign,
but no sign will be given it except the sign of Jonah the prophet. For just as
Jonah was in the belly of the huge fish for three days and three nights, so the
Son of Man will be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth”
(Matthew 12:38-40).
And, on their way
to Jerusalem for the last time, Thomas was there when Jesus told all the
disciples: “Look, we are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of Man will be
betrayed to the chief priests and the experts in the law. They will condemn him
to death and will hand him over to the Gentiles. They will mock him, spit on
him, and kill him. On the third day he will rise again” (Mark 10:33-34).
Thomas heard all
of this. He witnessed all of this. He had all the facts. But, his sorrow over
His Master’s death; his fear of being arrested and crucified; and his guilt over
running away from Jesus – all of that was too much for Thomas. He questioned.
He faltered. He doubted. His feelings overtook his faith in the Christ and the
facts Jesus was the Messiah.
We are very much
like Thomas. We question, falter, and doubt when we allow our feelings to hold
sway over our faith.
Have you noticed
how our language has changed over the years as we talk about feelings? Someone
used to ask you, “What do you think about this or that?” Now, someone will ask
you, “How do you feel about this or
that?” It sounds the same, but it’s not. It appears to be a subtle difference,
but it’s not.
Your thinking is
based on reliable facts, on empirical evidence. Feelings are temporary and volatile.
People don’t think
anymore; they feel. One of the great problems of our present age is that we
make decisions based on our feelings instead of facts.
Our culture has bought into feelings over facts. If a
man feels like he is a woman trapped in a man’s body, then he should be treated
like a woman. Politics, gun laws, immigration, and pretty much anything else in
the news these days are debated based on feelings, rather than on facts.
We Christians have bought into this feelings over facts
rationale, as well.
We know what God says about sex before marriage in His
6th Commandment (Exodus 20:14), yet we Christians still move in
together before marriage. We know that God demands us to keep His Sabbath day
holy (Exodus 20:8), but we ignore Him, so we can keep our Sundays free. We know
that God prohibits gossip, but if we didn’t gossip, we wouldn’t have anything to
talk about. We know that God teaches contentment is a blessing and coveting a
curse, but how do we plan to get ahead in life if we are content with our job
and not coveting more wages?
I have heard numerous Christians repeat the mantra: “Perception
is reality.” No, perception is how you perceive things to be – how you feel
about them. Reality is the way things really are. Perception is perception.
Reality is reality.
We allow our feelings to overtake the facts God lays
out for us in His Word.
A young family is at Children’s Hospital with their
deathly ill little girl. They don’t know what’s making her so sick. Their fear
threatens to overcome their Christian faith.
A family is blessed that their Mom is able to stay at
home with the little children. But now, Dad is home, too, after being laid off
from work. They don’t know where the next paycheck or next meal is coming from.
Their worry threatens to overcome their faith.
A wife has admitted to her husband that she has had an
affair. Her guilt threatens to overcome her faith.
A family calls the pastor at 2 a.m. to ask him to come
to the emergency room. Their dad has just had a massive heart attack and isn’t
expected to survive. Their shock and sorrow threaten to overcome their faith.
Jesus does for us the same thing He did for Thomas. Jesus
held Thomas’ finger in His side and said, “Don’t continue to doubt, but
believe.” Thomas believed and said, “My Lord, and my God” (John 20:28). Jesus said
to him, “Because you have seen me, you have believed” (John 20:29). Then, Jesus
talks about us when He says, “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have
believed” (John 20:29).
What haven’t we seen and yet believed? We haven’t seen
the empty tomb or the angel sitting on the stone or the burial cloth neatly
folded in place. We haven’t directly heard the testimony of the angels or the
women walking away from the tomb or the Emmaus disciples. We haven’t put our fingers
into the wounds of Christ. Yet, by the grace of God, we have heard and seen and
touched, and so we believe.
What does this faith do for us? It overcomes our
feelings!
The young family hears Jesus’ words of “Peace be with
you” that He spoke to His disciples in the upper room (John 20:21). They know
their resurrected Christ is sitting at God’s right hand working everything out
for the good of their little girl (Romans 8:28). This peace overcomes their fears.
The parents pray the Lord’s Prayer every night with
their young children. With their stomachs rumbling with hunger, they especially
focus on the address and two petitions of the Lord’s Prayer: “Our Father, who
art in heaven … thy will be done … give us this day our daily bread.” They
trust that their heavenly Father will give them daily bread according to His
will. This trust overcomes their worry.
The wife who has cheated on her husband, hears the
words of Jesus that He breathed on His disciples: “Whenever you forgive
people’s sins, they are forgiven” (John 20:23). She believes her husband when
he forgives her in Jesus’ name. This forgiveness overcomes her guilt.
The family that has just lost their dad to death,
believe in Jesus when He said, “Because I live, you also will live” (John
14:19). They believe that their dad is now walking in the green pastures and
quiet waters of paradise with their risen Good Shepherd. This resurrection
faith overcomes their shock and sorrow.
Feelings are among the least reliable sources to answer
any questions – whether those questions are posed by children, teenagers or
adults. Whether those questions are about homework, politics, morals, or the
Bible. Feelings are actually the worst place to go to answer the weighty
questions of life.
Feelings are a gift from God. But, because of sin, we
cannot trust them. We cannot control them. They lead us where we should not go
and leave us where we should not be. They prey upon our weaknesses and cast off
the restraints the conscience puts upon us. Feelings are temporary and volatile.
We are consumed with the need to express our feelings and have those feelings accepted
and validated.
As Christians, we must set aside our unreliable
feelings that have been forever marred by sin and trust, instead, in the
ever-reliable voice of the Holy Spirit in God’s Word and Sacraments.
Jesus held Thomas’ finger in His side so that Thomas
could feel Christ’s wounds. Jesus holds your head at the baptismal font so that
you can feel those regenerative waters washing over you, making you a sanctified
child of God.
He holds your eyes to the pages of Scriptures so that
you can read for yourself God’s love letter to you in those beautiful words.
He holds your ear close to the mouth of the pastor so
that you can hear the precious words that absolve you from every deliberate and
accidental and inborn sin.
He holds His body and blood up to your lips so that
you can taste His forgiveness and drink His strengthening of your faith.
Our old enemies of sin and death cannot be
killed by feelings. Instead, they must be confronted and crucified with the
facts of God’s Law and Gospel. We do not meet God in the emotional roller coaster
of the heart, but in the concrete means of water, Word, bread and wine of God’s
Word and Sacraments.
Jesus holds us to His Word and Sacraments.
It is here where reality overtakes perception; where facts overthrow emotions;
and where faith overcomes feelings. Amen.
How blessed is
everyone who fears the LORD, everyone who is walking in his ways. (Ps 128:1,
EHV)
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