This sermon was prepared by our ALM Carol on Sunday 19 April 2020. You can read it here.
“Peace be with you, as the Father has sent me, so I send you”
God’s story is our story. We have been blessed with the Bible, God’s story of his interaction with his beloved creation. The stories we read in the gospels are our stories. In Holy Week I hope like me you stepped into God’s story as we followed our Stations of the Cross, as we walked those final hours with Jesus to Good Friday. Now, we have come to the Easter season and we walk in the most astonishing and delightful part of the story of God’s dealings with his people.
So let us again seek to step into this story. What might Jesus have to say to us?
The disciples in our gospel reading today are hiding from fear of the Jews. Are they hiding from God, like Adam and Eve did in the Garden of Eden? Perhaps they are, in a way. What was the last thing they did before the arrest of Jesus? They fled and denied knowing Christ, even though each of them had said they would be willing to die for Jesus. They are still not willing to die for Jesus. They are hiding and they are terrified. They know Jesus is dead and that his body has gone from the tomb, but they have no understanding as to what this might mean. I think they believe what Mary first tells them, that the body has been taken away and they don’t know where they have put him, but Mary has since told them that she has seen the Lord, but it still makes no sense to them. It is in this context that the Risen Christ appears to the disciples. What is the first thing Jesus says to the disciples? Does he say, ‘Where were you?’ or ‘You abandoned me?’ No. He says, astonishingly, ‘peace be with you’. Then John gives us what I think must be one of the greatest understatements in scripture, he writes: ‘then they rejoiced when they saw the Lord’. Of course there is the delight in seeing Jesus risen from the dead, but I think the rejoicing may partly be because in saying ‘peace be with you’ Jesus is saying ‘I forgive you, you thought you were no longer my friends but you are still my friends and I say peace be with you’.
He repeats again ‘peace be with you’. Then he does something else astonishing, he says ‘I send you’. This is a group of frightened men hiding in a locked room who don’t even understand what has happened to Jesus. In that state, he tells them that he is sending them. There is no sense that they need to pass some kind of test first before they get sent out: they’re ready now. Jesus says ‘as the father has sent me so I send you’. It almost sounds like ‘get up, take up your mat and walk’, which incidentally was the theme of World Day of Prayer.
Then Jesus does something weird. He breathes on them. How does God bring Adam to life when he is created from clay? He breathes on him. Only the Creator God can give life to something that is dead. In a sense, the disciples in that locked room are dead and lifeless, they are dead in their denial of Jesus, their sins, in the way they have let God down. Jesus breathes on them and says, ‘receive the Holy Spirit’. Unfortunately, in English it is hard to make the connection but in both Greek and Hebrew the word for God’s spirit can also mean breath or wind. So Jesus, the one who until very recently was dead, breathes life, breathes the Holy Spirit back into the weak disciples. In receiving this forgiving power of the Holy Spirit, the disciples are then to do the same, to go out and forgive others in that power.
We all know and relate to the hymn
Breathe on me, Breath of God, fill me with life anew, that I may love the way you love, and do what you would do.
Breathe on me, Breath of God, until my heart is pure, until my will is one with yours, to do and to endure.
Breathe on me, Breath of God, so shall I never die, but live with you the perfect life for all eternity.
Jesus knows exactly what we need. He knew what the disciples needed to hear and see and touch. In this first appearance in the locked room he shows the disciples his hands and his side, to show them he is not a ghost but real and can be touched. Thomas isn’t there and so he is afraid that the disciples have just been seeing things, that they’ve had some kind of hallucination. He makes the perfectly reasonable statement that he wants to touch Jesus in the very spot where the nails went in. He has to be sure it’s the same Jesus: that he’s not a ghost and neither is he just a man that looks like Jesus.
These are the same questions I have. Surely they were just seeing things, the mind when going through grief can do strange things. Surely it was just wishful thinking? Or maybe a man did come into the room, but it was just some bloke that looked rather a lot like Jesus? It can’t actually be that man we lived with for 3 years and saw brutally killed. Can it?
Jesus, when he appears for a 2nd time is again in a closed room, and again, the first thing he says to them is ‘peace be with you’. In doing this he is saying ‘I meant it you know, I really do forgive you, you really are still my friends, peace be with you’. Then he immediately knows what Thomas needs and offers him the chance to touch the place where the nails were in his hands and feel where the lance pierced his side. Jesus is happy to show him how real he is. This is enough for Thomas, we don’t even know if he takes Jesus up on the offer to put his finger in his wounds, he simply makes the first full profession of faith in the divinity of Christ in the Gospel and says ‘my Lord and my God’.
Jesus knows what we need. He knows we need something tangible to let us know that God is real. Something we can touch. So he gave us Holy Communion. A reminder each week that Jesus is real. We can touch and taste and receive him in the bread and the wine. Just when you were worried that God felt like an imaginary friend, we are reminded, week by week that He is real and He has risen. Alleluia
Jesus speaks directly to you at the end of this encounter. If this were a movie rather than a book, this would be the part where Jesus’ head turns from Thomas and looks directly at you down the camera lens and says ‘blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe’. That is, you. That is, me. Jesus steps out of this story we are reading directly into our lives. His story is our story. Our story is his story. He comes to us in our fearful, dead, inadequate, failing state and says ‘peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you, Receive the Holy Spirit, you are blessed because you believe in me.’
Let us pray:
Do you feel afraid? Jesus says ‘peace be with you’
Do you feel you’ve let God down? Jesus says ‘peace be with you’
Do you hear God calling you? Jesus says ‘I am sending you’
Do you feel empty or inadequate? Jesus says ‘receive the Holy Spirit’
Have you been shutting God out of your life? Jesus says ‘peace be with you’
Do you want to know that Jesus is real? Jesus says ‘touch, taste and receive me in the bread and the wine’
Do you believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God?
Jesus says ‘blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe’. Amen.