To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 5:12-16; Rev 1:9-13, 17-19; Jn 20:19-31
The verses which make up the Gospel text for today
may be seen to be divided into four parts, all of which are interconnected. The
first of these is the appearance of the Risen Christ to his disciples, and this
is followed by his commission to them. The third is the appearance of the Risen
Christ to the disciples when Thomas is present.
The final part is the comments made by the evangelist.
The disciples did not believe the word of Mary
Magdalene that the Lord had appeared to her and so, they are behind closed
doors. However, even closed doors do not pose a hindrance to Jesus. He comes into
their midst. His first words to the disciples are his gift of peace. This is
not merely a wish, but a gift, since it is with his peace that they will be
sent out into the world. This gift enables them to substitute fearlessness for their
fear, courage for their cowardice, and joy for their sorrow. The manifestation
of his hands and side is to indicate to them that there is continuity. It is
not a different Jesus who appears to them, but the same Jesus, who was
crucified, died, buried, and raised from the dead. He is now, also, the Risen
Christ. This manifestation enables the disciples to see and recognise him. This
is the reason for their joy.
However, the manifestation serves another purpose as
well, which is to send the disciples on mission. The disciples are sent by Jesus,
the Risen Christ, just as Jesus was sent by the Father. In other words, they
are to continue the mission that Jesus began.
As he received the gift of the Spirit before his ministry, so too, the
disciples receive the gift of the Spirit from Jesus. The breath of Jesus on the
disciples makes them a new creation and readies them for their mission that is
to forgive and retain sin.
While this has been understood as a basis for the
Sacrament of Reconciliation, it seems, from the text, that the mission is much
deeper. The Commission is to “the disciples”, which, in the Gospel of John, is
a much larger group than the eleven or twelve. It involves the entire faith
community. It is the whole community that is called to continue the mission of
Jesus. This mission is not merely the forgiveness or retention of sins that
individuals commit. It is more than
that. In the Gospel of John, sin is,
more often than not, a theological failing. It is the refusal to believe that
Jesus is the manifestation of the Father. It is the refusal to believe that
Jesus reveals God as no other does. Thus, when the disciples are commissioned
to forgive and retain sin, what they are really commissioned to do is reveal
God to the world as Jesus did. They will
reveal God to the world by the love they have for one another, and by the love
they show to others. They will make others see that God is, indeed, love. They
will, through their actions, invite others to share in this unconditional love.
Those to whom this manifestation is made are free to accept or to reject it. It
is in this acceptance or rejection that sins are forgiven or retained.
Acceptance means forgiveness. Rejection
means that sins are retained.
This interpretation is confirmed when we realise
that one reason why Thomas did not believe the disciples when they told him
that they had seen the Lord, was because he was not able to see in their words
and actions a manifestation of the love of Jesus. They were as they had been
before the revelation that Jesus made to them. There did not seem to be any marked
change in their behaviour. They were not able to convince him that the Lord had,
indeed, appeared to them. However, Jesus will use, for Thomas, that way which
will bring him to faith. In this, Thomas is as “doubting” as the disciples and no
more so. Thus, in this scene, the focus of attention is not Thomas, but Jesus.
The focus is on the generous offer of himself that Jesus makes to Thomas, an
offer that Jesus made to so many others, so often in his life time. After his
resurrection, Jesus continues to give. Thomas responds with the most powerful, complete
and the highest acclamation for Jesus found in the Gospels: “My Lord and my
God!” Jesus is, indeed, Lord and God. The words of Jesus to Thomas after the
acclamation include future generations of believers. It is not necessary to
have external sight to come to faith. It is not necessary to touch and to feel
to come to faith. It is not necessary to have tangible evidence to come to
faith. We, who believe without having seen, are invited, like Thomas and the
other disciples, not merely to believe in the resurrection, but to believe in
the revelation of Jesus as the Son of God.
We are invited to believe in his unique relationship with God. We now
have life in abundance because Jesus has completed his work on earth and
returned to the Father.
He is, as the second reading of today informs us,
the beginning and the end, the first and the last. He who was dead is alive
forever and it is he who holds the keys of the kingdom. It is the same Lord who
gave Peter and the first disciples the power to heal and make whole. It is the
same Lord who gave Peter and the disciples the power to reach out in love. It is the same Lord who gave Peter and the
disciples the power to make him manifest in their every word and action so that
others will be brought to believe.
It is the same Lord who gives us this power today.
What will we do with it?
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