Believing Thomas  
                The Rev. George Yandell                             (This sermon is also available in audio)              When
            I was in seminary, fall of '77, I was taking a course on the gospel
            of John
              from Dr. Dick Reid. In the class was a student named John, from India.
              He was a minister in the Mar-Toma Church, a sister church to the
            Episcopal Church, a partner church in the Anglican Communion. Thomas
            is the patron
              saint of the Mar-Toma Church. (It bears his name.)  
                I
                    had never heard John speak—he was a slight man—but in this class, talking about the
                Thomas passage in the gospel, John stood up to his full, bristling 5
                feet four inches, and proclaimed loudly: "Let's get this one ting
                straight—Thomas was NOT a Doubter." Then he sat down.               So let's make
              an assumption—Thomas was not a doubter. Rather, he was an ardent, strong-willed
              apostle. He, no doubt, had heard from the disciples who were present
              the Sunday before, Easter night-had heard that Jesus himself had appeared
              in the room where they had huddled in fear. He had heard what Jesus did—he
              had breathed on them, recalling the way Yahweh had breathed into Adam's
              nostrils to animate him. And Thomas understood that Jesus was breathing
              into life a new Spirit-filled creation. 
            Thomas
                knew that he had tried just as the other disciples had tried
                to go out as
            a "sent" one, an apostolein, to forgive sins,
            and to tell the story of the resurrection. And had failed. He stumbled
            against the
            same problem each of us stumbles against—"If only I could
            see Jesus now, and know for myself that he lives, then I could be
            a worthwhile
            disciple." 
            Probably
                others of the disciples—even those
              who had seen Jesus the week before—had had the same difficulty;
              they hadn't
              been able to get through to the people around them the utter necessity
              of repenting, turning to Christ, and living in the power of the resurrection.             So, when they
              were all gathered together again one week later, (the Sunday after Easter)
              they were wondering about what Mary and Peter had told them, that they
              had seen the Lord alive. When all of a sudden, Jesus stood among them
              and said, "Shalom." And then, Jesus turned to Thomas, "Establish
              it by putting your finger here that I am alive, have faith." And
              without touching him, Thomas exclaimed, "My Lord & my God!" The
              others witnessed it, and had their faith bolstered.              Here is the
              elegant, indulgent, risen Jesus; victorious and personally available.
              He knew they needed continual contact. He knew them, had eaten countless
              meals with them, had sat for hours wrestling out belief; Jesus knew what
              each feared and what each could give to lead fearlessly. So his visit
              indulged Thomas, but more importantly it showed them each that falling
              short was okay; Jesus comes to each and puts wavering belief back in
              balance.             After all,
              Jesus had died for them! He cared so intimately for them and all who
              would come to know him through them that he would be with them always.
              To me, that's the critical message of this Thomas Sunday. A message of
              relationship. Jesus relates to every Thomas, every Peter, every George,
              and accepts us. So the question of success or failure is moot—rather,
              the question is, "Am I honoring Christ? Do I act in caring response
              to others as Jesus has with me?"             I heard a
              story from a colleague recently. It illustrates the way Jesus knows so
              intimately our needs, unique to each of us alone.             "A pastor
              was invited to eat the evening meal with a family in his church. As he
              stopped his car and walked up the sidewalk, he was met with two boys,
              ages seven and five. The five-year-old was mentally slow. As they walked
              to the house, their father drove up into the driveway. Both boys left
              the preacher and ran to their daddy. On the way, the seven year old stopped
              and picked up a flower to present to his father. The younger son did
              not quite understand. He reached down, picked up a handful of dust and
              rocks to give to his father. The dad picked each boy up and hugged him.
              The preacher heard the father say, "Thank you for the flower. And
              thank you for the rocks."             As Jesus dealt
              with Thomas's needs, so he deals with us all. And in our own experiences
              we can come to say: "My Lord and my God!" We finally learn
              what each disciple learned: to speak our faith in our own way, giving
              our own account of the life beathed into us as new creatures of resurrection
              power.  
              Now
                  it makes sense that Thomas was late on the scene to witness
                the resurrection. Each of us comes to faith in her own time,
                  and relates to the risen Lord personally. Yet what affects
                  one of us affects us all—so
                that my need can be an opportunity for another to learn his story more
                fully.  
              And
                  finally what Thomas teaches me is this—all our stories are
                  God's story. Jesus is not reported to have left that room where the disciples
                  were. It simply states, "Now Jesus did many other signs among the
                  disciples which are not written in this book." Where else better
                  to find Jesus now, than among the disciples he has never left? Among
                  you and me, whose every gift he prizes because he knows us so intimately
                  he would die and rise again to receive us, embrace us and send us forth
                  to tell the world, "We have seen the Lord!"               Amen. 
                                            Copyright
        ©2003 Calvary Episcopal Church       This
                  homily was delivered at Calvary
                  Episcopal Church, Memphis,
            Tennessee, on April 27, 2003, the Second Sunday
            of Easter. 
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