Luke 24:36-49 · Jesus Appears to the Disciples
Bringing Life to a Party
Luke 24:36b-48
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

I read a story recently about a man named Fred Karger who has earned the unofficial title of the “World’s Greatest Party Crasher.” Over the years, Karger has crashed hundreds of high-profile parties and celebrity events. He even ended up several years ago on the stage at the Academy Awards and at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner for President Obama. He had crashed these as well. Karger claims there is no high-profile party or wedding or funeral or political event he can’t crash. He says the key to being a successful party crasher is to look confident, as if you belong there, and no one will question you. (1)

Our Bible verses today make me think of Fred Karger and the “art” of party-crashing. This time, though, the party crasher was Jesus. The interesting thing is that it wasn’t a party until Jesus showed up there. Before he got there, in fact, things were kind of gloomy.

Jesus wasn’t exactly an uninvited guest in this story, but he certainly was unexpected. After his crucifixion, his disciples were trying to sort out the meaning of the reports they had been receiving about appearances of the risen Christ. It was most confusing to them. Was it a hoax? Perhaps it was some kind of ghost. Last week we talked about Doubting Thomas. But it’s important for us to see that at first it was difficult for all his followers to deal with Christ’s resurrection.

Then suddenly it happened. The disciples were gathered together in one place and the crucified Christ himself stood among them. The disciples were startled and frightened. Then Jesus said to them, “Why are you troubled and why do questionings rise in your hearts? See my hands and my feet, that it is I myself . . .”

The response of the disciples is a sermon in itself. Luke tells us that they “disbelieved for joy . . .” It was simply too wonderful to be true. He was alive and he was with them—right there . . . in their presence! He had been raised from the dead. Talk about bringing life to a party! No wonder they had difficulty believing. Some persons still have that problem today. Many desperately want to believe but something holds them back. “See my hands and my feet . . .”

Greg Boyle is a Jesuit priest who has spent decades ministering in the toughest neighborhoods in Los Angeles. He is the founder of Home Boy Industries, which provides jobs and counseling to young men who have been released from prison. In an interview, Boyle told the story of José, a young man from the streets.

When José was six years old, his mother told him to kill himself because no one wanted him. Can you imagine a mother saying that to her son? When he was nine, she abandoned him at an orphanage. His grandmother assumed custody of José, but she beat him brutally. It’s no wonder that when José grew up, he turned to drugs and gangs, and eventually crime to deal with his painful past.

José ended up in prison, which turned out to be the best thing that could have happened to him, because it was there that he heard the message of Jesus. Through a prison ministry, he learned that Jesus was the sole embodiment of God’s love and that he came to die for us on the cross to take away our sins and give us new life.

As José told Greg Boyle about his background, he showed him some of his scars, the scars left behind by his childhood beatings and his drug use and rough living. Since he found Jesus, José was no longer ashamed of his scars. As he said, “How could I help other wounded people if I did not make friends of my wounds?” (2)   

The risen Jesus showed the disciples his scars because he was going to send them out to do the work the Father had sent him to do—to save wounded people. And they couldn’t save wounded people unless they could see and touch and make friends with Jesus’ wounds. Only then could they proclaim with confidence the limitless love of God.

Many people desperately want to believe, but something holds them back. Maybe if they could see his scars, it would make a difference. Why? Several reasons.

For one thing, some people have difficulty believing that God really cares about hurting people that much—that he would give His life for them. A Savior with scars in his hands and feet and side? Some of us are more comfortable with an impersonal God who is the First Cause, the Ground of Being, a Source of life and power but not of personality. The idea of God with nail prints in his hands and feet and side because of His great love for us is an idea we are not ready for.

Professor Maria Teresa Dávila put it this way: she writes that Jesus’ resurrected body shows his disciples that the triumph of life over death is “not a victory without cost.” God’s love for us required that He humble Himself, give up His power and authority, take on human form, and suffer humiliation and injustice and persecution and torture and death to save us. As Dávila writes, “Victory didn’t erase the scars. He continued to carry on his very skin the evidence of a life lived in radical commitment to God’s love and justice.” (3)

How outrageous are the claims of the Gospel? The divine Creator of all that lives and moves and has its being came down to earth and suffered and died to say to us that no one on this earth is beyond God’s love and concern.

In trying to deal with the meaning of the cross on which Christ died, the early church came to understand that those nail prints in the hands and feet of the Master should have been ours. But God so loved the world that he sent his own Son to bear the burden brought about by the iniquities of us all. Can you deal with that? Can you believe that God really cares about you that much?

A few years ago, the Christian Century magazine carried the story of a young student at Yale Divinity School named Lou Marshall. Marshall moved into a poor and violent neighborhood in New York City to work with gang members. At one point, Marshall was able to negotiate a temporary truce between two rival gangs, the Young Untouchables and the Playboys. But on his way home from the mediation talks, four gang members who resisted the truce attacked Lou Marshall and beat him unconscious on the street. Two days later, Marshall died.

At his memorial service, Reverend Howard Moody summed up the tragedy of this event like this: “Some people will say that the crumbling pavement on which he died wasn’t worth his life—so full of promise and hope. Others might say that he was foolish to become involved in a way that was so dangerous. Still I believe that street has been made more holy because a man’s blood was shed—a man who had the courage to stand there for what he believed was right.” (4)  

Jesus’ courage was rooted in his love for humanity. He knew we could never be good enough by our own efforts to stand in the presence of a holy God. So he covered our sins with his holy blood and made us perfect in God’s sight. He paid for our sins to set us free from the power of death.

It’s like a judge a few years ago in Fairfax County, Virginia who heard a landlord-tenant dispute for a landlord who wanted to evict a deaf couple who couldn’t afford to pay their back rent.

Judge Donald McDonough was accustomed to dealing with more than 100 landlord-tenant disputes on an average Friday, so this wasn’t the first time he was called upon to pass judgment on a situation like this. But there was something about this deaf couple and their grim situation that touched Judge McDonough’s heart. Before he rendered his judgment, he excused himself from the bench and went back to his chambers. A few minutes later, he returned with $250 cash, the exact amount of money the deaf couple owed in back rent. He handed it to the landlord’s attorney as he pronounced his judgment: “Consider it paid.” (5)

What beautiful words— “Consider it paid.” Those are words Christ speaks to us. Our sins, our debt, our failures. “Consider it paid.” The empty grave, the empty cross, the wounds in Jesus’ hands and feet and side—those are all physical reminders of God’s ultimate announcement to humanity: “Consider it paid.” That’s how much God loves us. And yes, it is hard to believe that God loves us that much, but his scars are a reminder.

In the second place, there are others of us who simply have difficulty believing that life really goes on beyond the tomb. It seems too wonderful to believe that there is a world beyond this one—another existence in which that which dies here is resurrected to new life there. Yet such a conviction is at the heart of our faith.

It is very difficult for most of us to face the thought of dying. In the cartoon, “Family Circus” the family is evidently returning from a funeral. The mother says to the children in the back seat: “Well, yes—we’ll see Granddad someday when we go to heaven.” 

With that, the smallest child in the family says, “Could I just wait in the car?” 

I can understand that sentiment. None of us wants to die. But that’s life. No one gets to wait in the car. We will all die. Thankfully, that’s not our final destiny. We were created for life, not death. God did not bring us into being for this world only. Christ showed us that death is no longer our enemy. Death has been conquered. Because Christ lives we, too, shall live. We no longer need to fear death. Without the Easter faith not only death but life itself is ultimately meaningless. What value is there in love that ends beside a grave?

Some of you may remember the name Alfred Krupp. Krupp was a wealthy manufacturer who supplied weapons to the Nazi regime and used slave labor in his factories. After World War II, Krupp was put on trial for crimes against humanity for forcing prisoners of war to work in his factory producing the weapons that allowed the Nazis to wage war against the Allies.

Those who knew Krupp well said that he was so afraid of death that he would not allow his family, his friends, his colleagues, his employees from ever speaking about death in his presence. As he lay dying, he offered his doctor a million dollars if the doctor could prolong his life just a little longer. But no amount of money could buy Alfred Krupp more time. His power and money weren’t enough to protect him from his greatest fear, his own death. (6) You have to wonder in Krupp’s situation if it was fear of death or fear of judgment that filled his heart with terror.

That is all the non-believing world can do with death—fear it, ridicule it, deny it, avoid talking about it. But not those who have seen the scars of the risen Savior. He is alive and because he lives so shall we live!

Many people resist believing the Good News that Christ is alive. Some cannot believe God really loves us that much. Others cannot believe that life really does go on beyond the grave. But even more significantly, most people do not want to deal with the implications of those two truths. What if Jesus really did rise from the grave, what does that mean for our lives today?

Jules Verne, the author who is known as “the father of science fiction,” had a marker sculpted for his grave that shows Verne breaking open his tombstone and coming out of the grave. The epitaph on the tombstone is in French. It is translated, “Towards Immortality and Eternal Youth.” (7)

Maybe Jules Verne thought that he could achieve immortality on his own. Maybe he believed his writings would live on after him. But the Bible makes it clear that we cannot save ourselves from death. And no amount of avoiding the subject or worrying about it or fearing it will change that fact.

But what if there really is a God who is that intimately concerned with our lives? What does it mean if this life really is but a prelude to everlasting life?  And what difference would it make in your life to see the hands and feet and side of the risen Christ? Would it cause you to take more seriously your walk with the Man of Galilee? Would it have some effect on the goals you have set for your life? After all, if life is indeed eternal, some of our goals are going to seem awfully short-sighted and self-serving, are they not?

Former disgraced presidential advisor and prison ministry founder Chuck Colson tells of visiting one his mentors, Ken Wessner, a few days before Wessner’s death. Wessner had been a successful businessman, the CEO of the ServiceMaster Corporation.

After his retirement, Wessner dedicated his time and energy to a variety of ministries. Now he was dying of kidney cancer. But he wasn’t scared or self-pitying or sad. He had a peace and joy that comforted all those around him.

A few days later, Wessner called his close friend Ken Hansen, who was also dying. Wessner’s wife reports that the two men spoke with joy about meeting Jesus soon, about having new bodies without any pain or weakness. Because of their faith in the promises of God and the sacrifice of Jesus, both men faced their suffering and death with joy and confidence. (8)

No wonder. Jesus had crashed their pity party. They had seen the hands and feet of the risen Christ and they knew that there is more to life than death. Those who live their lives in the light of eternity never run out of a purpose for life.

“See my hands and my feet . . .” said Christ to his fearful disciples. God really does love us that much. Life really does go on beyond the tomb. How shall you live in response to those two great truths?


1. “The Secrets of Real-Life Wedding Crashers” Mel Magazine,  https://melmagazine.com/en-us/story/real-life-wedding-crashers?utm_source=join1440&utm_medium=email.

2. Steven Kurtzin, “The Forgiving Community of the Forgiven,” https://stevendkurtz.wordpress.com/tag/john-2019-31/.

3. Maria Teresa Dávila “Third Sunday of Easter,” Preaching God’s Transforming Justice: A Lectionary Commentary, Year B, eds Dawn Ottoni-Wilhelm, Ronald J. Allen, And Dale P. Andrews (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2011). Cited by Pastor Chrissy Cataldo, “Looking for Jesus,” http://www.wccucc.org/sermon-blog/our-sermon-for-april-15th-2018-looking-for-jesus-luke-2436-48.

4. From a sermon by Dr. Joe Harding.

5. Rocky HenriquesSource: The Timothy Report, Copyright (c) 2000 Swan Lake Communications,www.swanlake.twoffice.com WITandWISDOM(tm) - January 15, 2001.

6. Anonymous. Your Sermon Illustration Library: The Preacher’s Tool (Kindle Locations 11372-11376). AAA SMARTWORLD. Kindle Edition.

7. “27 Headstones that defied expectations” by Molly McBride Jacobson Atlas Obscura Oct. 13, 2016. https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/headstones-that-defied-expectations.

8. Chuck Colson, The Good Life (Wharton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 2005), p. 341.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Sermons, by King Duncan