John 20:19-23 · Jesus Appears to His Disciples
He's Back
John 20:19-23
Sermon
by David O. Bales
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Most Christians know about the Holy Spirit’s power granted one morning in Jerusalem seven weeks after Jesus’ resurrection. It occurred on the Jewish Festival of Passover recorded in Acts 2. Many Christians don’t know what John 20 reports. This text is about Jesus’ giving the Holy Spirit before the exciting spiritual event at the Passover Festival.

Seven weeks before Pentecost we’re with Jesus late on the day of his resurrection. Jesus’ resurrection has announced that he’s back for good. His students thought he was gone forever. His enemies reckoned they’d safely stuffed him, dead, in a tomb. But his students’ breathtaking (and breath-receiving) experience in John 20 shows that Jesus is back and will never again be absent from their lives.

We might as well get used to that with Jesus. He’ll never truly leave us again. You assume that his death will end his influence in Jerusalem and pretty soon his followers are spreading his good news all over the eastern Mediterranean. You kill a few Christians in Roman arenas and before you know it Jesus’ followers spread throughout the known world. You think you get Jesus stopped here, he pops up there. That’s not only a summary of Christian history: That also is the pattern of our Christian experience until the end of days.

Remember when you were kids in a dozen different games of hiding and seeking, you always tried to double back and come up behind the other kids? That’s what Jesus has done. He’s circled around through suffering and death and returned. He’ll always return. That’s why we can’t hold the Bible casually as we read it. The scriptures tell us amazing things that are happening right now. Jesus is back.

As Jesus surprises his students on Sunday in John 20, so he does with us. He surprises us when we gather in worship with fellow believers. Who knows what Jesus will do here this morning? He surprises us when the Bible is read and when it’s preached. Who can guess how his word will break into our lives? I was sitting in worship one day beside a woman. We said hello and shook hands during greeting. Then in the middle of the sermon she started hitting me with her bulletin: Whap! Whap! Whap! Surprise is one word that could describe my response. She saw a spider on me and she was dreadfully fearful of spiders. You know, it made me more aware of what might strike me during worship. One way or the other, Jesus circles around and comes back, especially on Sunday in worship.

As on that first Sunday, Jesus opens tombs sealed in despair and unlocks doors bolted in fear. He pries into the places we hide. The whole world lies exposed before him. We can only experience the world with the risen Jesus in it. He hasn’t just slipped from his tomb. He doesn’t merely pick locks in first-century Jerusalem. He opens all of life as easily as we crank open a can of chili con carne. Consequently, nothing and no one upon our planet is truly shut to Jesus. He’s already here.

If you meet someone who has never gone to church or considered the Christian faith, don’t be surprised if they mention that they’ve wondered about God or that they pray, even if they don’t know to whom they pray. Jesus got to them before you did. Jesus is on the loose, from the morning of his resurrection until that evening that starts our text, and now beyond.

Jesus is smack in the middle of our life again. We can’t keep him out. He obviously returns Sunday after Sunday. But he comes on weekdays too. So our house stands permanently accessible to Jesus. No matter what difficulties assault us from the outside or what fears grab us from the inside, Jesus is risen and we can’t divest ourselves of him. We can ignore him, but we can’t lock him out of our lives.

Jesus comes right through the walls, and that’s not a comment upon the poor quality of buildings in first-century Jerusalem. Jesus appears suddenly and insists, whether or not he has an appointment, that we deal with him. We might think other things are more important: health, family, job, house, car, or vacation. We might even be concentrating upon improving our character or our church. Suddenly Jesus stands in front of us, eyeball to eyeball with us, and, when he speaks to us, it’s about eternal matters. He tells us we’ll never get away from him — that’s what his resurrection is about.

In Jerusalem on that spring Sunday evening, Jesus’ original students are locked in because they’re frightened. Their fear keeps them even from leaving the house. They’re paralyzed. We know what it’s like to be stunned by grief, loss of a job, our beloved rejecting us, a war starting, an illness, or our crops or business failing. Yet Jesus roams the planet again, first in the shadows of resurrection morning and now in the shadows of that evening. Sunshine or shadow can’t stop him. The tragedies in your life can’t keep Jesus away from you, nor can all your worldly advantages. Jesus returns with unfinished business. He isn’t done with you yet. He’s just getting re-started.

Jesus doesn’t meet with his dumbfounded students merely to restate the principles of his earthly ministry — that would mean nothing’s changed. Jesus Christ our risen Lord is restarting creation. Jesus is raised on this first day of the week. The peace with which he greets his student is the peace that reigned upon God’s very first day. If God’s renewed creation wasn’t obvious at that moment to Jesus’ confused students, to the early Christians who later heard the gospel of John read in Greek, they’d instantly recognize the exact word — tense, voice, and mood — used of Jesus’ granting the Holy Spirit to his students as God’s blowing into Adam the first breath of life.[1]

After he’s breathed on them and commanded them to receive the Holy Spirit, notice what Jesus tells his students, “If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them” (v. 23). That’s how Jesus starts the world over. It’s also, if you consider your life in Jesus, how he starts over with each of us. The biggest problems in the world and in our lives aren’t always caused by doubting as Thomas did, or by our sinning (Jesus dealt with that on the cross), but by our not forgiving. Jesus continues recreating the world by starting our forgiving others. Forgiving is what Jesus was about to the end of his natural life. Hanging on the cross he forgave; now, first day out of the tomb and he’s telling us to do that also.

We assume religion is about forgiveness. We might not, personally, get around to forgiving, but we think religion in general is about forgiveness. At Jesus’ time you’d expect Jesus after his resurrection to avenge his death. That’s what others would’ve done. But Jesus forgives. He doesn’t avenge his death and he won’t let his followers try that either. Instead, Jesus sends us to live and act as he did. He dashes up to us like a runner in a relay race. He’s not the last to carry the baton. He passes it to us, saying, “As the Father has sent me, so I send you” (v. 21). Jesus’ suffering, death, and resurrection led to Jesus’ sending us into the world with the energy of his message and with his same purpose of forgiving.

As we take off following Jesus, we can’t live his kind of life without his Spirit within us. The tasks are too large and our responsibilities too grave, especially knowing that some won’t believe that Jesus is alive again and offering eternal life. But the focus of our Christian lives, from the first day of re-creation, is that we are now Jesus’ bearers of forgiveness and hope.

We find Jesus surprising us with hope when, having experienced discouragement, we continue trying to live for him for no reason we can identify in this natural world. It’s supernatural — Jesus’ Spirit making us hopeful, loving, and forgiving. Even when we don’t see him around. Even when we don’t feel his presence. It’s just that he often wields his power in a hidden and quiet way. Jesus is invisibly roving the world and invisibly wandering inside us.

Jesus’ Holy Spirit within us helps us know where Jesus is now, and what he’s doing now, and where he’s sending us now. Our worship and prayer conditions us to Jesus within us. So we practice praying. We regularly meditate upon scripture. We attend worship no matter what we feel like. Those are spiritual disciplines that open us to the grace God already has granted us through the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit’s presence then helps us to see Jesus here; or, you can say to imagine Jesus, to see the image of Jesus here.

There’s no place you can imagine where Jesus won’t show up. So here’s another spiritual discipline and we’ll practice it now. I’d like you to close your eyes and see Jesus here in worship with us. Maybe he’s standing across the room. Maybe he’s sitting next to you but in your prayer see Jesus’ image with us in worship….

Seeing Jesus clearly with prayer, thank him for what you’re most grateful for….

Now, trusting that Jesus is always with you, in prayer bring to Jesus a person you need to forgive….

If it’s difficult for you to forgive, watch Jesus approach you in worship, breathe upon you, and say, “Receive the Holy Spirit….”

Thank you, Jesus, for being with us, for appearing again in our lives, and for offering us grace to live on and a goal to live toward. Help us always to live within your presence and for your glory. Amen.

Please open your eyes.

The Bible doesn’t just record Jesus’ teaching but also tells us what he did so we can see him in first-century Palestine. Get used to seeing him in the Bible, and soon you start seeing him here; because, he’s no longer entombed either in Jerusalem or in the first century. Jesus is here — the marks of the nails in his hands and the wound in his side.

Jesus shows up in the hopeless gloom of Easter morning and in the frightened apprehension of Easter evening and beyond. On Easter evening Jesus doesn’t grant us the spiritual experience others enjoy a few weeks later on the Day of Pentecost. Yet Jesus gives us his Holy Spirit in order to bring his good news of forgiveness to others.

Jesus is our leader and one way to define a Christian is a person always trying to catch up with Jesus. Since Jesus is way out in front of us, we’d better get going after him and living his way; because, if we don’t start following him now, he’ll circle around and come back again and again until we do.


1. The Christians’ first Bible wasn’t the Hebrew Old Testament. Almost exclusively they read the Greek translation of the Hebrew, in which the verb, “he breathed upon” is exactly the same in the Greek of Genesis 2:7 and John 20:22.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., To the Cross and Beyond: and other Cycle A sermons for Lent, Easter, by David O. Bales