John 20:19-23 · Jesus Appears to His Disciples
So Send I You
John 20:19-23
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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One of the fastest growing, most profitable investment ventures in today’s economy is . . . . anything having anything to do with security. You couldn’t have lost money in the last twenty years if you invested in storage or security: national security, personal security, home security, financial security, Internet security. The dangers of this world seem to be breathing hotter and closer down our necks. Any offering that promises to cool that threat down is welcomed with open arms and wallets.

We gladly invest in “LifeLock” and “Life Alert” and “Alert Life”— hoping to safeguard both our fiscal and physical lives. Instead of scripted shows by the Blue Angels at air-shows, we are sending long-range spontaneous shows of strength in the form of stealth bombers over South Korean airspace, which offends North Korea. We have “apps” on our smartphones that enable us to watch our front doors at home and our backdoors at work, to turn on our lights and turn off our heat, to be on-guard and on-point, even when we are off-site. We are desperately trying to contain the chaos of the cosmos.

In John’s gospel, Jesus’ first appearance to his disciples is when he comes to them behind closed, locked doors. Despite the vision of the empty tomb, despite the version of the resurrected Jesus Mary Magdalene had reported to them, the disciples were still shuttered and shuddering — clamped down and closed off from a threatening world. Then Jesus blasts through their ADT security system, blows out their “LifeLock,” and suddenly stands in their midst. All their human safeguards are gone. All that remains is the Divine Safeguard the risen Lord Jesus, standing before them, baring his scars and blessing them with peace.

When Jesus bursts into the locked Upper Room, he first brings “Peace.” He then brings “rejoicing.” Finally he brings his assignment: the mission he expects his disciples to accomplish. With peace and joy and with the promised power of the Holy Spirit that he breathed out upon his followers, Jesus summoned his disciples to follow the same directive he had been given: “As the Father sent me, so I sent you.” Jesus gave up his life, and then he gave over his mission, to those who gave him their faith and love.

These nine short words “as the Father sent me, so I send you” may just be the best description of what it means to be a follower of Jesus in all of the Bible. “As the Father sent me, so send I you.”

The most amazing realization of this proclamation is that Jesus is affirming that we are all children of God even as Jesus was God’s child, so we are to go out into the world as God’s sons and daughters. In this one commission on the meaning of discipleship, Jesus affirmed our divine parentage. And as Jesus’ surprising entrance into that locked Upper Room testified, the first gifts of belonging to God’s family are peace and joy. Jesus proclaims that “Peace be with you,” and his disciples respond with great joy.

But to be a faithful follower of Jesus entails more than just being filled with peace and joy. Jesus’ followers are not just “called” — they are “sent.” Every disciple of Christ, throughout the centuries, have been included in Jesus’ locked room declaration “as the Father has sent me, so send I you.” Every follower of Christ is admitted to the family of God, and then charged with the responsibilities of that family to be a witness to the world, even as Jesus was a witness to the world.

We are not called to save the world. But we are called to show the world the way in which it can be saved. As newborn children of God, we are sent, we are storytellers, and we sing.

#1 We are sent into the world, just as was Jesus. We are the sent ones. “As the Father sent me, so send I you.”

Various theologians have talked about a “worldly faith.” In other words, Christians are “holy” and “worldly” at the same time — that is, we are intimately connected to the world’s well-being. Jesus came into this weary world to save it from sin and offer it salvation.

As ones “sent” by Jesus, we offer the same salvation — not through ourselves, but through our ongoing testimony of Jesus’ life and death and resurrection. Disciples are called to be “worldly” in that we are called to go far outside our safe, locked rooms, where those who might challenge or hurt us are kept at a distance. The risen Lord who ignores locked doors and appears where most needed is our model and momentum. Being “sent” means getting out of our safety zones and stepping into stuff we know is dubious and even dangerous. As Jesus went to Samaria, we are to go to the pariahs of the world.

#2 We are sent to tell a story, the greatest story ever/never told.

Jesus breathed the Spirit into his eye-and-ear witness disciples so that they might tell the story of the Savior to the world. As Jesus’ sent ones, we are both story-catchers and story-tellers. Our first call is as story-catchers because we must see and catch the stories of the risen Christ at work in our world. To know that he is risen, we must feel his wounds with our hearts. Are you wounded by the hurts of people?

That is our story. But as ones who are then “sent” into the world, we must also be story-tellers.

Scholars like to argue over whether the disciples Jesus “sent” proclaimed Jesus as the once-and-for-all Savior of the world, or to continue the human side of Jesus’ earthly ministry healing, teaching, loving, feeding the hungry and visiting the prisoners.

The truth is, of course, both. Story-catchers cannot help but be story-tellers and communicate the incredible truth of salvation that Jesus has made possible for all persons. But storytellers also continue what Jesus is doing in the world today, through ordinary people, in ordinary places, in ordinary ways.

“As the Father has sent me into a specific time and specific place — so I send you into a specific time and specific place.” Thus it has been for 21 centuries.

Each new generation of those who have been “sent” tell the “first story” of the once-and-for all Savior. But they also tell the individual stories of Christ, accomplished by the Holy Spirit in the life in this world. Disciples “catch” the story of the first century Jesus, but they also “catch” the story of the 21st century Spirit of Christ active in this world.

#3 We are sent to sing

Everywhere you look we are invited to “Discover your inner...” something. “Discover your inner power.” “Discover your inner Self.” “Discover your inner goddess.” “Discover your inner animal.” My favorite is one that greets you as you make your way to baggage claim in Memphis: “Discover your inner Elvis.”

This is Eastertide, when we celebrate that Christ is alive. We serve a “risen Savior.” We believe Jesus is “in the world today.” And how is Jesus alive in “in the world today.” Because he lives in you and me and in his body, the Church. What it means to be a disciple is to “Discover your inner Jesus.” We are called to sing his song in the world. Or in words that some of you will recognize, and some of you won’t, “I’ve got the Music in me.”

Do you have the music in you this morning? Have you discovered your inner Jesus? Is he alive in your life? If he is, then what Jesus said to his disciples he says to us this morning: “As the Father has sent me, so send I you.”

Some have called this song the “greatest missionary hymn of the 20th century.” It was written in 1954 by a Canadian school teacher by the name of Margaret Clarkson. Her physical disabilities prevented her from becoming a missionary on some foreign field, but when she read today’s text she was convicted: her lonely job as a school teacher in a remote lumber camp in northern Ontario, Canada was to be her mission field. And in that moment she wrote this hymn:

So send I you to labor unrewarded

To serve unpaid, unloved, unsought, unknown

To bear rebuke, to suffer scorn and scoffing

So send I you to toil for Me alone

So send I you to bind the bruised and broken

Over wandering souls to work, to weep, to wake

To bear the burdens of a world a‑weary

So send I you to suffer for My sake

So send I you to loneliness and longing

With heart a‑hungering for the loved and known

Forsaking kin and kindred, friend and dear one

So send I you to know My love alone

So send I you to leave your life's ambition

To die to dear desire, self‑will resign

To labor long, and love where men revile you

So send I you to lose your life in Mine

So send I you to hearts made hard by hatred

To eyes made blind because they will not see

To spend, though it be blood to spend and spare not

So send I you to taste of Calvary

We are the sent ones. "As the Father sent me, so send I you"


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COMMENTARY

Easter morning is a synonym for drama. There was the witness and wonder of the empty tomb. There was the reality of a stone rolled away. There was the breathless report back by Mary Magdalene “I have seen the Lord” (20:13). Yet . . .  Easter Eve still found Jesus’ disciples bewildered and disbelieving. The eye-witnesses of Peter and the “beloved disciple” John and the ear-witness of Mary’s astonishing announcement had not been enough to move the disciples from fear to faith.

It is, then, “for fear of the Jews,” that the disciples are once again gathered together in the Upper Room, huddling behind locked doors. This locked room detail not only demonstrates the fearful mindset of the disciples. It also enables John to let his readers know that Jesus’ sudden miraculous appearance within that room means his resurrected body has a transformed quality about it. No simply human body could materialize into a locked room and stand within their midst.

John’s text does not specify the number of disciples who were present in this locked room — except for noting in verse 24 that Thomas was absent. Because this is the same location as the Last Supper, it is often inferred that only those who dined at that meal were present. Yet John often used the term “disciples” to refer to all those who followed Jesus. It seems highly unlikely that Mary Magdalene would have delivered her testimony to Jesus’ remaining eleven disciples, talked no more of it, and then went somewhere else to supper.

The miracle of Jesus’ unexpected appearance is accompanied by a wholly ordinary greeting: “Peace be with you” (Greek “eirene hymin,” Hebrew “Shalom halekem”). But in this small Upper Room, the risen Christ will repeat this “ordinary” polite Jewish form of greeting three times. This suggests that these words carry a much deeper, more significant meaning that polite address. In 14:27 and 16:33, Jesus had promised his “peace” to his disciples. Now the first act of the resurrected Jesus is to make good on that promise, offering peace to all who received the risen Lord and followed him.

While his body is somehow able to materialize into a locked room, Jesus nevertheless still physically retained the marks of his sacrifice on the cross. He “proves” his physical triumph over death by showing his disciples “his hands and his side.” It is only after they see the physical evidence of Jesus’ crucifixion that the disciples finally realize their Master is truly standing before them and they “rejoice.” The promise of “joy” Jesus had made in 16:20-22 is now made real in the hearts of his disciples.

Immediately Jesus proclaims that all this newfound “peace” and “joy” have a purpose beyond themselves. Echoing John 17:18, the risen Jesus gives a commission to his disciples: “As the Father has sent me, so I send you” (v.22).

Commentaries argue heatedly and at great length just what this sentence involves. The most basic debate is over whether Jesus’ disciples are being sent to continue the works of Jesus’ own earthly mission healing the sick, comforting the poor and outcast, witnessing God’s love, calling for repentance, etc. Or is the “sentness” of the disciples only to proclaim Jesus, the one uniquely “sent” by God into the world to end the stranglehold of sin and death upon humanity?

Surely this “sentness” is not an “either/or” proposition. God had sent Jesus on a unique, once-and-for-all mission for the world. But it was as an unexpected suffering servant, not as a militant messiah, that defined Jesus’ mission and defied expectations. Now Jesus declares that it is “as the Father sent me” that he now sends out his disciples. Jesus’ death and resurrection was unique. But the method of his mission is part of his identity, part of his “sentness.” It is a presence that he continues to send into the world via his disciples.

John’s gospel does not record the dramatic public Pentecost moment found in Acts, Luke’s second volume. Again there is much debate and disagreement about the nature of the event John records here in verse 22 and the Acts 2 phenomena. Some try to make this “breathtaking” event as a partial impartation of the Spirit. Notably, John Calvin offered that in John’s gospel, the disciples were “sprinkled” with the Spirit, but not saturated with that holy presence until the Pentecost described in Acts 2.

Rather than focus on what the Fourth Gospel does NOT offer, or suggest Jesus gave some watered down spit-spray of the Spirit at this moment in time, it seems more honest to read John’s text as his presentation of the post-resurrection gift of the Spirit to the disciples. Jesus’ presence in the midst of his followers, the stark testimony of his crucified wounds, his promised gifts of peace and joy, have all been bestowed. Now the promised coming of the Spirit, John 16:7, is breathed out upon those whom he is sending into the world “as the Father sent him.”

John’s testimony that Jesus fulfilled his final promise of the spirit to his disciples in that Upper Room does not make Luke’s day of Pentecost ancillary. It is rather the first public and powerful manifestation of that Spirit.

We are not concentrating on the second half of this week’s gospel text — the Doubting Thomas encounter. Yet there is an interesting time frame to note in that meeting. Absent (i.e. still hiding) Easter evening when Jesus first appeared to his disciples, Thomas is present a week later, that is, the Sunday after Easter.

The Sunday after Easter is commonly known as “Low Sunday.” Exhausted by all the events of Holy Week the emotional roller-coaster ride of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, No-Name Saturday, Easter Sunday the Sabbath after Easter tends to be a bit muted. Plus it’s one of the lowest attended worship services of the year.

But for Thomas, “Low Sunday” became the highest moment of his life. The doubting disciple sees for himself the risen Lord. Despite his previous disclaimers (“Unless I see the mark of the nails...unless I put my hand in his side”), Thomas spontaneously exclaims the encapsulation of the entire gospel. Upon encountering the risen Jesus, Thomas’ Low Sunday is “My Lord and My God.”

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet