John 20:24-31 · Jesus Appears to Thomas
Wounded Glory
John 20:24-31
Sermon
by Erskine White
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When He had said this, He showed them His hands and His side. (John 20:20)

Have you ever wondered what Jesus really looked like?

The Bible is no help whatsoever in telling us, since it doesn't say a thing about the physical appearance of Jesus. Not a single word. We don't know if He was tall or short, skinny or fat. We don't know if He had a straight nose, crooked teeth, long hair or a beard. Everyone has a portrait of Jesus somewhere in their home, but no one knows what He looked like in the flesh.

Have you ever wondered what Jesus looked like after He was raised from the dead? I ask this as a separate question because apparently, His appearance was changed after His resurrection. In last week's text for Easter Sunday, we saw that Mary didn't recognize Jesus in the garden, even though she had surely known Him well for several years. And here in today's text, as Jesus appears to the disciples who are gathered in a room together, again, for some reason, they don't recognize Him either.

They don't recognize Him, that is, until He shows them the marks on His hands and in His side. The Man they knew from Nazareth has returned to them exalted as the Risen Christ, but they only recognize Him when He shows them His wounds - the worldly signs of His sacrifice and suffering upon the cross.

There is a profound spiritual lesson in this little episode which is ours to learn today. The question is: how do we recognize Christ when He appears in our midst? How do we know where Christ is, in our lives and in the world? Remember the disciples on that first Easter day: they saw the Christ who was Risen in glory, but they recognized Him only when they saw His wounds.

I have seen this so often in my years of ministry that I would say it is almost always true: when troubles and tragedies hit in life, some people are helped by their faith while others lose their faith completely, and the difference almost always has to do with the way they see Christ.

There are many people who loudly and publicly profess their faith to anyone who will listen. They love Jesus so much, and they want you to know how much they love Jesus. They want to tell you how much Jesus has done for them and how much He can do for you. Judging by their talk, life can be just a continuous, uninterrupted joyride with Jesus if only you have the faith.

But then trouble or tragedy strike. They suffer a financial setback or a career disappointment. Something happens that isn't "supposed" to happen to people who love Jesus, like a divorce, or a child running away from home. Something happens that no amount of faith or prayer can change, like the death of a loved one.

Then, these are often the very people who lose their faith altogether. The whole structure of their religion comes tumbling down like a house of cards. The experience is shattering, and they cannot cope with their loss. Some people never recover the faith they were once so certain they had.

People like this lose their faith because it was built on a foundation of sand (Matthew 7:26). They built their whole faith on the idea of blessings and prosperity, so they were totally unprepared for the harder side of life. Their Jesus was clean and pure and far removed from the trials and troubles of this world; He was a kind of cosmic Santa Claus dispensing goodies to the people of His choosing. The problem is: this kind of Christ can't deal with their suffering! This kind of Christ has no answer for them when life is no longer prosperous or a blessing.

Meanwhile, other people are more quiet and humble about their faith. Maybe they don't witness as often as they should, but faith to them is a private matter. They are the "salt of the earth" type Christians whom Jesus described when He said, "Blessed are the meek," and "Blessed are the poor in spirit."

Yet these are often the very people who endure the tragedies of life with dignity and grace. Their quiet faith helps them through the valleys of pain and sorrow, and they know they never walk alone. You see, they have faith when they need it the most, because their Jesus isn't merely a supernatural sugar daddy who is helpless in the face of adversity. Their Jesus is the One who died on a cross and rose again - the One who comes to them in their trouble and shows them the wounds in His hands and side.

It is remarkable how healing and powerful it is to recognize Christ like this, to recognize Him by His wounds and not just by the blessings He bestows. It is remarkable how comforting it is to see that Christ is standing with us in our troubles.

I think of someone like Dr. Paul Brand, an American physician who worked with lepers in the town of Vellore, India. He worked in an isolated colony for people with this disease, who were shut off and quarantined from the outside world.

One day, the patients were holding a worship service as Dr. Brand came in late and sat in the back. But when they saw him, they insisted that he speak, and the doctor reluctantly agreed. He went up to the front and stood silently for moment.

He looked at all the patients assembled there, and he found himself looking at their hands. Many of them had the familiar "claw hands" which afflict people with leprosy. Some of them had no fingers; some just had twisted, deformed stumps where their hands once had been. Many of them sat on their hands or hid them from view, so ashamed were they of their appearance.

Dr. Brand began to speak. "I am a hand surgeon," he said, and waited for the translation into Tamil and Hindi. "So, when I first meet people, I can't help but look at their hands. I can tell what trade you were in by the position of your callouses and the condition of your nails. I can tell you something about your character. I love hands."

He paused for a moment and said, "I've often wondered what it would have been like to meet Christ and study His hands. There were the hands of Christ the carpenter, rough and bruised from working with saw and hammer. There were the hands of Christ the healer, radiating sensitivity and compassion."

"Then there were His crucified hands. It hurts me to think about the soldiers driving nails through His hands because I know what would happen to the nerves and tendons. His healing hands became crippled and gnarled, twisted shut on the cross."

"Finally," the doctor continued, "there were His resurrected hands. You and I think of Paradise as a place of perfection, but when Jesus was raised up from the dead, He still had His earthly wounds and He showed them to His disciples."

The effect on the audience of lepers was electric: "Christ had crippled, claw-like hands like mine? Christ showed His hands to His disciples when He was raised from the dead?" Suddenly, this whole room full of lepers began pulling their hands out of their pockets and holding them up in the air. They knew Christ as one of them; they recognized Him in their midst, and He lifted them out of their shame.1

Let us not forget the social dimension of recognizing Christ, since we see His wounds not just in our own lives, but also in the life of the world. Where do you think Christ is, or where do you think we can recognize Him in the world today?

Can we recognize Him in our own hemisphere today, in neighboring nations like Brazil and Guatemala, Haiti and El Salvador? Can we see Him in the masses of peasants in those lands, who grow up in a poverty you and I can scarcely imagine? Half of their children die in infancy. They live in squalid mud huts and draw their water from filthy streams with garbage and raw sewage floating by.

In the cities, they beg and panhandle. In the country, they work on land which is owned by the wealthy few. Although they are hungry themselves, they watch good land being used to grow food for export to North America, because that is the system which is most profitable to the companies and the landowner.

If they complain or agitate for change, they are liable to be arrested in the middle of the night and perhaps tortured. If they fight for food, a fair share of the land or the right to form a union, they are liable to be killed by the death squads. It is a helpless, hopeless life they lead, with the power of the police, the wealthy elite and the North American colossus all lined up against them.

If you are wondering why there is so much anti-American sentiment in most parts of the Third World today, you must look at the bitter reality of imperialism. You must ask yourself why our national government and multinational corporations have so often lined up on the side of the wealthy few at the expense of the many who are poor.

Where can we recognize Christ in a world such as this? Can we recognize Him in the presidential palaces, plantations and corporate board rooms, far removed from the cries of the people? Or, do we recognize Christ in the swollen bellies and the hungry eyes of the little children, clinging to their mothers' skirts on the mud-soaked streets of peasant villages?

The answer lies in the experience of the disciples on that first Easter. They recognized the Risen Christ when they saw His wounds - the marks on His hands and the hole in His side.

Now that Christ is Risen from the grave, how will we recognize Him when we see Him? How will we know what He looks like, and where shall we find Him - in our own lives and in the life of the world?

He is our Risen Lord, exalted above all the earth, but He is not distant or detached from us. He is standing here beside us when life is neither kind nor fair. He shows us the marks on His hands and in His side, that our joy may be complete as we behold our Risen Lord in all His wounded glory. Amen.

Pastoral Prayer

Most Gracious and Loving Lord, we thank You for the bright light which has come into our world since Easter day. We thank You for the hope, the joy, the unquenchable faith which we have found at the empty tomb. Help us to celebrate this death of death by living as people redeemed in the Way, the Truth and the Life.

O God, who has met us in the flesh in Your Son, Jesus Christ, help us to recognize Him in our midst today, as the disciples did of old. Help us to see Him in the wounds we bear in life, and in the wounds which bleed our world. As we prepare to gather at His table today, inspire us to make our whole lives a sacrament, offering our bodies and our minds, our hearts and our spirits in service which is acceptable to You, even as He has been Servant to us. Through Jesus Christ we pray. Amen.

1. This story is told in Philip Yancey's Where Is God When It Hurts?, (Zondervan Publishing House, Grand Rapids, MI, 1977), pp. 163-165.

children's lesson

Why The Holy Spirit?

Text: John 20:18-23

He breathed on them and said, "Receive the Holy Spirit." (John 20:22)

Suppose you had a hundred dollar bill in your hand, and you announced that you wanted to give it away. You'd be pretty popular, wouldn't you! You'd probably get visited by every friend you ever had, and even some friends you didn't know you had. They would all come by to see you once they heard you had a hundred dollars to give away.

Now suppose a hundred friends of yours were gathered in a large room, and you were there to give away your hundred dollar bill. As you looked out at all their smiling faces, you'd have a real problem on your hands. Who would get the money? You've got a hundred people there, but only one bill to give away! How would you decide who the lucky person would be?

Well, the best answer would be to go to a bank, and exchange your hundred dollar bill for 100 one dollar bills. That way, you could spread the money around to everyone, ahd no one would be left out.

That's a bit like what Jesus did when He gave His friends a gift much more valuable than money: the gift of the Holy Spirit. The Bible says that shortly after Easter, when Jesus was raised from the dead, He visited His friends; and on one of those visits He breathed on them and said, "Receive the Holy Spirit."

Jesus was getting ready to go to heaven to live with God, but He didn't want to leave His friends alone by themselves. He wanted to leave a part of Himself, and a part of God, with them. But how could He do that? Jesus Himself was just one person, and He could only be with those people who were lucky enough to be near Him. Only a few certain people would have the great privilege of being so close to God. What about everyone else? What about all the other people in the world who lived far away, and all the people like us, who were born many years after Jesus lived on earth?

Jesus Himself was like that hundred dollar bill - He could only be in one place at a time. But the Holy Spirit is like the 100 one dollar bills - God in the Holy Spirit can be everywhere at once. No one need be left out. The Holy Spirit is God's way of spreading Himself around and being a part of everyone. What does it mean to have the Holy Spirit? You'll find out more about that as you grow in faith. For now, let's just say that the Holy Spirit is Jesus' special gift to us after Easter. But at least you know now why He gave us this gift: it is His way of being with us all the time, and being with everyone who loves Him. Amen.

C.S.S. Publishing Company, THE VICTORY OF THE CROSS, by Erskine White