Magyar Egyház, 2003 (82. évfolyam, 1-3. szám)

2003-01-01 / 1. szám

MAGYAR EGYHÁZ 7. oldal "MY LORD AND MY GOD" John 20:19-31 Thomas must have felt that he had a bit of a raw deal. For he really missed out on that first Easter Sunday. Thomas must be the definitive everyman, for there is a little bit of him in each of us, and what he missed has much to teach us. Peace. “Peace” Jesus said to the disciples in the locked room. What a relief for them, a frightened, perse­cuted, and bewildered group, hidden away in a locked room “for fear of the Jews”. His first words were “Shalom” - “Peace”. He could have spoken first of his disappointment, of his anger at them for their denial, abandonment, misunderstanding and betrayal. However, Peace is what he bestows on his disciples, and in saying this he echoes what he had said in that same room on the last night he had been with them: “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid”. -And Thomas missed the peace. Pardon Our Lord had already forgiven or par­doned the disciples when he bestowed peace upon them; but he spoke explicitly of pardon when he spoke of for­giving and retaining sins. What Christ empowered the apostles to do, his Church continues. -The pardon of our Savior can be available to us, only if we make some con­cessions: God cannot fill our cup with forgiveness if it is already filled to the brim with bitterness. -God cannot em­brace us with forgiveness if our arms are carrying the heavy burden of resentment. -God cannot take our hand in forgiveness, if our fists are clenched in anger. -In his cry of doubt, Thomas shows his own unwillingness to make concessions to Our Lord, expecting Christ to come to him and show even his most intimate wounds, associated with the world’s greatest humiliation, with nothing given in retum.-So Thomas missed out on the pardon of Christ. Presence The real, concrete, Glorious Presence of God came to those disciples. Woody Allen said that “95% of life is just ‘showing up’” Thomas had simply failed to ‘show up’. -And so Thomas missed the presence. -He missed out, and that must have hurt; especially for one so previously intimate with our Lord. Peace, pardon and presence, Thomas missed them all. In their place he demanded a substitute for them, something which our cynical society constantly craves, and which we, in our inmost, darkest times before the dawn hanker after proof. Proof And this is why I must conclude that Tho­mas must be the definitive everyman, because although graced with apostolic sainthood, he is shown to be above all like us. In our struggle to maintain the Christian life, we too miss out on peace, pardon and the presence of Christ, and in return we torture ourselves over proof.-Despite being promised how blessed we would be if we believe without physical proof, the burden of ra­tionality rests upon our faith like a cumbersome weight - 'Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and put my finger in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side, I will not believe’. Thomas craves certainty, clarity, proof: an empty tomb and the reports of his colleagues are simply not enough. And these things have not changed: the quest for proof to bridge the gap between us and the living Godhead remains constant through the ages: from the Upper Room, past the Enlightenment and into our pre­sent age. -So, was Thomas just going through the motions of discipleship? Was he incapable of commitment to faith beyond proof? I don’t think so, for he learns in his shame that his Lord was indeed his God: a shame almost compa­rable to the remorse felt by Peter when he had denied Christ. Both are forgiven, both are justified by the risen Christ, and they are used as examples to us, the less im­mediate disciples: learn from Thomas and believe without having to put your hand into his side. When Thomas was given the opportunity to experience the risen Christ, the Presence of Christ in his life, he was also able to experi­ence the Pardon, a blessing even, and through that he is able to experience the Peace; a true peace which can only come from an intimate, life-changing encounter with the risen Lord. Thomas therefore was ultimately able to catch up with those special events, and through this, to be able to conclude that he was faced by “My Lord and My God”. He did not miss out. -‘Blessed are those who be­lieve when they have not seen’. John the Evangelist speaks directly to us at the end of this Gospel passage, and reminds us of the purpose of his gospel, which is to enable us, nearly 2000 years after these marvelous events, to be able to believe. He says to us that “Jesus did many other signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not written in this book”, events which may have been trivial: encounters, comforts, healings even, which the risen Christ took part in during those heady days between Easter and the Glorious Ascension, proof which existed, but which we do not need. -As Thomas discovered, faith is therefore not something which can be scientifically ra­tionalized, and all such rationalizations have been ulti­mately disappointing in their conclusions. Thomas thought that he needed a concrete solution. Because of this he nearly missed out, and the danger is that we too may miss out. -Look beyond the Proof - and seek the faith that is found behind this account; a faith that is as pure as gold that has been tested by fire. -We will always remember Thomas as the one who dared to question the reports of his fellow apostles - “doubting Thomas”. How­ever, his one definitive statement is the finest example of New Testament Christology - “My Lord and My God”. How dare we call him doubting Thomas after that: “professing Thomas”, perhaps, “confessing Thomas”, and now, most undoubtedly, “believing Thomas” -“My Lord and My God”. Of Jesus this is what we de­clare and believe. Amen. Ferenc Varga

Next

/
Oldalképek
Tartalom