St John Paul II declared the Second Sunday of Easter to be
Divine Mercy Sunday. First and foremost,
Jesus is the face of the Father’s Divine Mercy.
Today is the Day of Mercy -- Divine Mercy. In the Gospel, Thomas is the recipient of the
merciful love of Jesus. Thomas then
proclaims the beautiful statement of faith
– “My Lord and my God.” Indeed Thomas
was invited by the Lord Himself to encounter the merciful love of God.
I invite you to consider the faith journey of the apostle
Thomas on this Divine Mercy Sunday. The
popular interpretation of Thomas is that he is ‘doubting Thomas’ -- seen in a bit of a negative light. I invite you to revisit this Easter gospel
and see Thomas as a model of faith.
Thomas was right to insist before he could believe in Jesus’
resurrection, he must see the holes the nails made in his hands, put his finger
into the holes and his hand into the great wound made by the centurion’s lance.
I suggest Thomas is teaching the important lesson that we
must not separate the resurrection from the cross. We are the disciples of the crucified as well
as the risen Lord.
We cannot live the life of grace, the risen life,
authentically unless we bear in our bodies the wounds of the cross. What does
this mean? This means being conscious
that we develop the capacity to love and be loved only by dying to
ourselves. Our wounds are also a
constant reminder of our frailty, and that it is God’s grace that raises us up
to new life.
Thank you Thomas for bringing honesty into our faith, for
helping to acknowledge at times that there are areas in our life that Jesus is
not yet Lord. Thomas didn’t pretend that
he was better than he was. He began by wanting proof and ended by being glad of
faith. He is the patron saint of
transitions and steps in faith. Faith is
a journey. He is the saint of faith in
our times. The community was the place
he found faith, having lost it when he tried to go it alone. Then he came back to the community of faith
and went on a journey of life that took him to martyrdom in India.
The Bible describes mercy as a gift of God, a gift that is
to be given to those who need it.
Establishing the abiding faithfulness of God, we the Church of the Holy
Spirit are to circulate mercy, to pay it forward irrespective of deservedness,
inviting one and all to experience the merciful love of Jesus.
On this Divine Mercy Sunday, my hunch is that we who are
gathered today come from all over the spiritual landscape. There is a side of us that is a doubting
Thomas and there is a side of us that is the believing Thomas. Each one of us is unique. This is not by accident. It is by God’s design that there is no
perfect cookie-cutter approach of the journey of faith for Catholics. We need to dispense with the myth that there
is one size that fits all for us as Catholic Christians.
The journey of faith of each one of us is unique. But it is the plan of Jesus that we are
better together as a parish community rather than as isolated individuals. This was the experience of the apostle Thomas,
and I suggest that in this community may you experience again the merciful love
of Jesus in the love we have for each other as a parish community.
Jesus is the model leader and spiritual guide. He is pleased to give Thomas the assurance he
is looking for, and then challenges him to look forward to the day when he will
believe without seeing – always in the Jesus who passes through death to
resurrection.
Jesus on this Divine Mercy Sunday is pleased to give you
what you are looking for in your journey of faith. Jesus does not want His Body, the Church, to
remain in the tomb but always raise her up to new life. Each of us is not to remain in the tomb of
our doubts, of our fears, of our anxieties.
Lord, we thank you for friends, leaders and spiritual guides
who challenge us as Jesus challenged Thomas.
But may we like Thomas know that we need to see the scars and the wounds
for us also to believe in resurrection and new life. Thomas professes the true faith of the Church. We too must insist that the Jesus we follow
is the true Jesus, the one whose risen body bears the wounds of Calvary.
Lord, forgive us that we want to help those in need without
sharing their pain; we look for their
resurrection but do not want to see their wounds.
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Young people have been deeply hurt and we serve
them with pious exhortations;
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We become impatient with those who mourns the
death of a spouse or a child;
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We think we can restore a broken relationship by
merely saying we are sorry;
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We propose reconciliation between warring
factions without acknowledging past wrongs;
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We pray for peace in the world and do not
agonize over its terrible injustices;
We thank you for people like Thomas who will not let us away
with easy solutions. They insist that we
must see the holes nails have made in the hands of victims, and only then
believe that they have within themslevesthe capacity to rise to new life.
On this Divine Mercy Sunday, may live in a state of
thanksgiving for God’s redemptive mercy that is shared with each and every one
of us. And may the Gospel we proclaim
help us to recognize that scars are the pathway to our sharing in the Risen
life of Christ. This was the journey of
the apostle Thomas. It is the journey
for each one of us.
Have a blessed day.
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