Eastertide #12:
When
they had finished breakfast,
Jesus
said…
(John 21:15)
There is much lingering after that barbecue breakfast on the
shore of Galilee. Jesus and Peter discuss love and caring for the sheep and
lambs; that’s the church—that’s us. Peter discovers he will grow old and die
before Christ returns. When Peter asked about John and if the Lord will return
before John dies, Jesus replies, “What is that to you? Follow me!” And so it
goes.
Before John concludes his Gospel, he reminds the reader that
“this was the third time Jesus appeared to his disciples.” Let’s see, I hadn’t
bothered to count:
1. Appearance
to the ten when the Emmaus couple dropped in on them.
2. Appearance
to the eleven when Thomas, who missed the first, joins them.
3. Appearance
on the shore of Galilee.
Luke calls these appearances “convincing proofs” (Ac 1:3). Is that so? The appearances became
proof enough for the disciples. Otherwise, they would never have become
Apostles. When “ordered not to speak or teach at all in the name of Jesus,”
they answered, “We cannot keep from speaking about what we have seen and heard”
(Ac 4:18-21). For us who have never seen
the Crucified’s nail scared hands or touched his wounded side; we need an extra
blessing: “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe” (Jn 20:31). We need Pentecost. We wait to see
what Thomas saw—those five man made things that survive into eternity.
There is a hymn, from my youth, that’s been sneaking back into
my soul as hymns tend to do. It’s the refrain: “I shall know Him by the nail
prints in His hand.” Precious, but odd. As if when we get to glory we’ll have
to check out his hands to make sure it is Jesus. But precious nonetheless. The
hymn speaks of our longing to see what Thomas saw. That will settle it.
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