Sunday, April 12, 2026

Easter 2, Year A (2026)

Acts 2:14a, 22–32 / Psalm 16 / I Peter 1:3–9 / John 20:19–31  

 

This is the written version of the homily given at Flohr’s Evangelical Lutheran Church (ELCA) in McKnightstown, Pennsylvania on Sunday, April 12, 2026, by Fr. Gene Tucker, Interim Pastor.

 

“PROOF OF THE RESURRECTION: SEEKING (AND FINDING) THE PROOF WE NEED”

(Homily text: John 20:19–31)

Each year, on the Second Sunday of Easter, we hear the account of our Lord Jesus Christ’s appearance to Thomas (yes, he who has come to be known as “Doubting Thomas”). In a very real sense, it is highly appropriate that we hear this account on this day, for it was on this day, the eighth day[1] after the Lord’s resurrection, that Jesus granted Thomas’ demands to be able to put his finger into the wounds on Jesus’ hands, and to thrust his hand into the Lord’s side.

The importance of this event underscores Thomas’ need, and ours, to know that the Lord really, truly, and in fact, was raised from the dead on Easter Sunday morning. Put another way, Jesus’ resurrected life was – and is – an actual fact, not the product of an ancient people’s religious imaginations, and not a fable promulgated by some highly fanatical followers of a dynamic teacher and leader. (I mention these two possibilities because – as many people contemplate the resurrection event - those who cannot accept it as an actual reality or fact often maintain those two possibilities to explain the biblical accounts.)

The Lord’s gift to Thomas underscores an essential outline of God’s ways of working with human beings. That plan unfolds in this way[2]: 1. A person comes to faith in God’s love, God’s power to change, and, perhaps most importantly, God’s ability to create and to re-create; 2. An encounter with God changes the person, fitting them out for God’s intentions, God’s call and God’s plan for their lives; and 3. The called/changed/outfitted person pursues God’s call and God’s will, putting faith into action.

The truth of this progression, when we think about Thomas’ situation, discloses the truth that, absent an encounter with the risen Lord, Thomas wasn’t prepared/outfitted/ready to do God’s will for his life. If Thomas had tried to do God’s work and will without that life-changing encounter, then he would be trying to do so on his own steam, not on God’s power.

What we’ve just said about Thomas state before his encounter with Jesus is the same truth we can apply to our own lives and our own situations: None of us is truly and completely ready and able to do God’s will for our lives, absent an encounter with the risen Lord, an encounter which leads us to faith in the reality of the Easter event as Holy Scripture informs us.

Thomas got the proof he demanded. Don’t most of us wish that we, too, had the same proof, the same encounter with the risen Lord? I think we do. No wonder that the Lord says to Thomas, “Have you come to believe because you have seen me? Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet have come to believe”. (Personally speaking, I’d like to think there’s an imaginary blank in that statement, one into which my name can be inserted…maybe you feel the same way.)

Absent that sort of physical proof, the demands that Thomas made to be able not only to see the risen Christ, but to touch Him, aren’t available to us today.

How then, do we get the proof we need? After all, faith needs some sort of a foundation in order for us to have something to work with as we come to believe in the reality of God’s power to change, to create, and to make all things new again.

Perhaps the proof is in Thomas’ life, post-Easter, and, as well, in the lives of the others who’d encountered the risen Lord.

Each one of them went out into the known world, carrying the Good News (Gospel) of God’s intervention in human history, made known in the sending of the person of Jesus Christ. In Thomas’ case, tradition tells us that he went as far as the subcontinent of India, carrying the Good News with him.

Each one of the original band of twelve Disciples who would soon become Apostles met a martyr’s death[3]. But even that possibility couldn’t shake their steadfast adherence to the truth that they had witnessed God’s power to preserve them for an eternity in God’s presence.

Today, proof of the reality of the resurrection event can be seen in altered and changed lives, lives which exhibit in some way or another that God’s power to make all things new has taken up residence in someone’s heart and mind.

So then, we pray for the Holy Spirit’s assistance, in order that we may come to believe and to know that Christ truly rose from the grave, a reality that continues to changes lives today.

AMEN.



[1]   Remember that, in the Bible, the number eight represents a new beginning. So the event that took place on this day was, for Thomas, a new beginning.

[2]   God’s way of working with people is much the same plan we can see elsewhere in life. For example, a person feels called to pursue some calling in life. The process of being able to fulfill that calling begins with an encounter with the reality of the calling, some way of knowing what the calling involves. Then, the person assesses their own ability to fulfill the calling. Then, the person receives the training and the skills needed (a new chapter in life, if you will).

[3]   Absent one, traditionally John.