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Sermons for 2nd Sunday of Easter
Year C
"It Happened on a Sunday"
John 20:19-31
"Seen or Unseen"
John 20:19-29
"Doubt"
John 20:19-31
"The Rainmaker"
John 20:19-30
"Jesus Is With Us!"
John 20:19-31
"Why You Must Give Your Life to Christ"
Revelation 4:1-8
Acts 5:27-32

"It Happened on a Sunday"

John 20:19-31

It happened on a Sunday. The disciples were gathered together in the upper room. Probably the same place that they had shared the last supper with Jesus only days before. Three days ago they had all watched from a distance as Jesus was nailed to a cross and slowly drowned his lungs filled with fluid. Peter had watched as the sound of his own denial of Jesus still rung in his ears.

That happened on a Sunday. All the disciples believed that Jesus was alive except one. Thomas had not been there when Jesus appeared. So he doubted and said that until he had seen for himself he would not believe. And so people call him Doubting Thomas.

It happened on a Sunday. As familiar as we are with the story of Thomas, that is the one detail that seems to go unnoticed. Jesus was made known to his disciples as they gathered on a Sunday. In fact it was a Sunday not unlike this one. It was in the spring. The birds were singing and the flowers blooming.

It all happened on a Sunday. It all happened where the disciples had gathered together. Well? Guess what? Today is Sunday. And Jesus' disciples are gathered here. And Jesus promised that wherever two or more were gathered in his name he would be there. The risen Christ is with us.


"Seen or Unseen"

John 20:19-29

Sometimes I think Thomas gets a bum rap. Everyone calls him "Doubting Thomas." But he only doubted for a week. I mean the man had a full life and yet he gets pegged for his behavior during one week. Sure, he started off doubting, but in the end he believed. When he saw Jesus he said, "My Lord and My God!" and he believed. So why don't we call him "Believing Thomas?" He certainly seems to have done more believing than he ever did doubting.

And what is wrong with doubt anyway. Doubt is useful. If we didn't doubt we would believe everything we see. I don't know about you but as I have grown older I have learned to doubt everything I hear: especially all the junk on the internet. If I get an email saying that such and such happened I check it out for myself because so often they are just hoaxes.

Sometimes I think the Disciples had an unfair advantage. I mean after all they had the physical bodily presence of the Lord to prove to them that the resurrection was true. Thomas said he would not believe until he had seen it for himself. A rather good idea when confronted with a story as amazing as a man rising form the dead. But he did see Jesus. He had the opportunity to see the living breathing body of the lord. He had the opportunity to examine the physical evidence and to verify that indeed Jesus did have a pulse!

I think Jesus was aware of our dilemma. He said "Blessed are those who have not seen and yet believe."(John 20:29) First of all, we may not have the living breathing body of Jesus to point to, but there is still evidence. One evidence of the truth of the resurrection is the living presence of Christ in us. Like the old hymn says, "You ask me how I know he lives; He lives with in my heart." We can't see, hear or touch the risen Christ but we can experience his life in our lives. We can feel his living presence. Wherever two or more are gathered in his name he is there. Just as Jesus was with the disciples in the upper room on that Sunday so long ago so he is with us here in this room by the presence of His Holy Spirit!


"Doubt"

John 20:19-31

Doubt. It's part of life. It is taught to us from an early age. At some point an older child tells us a lie, perhaps for good reason. But once we discovered that we had been told an untruth the seeds of doubt were planted. And the seeds of doubt grow fast and choke all in their path. The next time they told us something we questioned whether it was true: we doubted.

The prime example of doubt in the Bible is Thomas. We often call him "Doubting Thomas," but he is no different from us. We all doubt as he did. Under the same circumstances, we would doubt too. He had been gone when Jesus appeared, and he did not see him the first time. So when he came back everyone was excited and were saying that Jesus was alive.

I have a special kinship with "Doubting Thomas." Just call me "Doubting Alex." When I was in college I went through a period of serious doubt. I left for college knowing of my call to the ministry. I was going to study Religion and Psychology and then go to seminary. Then I met people and read books that made me doubt.

We call him "Doubting Thomas," but doubt is only half of his story. The other half of the story is that Thomas came to believe. A week after Jesus appeared to the other Apostles he appeared to Thomas. Jesus obviously came just for Thomas' benefit. He came to give Thomas the proof he thought he needed to believe. And in the end Thomas said, "My Lord and My God." Doubting Thomas had doubted that Jesus was even alive. But Jesus came and changed Thomas In the end "Believing Thomas" confessed that Jesus was God. God took the prime example of doubt and turned him into an example of belief.

We are all doubting Thomases. We all doubt, especially concerning religious matters. Perhaps we doubt that we are saved. "Do I trust enough? Was I baptized the right way? Is my faith enough or is there something I need to do?" Perhaps we doubt the Bible or the way people interpret it. And we think, "Maybe God really isn't loving. Maybe someone made it all up. Maybe there is no God." Or maybe like Thomas we doubt the resurrection. "Maybe Jesus didn't raise from the dead. Maybe he was just a good man who is dead." And sometimes the things preachers say make our doubts worse.


"The Rainmaker"

John 20:19-30

Let me tell you a story called "The Rainmaker."

I told this story because it relates in a special way to the disciples in the Upper Room in John's Gospel. In our Scripture lesson the disciples are gathered in the upper room. They were hiding from the people who had killed Jesus. They didn't realize the power that was already their's to stand up against that evil. Instead of believing that Jesus was alive and that they had the victory, they hid like they had been defeated.

In "The Rainmaker" the person telling the story failed to notice that the power of God to give new life was in his midst. In the Story, the character of the Rainmaker represents Christ. And he was present blessing those who were barren and distraught. But people failed to notice the blessing. They were too busy looking at their problems.

Jesus is alive and he comes to us in our need so that he can heal us. He comes to us when we are afraid like the disciples. He comes in answer to our prayers for rain, for healing, for strength. He comes to us in times of fellowship as well as fear. He comes to us when we are hurt or when our land is spiritually dry.


"Jesus Is With Us!"

John 20:19-30

I want us to imagine for a moment that we are not here. You may say, "Well, preacher that is usually what I do during the sermon on Sunday morning." I don't want you to imagine that you are on the lake, or sitting in your easy chair. Instead I want us to imagine we are in the room that I just read about in John. That each of us is one of those Disciples.

So the disciples were hiding in the upper room for fear of what the Romans would do to them. Then all of a sudden they were not alone. Jesus appeared in the midst of them. They probably thought they were seeing things. But everybody was staring at him so they must see him too. Then they began to wonder if this was Jesus' ghost come back to haunt them.

Things have not changed that much since then. In some places in the world Christians still hide from the authorities. Most of us can gather freely without fear of being killed. But we still live in a hostile world. A world that ridicules our values. A world that attacks us for our belief in chastity and marital fidelity. A world that degrades us because we try to help those who it says are not worth helping. A world that crucifies us because we tell it that it's lifestyles are sinful and that only Christ's blood can atone for it. A world that ignores us when we say that life comes out of death.

Jesus is with us. We live in a hostile world The people outside want to crucify us just like they did our Lord. But we are not alone. Jesus is present with all who worship in his name. And he is giving all of us new life.


"Why You Must Give Your Life to Christ"

Revelation 4:1-8

Acts 5:27-32

"Why you must give your life to Christ." Frances Asbury was one of the first two Bishops of the Methodist church in America. He went up and down the eastern seaboard in the late 1700's and early 1800's planting societies and congregations. One day someone asked him why he was always preaching on the passage "Surely ye must be born again." And Bishop Asbury simply replied "Because surely ye must be."

The first reason is that the Bible says so. I could quote scores of verses that say this. Jesus said "I am the way the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father but by me." John 3:16 says that God gave Jesus "so that whosoever believes in him may have eternal life." It goes on to say that "he came not to condemn the world but that the world through him might be saved." When asked by the crowds what they must do to be saved Peter replied, "Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ."(Acts 2:38)

You must give your life to Christ because God's Word, the Bible, says to, but it says to for a reason. God tells us to give our lives to Christ because we cannot save ourselves. When I was a boy I had a BB gun. One day I accidentally shot a BB through a window. My parents made me pay for the window. That was no problem because it only cost a few dollars.

We must give our lives to Christ because God tells us to and because we cannot pay the damages caused by our sin. We must also give our lives to Christ, as opposed to some other, because only he paid the price for our sins. In the book of Revelation, John writes a letter to seven churches about what he saw when Jesus appeared to him. In the beginning of the letter John described Jesus as the King of Kings and as the one who freed us from our sin by his blood. He quotes Jesus himself saying "I am the Alpha and the Omega; the first and the last."

You must give your life to Christ. Most people have heard that many times. But how many have actually given their lives to Christ? It is hard to know. You can't go by who goes to church and who doesn't. There are many people who go to church their whole lives who never really give their lives to Christ.