Second Sunday of Easter (A)
April 12, 2026
Text:
John 20:19-31
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
The wounds. He still has them. Why? That
we may know. This is the Lord Jesus
who was crucified for us. Dead
and buried. Our punishment, for our
sins. Our cross. Our hell.
Our tomb. See the scars. He was mortally wounded. Yet, behold, He lives. The Lamb of God, slain, but standing. Victorious.
The wounds. They are, for us, the wells of salvation. Pierced for our transgressions. Crushed for our iniquities. Upon Him was the chastisement that brought us
peace (Is. 53:5). Peter preaches, as did
Isaiah before him: "By his wounds you have been healed" (1
Peter 2:24; ESV). The Rock of Ages,
cleft for me. Let me hide myself in
thee.
The hands. The feet. The riven side, whence flowed the water and
the blood. Be of sin the double
cure. Cleanse me from its guilt
(justification) and power (sanctification).
It all flows from His wounds.
Into font and chalice. And so,
into you. And so, into me.
So, when I am tempted, I flee to the
wounds. They are the stronghold, my
protection from Satan’s flaming darts.
When the guilt of my sins overwhelms
me, I run to the wounds. There is
forgiveness in the blood. The blood is
the propitiation, the atonement, and the purifying agent.
When I have been sinned against,
behold, the wounds. Suffered also for my
neighbor. For the forgiveness of my
neighbor. The same mercy. The same blood. It covers me.
It covers my neighbor. If God
forgives my neighbor, how can I not forgive him? If God forgives me... at the cost of
these precious wounds... Forgiveness flows from these wounds, to me, and
through me, to my neighbor.
So, when I am given to judging my
neighbor in his sins... as though his sins are not as qualified, as are mine,
for the mercy of the Lord... look at the wounds. And bury that nonsense deep within them.
When I am weak, or sick... When I
know the brokenness of everything... When I am grieving, or sad... When I am
lonely... When I am dying... There is healing in the wounds. Only in the wounds. The Strong One, weak, with my own weakness,
in order to make me strong with His strength.
His body broken, that I be made whole.
His sorrow, His tears, turning mine into joy. Forsaken by all, that I never be alone. Not even in death. In which, even then, I will live. Because He died. But He lives.
And I live in Him.
See how His wounds give meaning to
my own. Mine are joined to His. His redeem and consecrate Mine. St. Peter tells us how. Though now, for a little while,
if necessary, you are grieved, these various trials are gifts of God,
given, why? That “the tested
genuineness of your faith—more precious than gold that perishes though it is
tested by fire—may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the
revelation of Jesus Christ” (1 Peter 3:7).
What does it mean? What kind
of test could this be? It is not an
academic test, or a fitness qualifier.
This is metallurgy! The
purifying of gold. It is melted into
liquid. Surely, being melted is not a
pleasant experience! But what
happens? As the precious metal is melted
down, all that is not gold is brought to the surface, and skimmed away. So it is with faith. That is the testing. The melting down. So that all that is not faith... all that is
not Christ... be exposed and removed.
Your wounds. They have purpose,
now. United with those of Christ.
And what happens to the wounds over
time, as they heal? They become scars. Scars are important. They are reminders. Signs.
Signs that the wounds are real.
That the hurt really happened.
But also, signs of healing and life.
Signs that God does not forsake you in your woundedness. In that case, there would be no healed scars. So... signs of God’s absolute faithfulness to
you. And a Promise, as you behold them
through the lens of Jesus’ sacred scars: God will raise you from
the dead, too. And what is the
proof? The crucifixion wounds.
It is Easter evening, and the
disciples are locked away for fear.
Having sinned, and been sinned against.
Weak and broken. In lonely prisons
of their own making. Sorrowful. Grieving.
When all at once, He appears.
He is in their very midst. No, He
didn’t use the back door, or climb in through the bathroom window. Here is a great Easter revelation: He’s
been with them the whole time. As He
always is with His disciples, now, in His risen and glorified body. And that, means us, beloved. He is with us. There He is, and you can imagine their
surprise. Startled. Confused.
Doubting their own eyes. Now,
even more afraid. What if He’s
come in judgment? What if He’s come in
wrath?
But He speaks forth His peace. Shalom. And then, what does He do for His doubting
disciples? What gift does He give them,
that makes everything right? Then He
showed them His hands and His side.
The wounds! He still has
them. That the disciples may know.
Now, Thomas was not with them. Doubting Thomas, we say. And it is true, he should have believed his
brothers’ resurrection preaching. But
his instincts are right. What does he
demand to see? The wounds. That will do it. They are the only cure for doubt. Contact with the wounds of our Lord Jesus
Christ. “Unless I see in his hands
the mark of the nails, and place my finger into the mark of the nails, and
place my hand into his side, I will never believe” (John 20:25).
Eight days later, there He is
again (He has this way of appearing in the flesh on Sundays, wherever His
people are gathered). And what does He
say? Thomas, here are My wounds. Go ahead, poke around. Here is the cure for all that ails you. “Do not disbelieve, but believe” (v.
27). And it works, doesn’t it? In place of doubt, faith! And creedal confession. Thomas says to Him, “My
Lord and my God!” (v. 28). And
then, as though turning and looking at us, the Lord says to Thomas, “Have
you believed because you have seen me? Blessed
are those who have not seen and yet have believed” (v. 29).
It is true, we haven’t seen, and yet
we believe. But we have come into
contact with those blessed wounds. The
Rock is cleft for us in altar and font.
We hide ourselves in those wounds in the blest baptismal waters, and
every time the Absolution is spoken, as Jesus here gives it (“If you forgive
the sins of anyone, they are forgiven” [v. 23]). The blood covers us in the body given and the
cup poured out, cleansing us, purifying us, forgiving our sins. And we believe. And we confess. “My Lord and my God!”
That is the power of Jesus’
wounds. He doesn’t bear them such that
they still hurt Him. Now they are
trophies, witnesses, signs. These things
were written, first, in the flesh of God’s Son.
“Behold, I have engraved you on the palms of my hands” (Is.
49:16). And then they are written in the
Gospel, the Scriptures: “that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the
Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name” (John
20:30). And so it is. Behold, the wounds. The Lord Jesus bears these wounds for you.
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
In the Name of the Father, and of the Son X, and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen.