Sunday Gospel Reflections
April 27, 2025 Cycle C
(Sunday of Divine Mercy)
JN  20:19-31
Doubting Thomas
by Fr. Jack Peterson


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We are blessed with 50 days to joyfully celebrate the beauty and power of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead and seek the grace to believe more deeply in this central mystery of our faith.

The Easter season challenges us to encounter the risen Lord in our present day and receive a new outpouring of the Holy Spirit. These graces lead to the transformation of our lives and give profound meaning to our earthly journey. Lord Jesus, thank you for dying and rising for us.

“The disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord.” (Jn 20:20) They had spent three days mourning the death of Jesus, the Messiah and Son of the living God. The images of his Passion and death, either witnessed or recounted to them, were turning over and over in their minds. The sudden turn of events that led to his Crucifixion, even though they were predicted, came as an earthquake to Our Lord’s closest collaborators. The three days of silence as he lay in the tomb must have felt like a slow death to each of them.

But then Easter Sunday came. Jesus rises from the dead, enters the upper room where they were hiding, stands in their midst, and shows them his hands and his side. The one who loved them without condition, spoke with such wisdom and authority, healed with such power and forgave with such generosity was truly alive. He came and sought them out as they were hiding in fear. He harbored no sign of resentment or anger for their lack of faith and courage during his Passion. Jesus extends the gift of his peace, so desperately needed at this moment. Their joy must have been explosive.

The second Sunday of Easter manifests anew the patience of our savior. The apostle Thomas was conspicuously absent on Easter Sunday night when Jesus first appeared to his disciples. Jesus is indeed the Good Shepherd, always seeking out the sheep who has strayed from the flock. He does not give up on Thomas or us. He endures our weakness, our stubbornness and our lack of faith. He is full of second chances.

Jesus patiently waits a week until Thomas returns to the upper room when he appears to them once again. He immediately approaches Thomas and invites him to see and touch his wounds, which remind the world of the truth of his Passion while at the same time bear witness to his Resurrection — his wounds are healed. Our precious Lord’s patience and kindness lead Thomas to pronounce one of the most clear and definitive testimonies of Jesus’ identity: “My Lord and my God!” Jesus, please be patient with me.

The second Sunday of Easter is also Divine Mercy Sunday. We tend to focus on God’s mercy during the Lenten season and move on to other aspects of our faith during the Easter season. The truth is, we stand at every moment of our lives in need of God’s bottomless mercy.

Conversion is a lifelong process and demands our attention all along that journey. The many graces that flow out of Easter — peace, joy, newness of life, an ever deeper understanding of our faith and a courageous zeal for spreading our faith — flow from the grace of God’s mercy, including the ongoing healing of our broken human nature.

Saints model for us the need to go regularly before the Lord on our knees, repent of our sins, and ask anew for the grace required to turn from our sins and live in an ever-deeper union with God. St. Faustina Kowalska, at the beckoning of Our Lord himself, became a spectacular promoter of divine mercy. She received from Our Lord a series of private revelations that she recounted in her diary, and which have beckoned so many to draw near to Jesus’ wounded heart to be immersed in his mercy.

On one occasion, Jesus said to her: “Souls that make an appeal to My mercy delight Me. To such souls I grant even more grace than they ask. I cannot punish even the greatest sinner if he makes an appeal to My compassion.” (Diary, 1146) Christ is calling upon the whole world to place great trust in him: “The graces of My mercy are drawn by means of one vessel only, and that is — trust. The more a soul trusts, the more it will receive.”

Heavenly Father, may the blessings flowing from your son’s Resurrection transform my life and help me to become a brand new creation in Christ. Lord Jesus, may I place all my trust in you and never fail to turn to you for the overwhelming gift of your Divine Mercy. Holy Spirit, set my heart on fire that I may boldly bring the Good News of Jesus into our broken and hurting world with my words and actions. Amen.

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