April 12, 2o26. Saint Barnabas Lutheran Church, Howard Beach, Queens, N.Y.
When was the last time you suspected a widely shared rumor was not true?
Did you ever get an email from a Nigerian prince who claimed he had millions of dollars to share with you and all he needs is your social security number?
Did you ever get a call from an insurance company that claims your car maintenance insurance has expired and you need to send them money immediately?
Have you received texts that appear to be from a close relative who says he’s in jail and needs you to send bail money immediately?
Most of us can recognize a con when we see one. In the Internet age we have to be very careful when outrageous claims or pictures are posted about the lives of rock stars or politicians. Sometimes it’s easy to see through the deception of Artificial Intelligence; that's probably not Ronald Reagan and Jack Kennedy schmoozing happily while putting together on a Trump golf course. In such cases we embrace our doubts.
At other times it’s possible to tell the difference between AI and reality. Did Rachel Madow really report the landing of an alien space craft at exit 7 of the Taconic Parkway? Is Prince William really putting his Uncle Andrew in irons and dragging him to the Tower of London?
Well, it looks real. But we are entitled to our doubts.
But was Thomas entitled to his doubts?
The anecdote that made Thomas famous will be read in thousands of Christian churches this week. It's from John 20:24-25, one of the accounts of Jesus' appearances after his resurrection.
"But Thomas (who was called the Twin), one of the twelve, was not with them when Jesus came. So the other disciples told him, ‘We have seen the Lord.’ But he said to them, ‘Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and put my finger in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side, I will not believe.’" (NRSV)
So Thomas didn't believe dead people get up and walk. That's not a hard position to defend. Such a thing is impossible to believe.
A lot of things are impossible to believe. Thomas would have been appalled by the approach conceived 1800 years later by Lewis Carroll in Alice in Wonderland.
"Sometimes," Alice says after interacting comfortably with a talking white rabbit, a disappearing cat, and a mad hatter, "I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast."
What an admirable trait: establishing a quota for the number of impossible things you will believe. We all know people who can believe just about anything. What a blessing that is. Doubt is so dark and lonely, while belief is so comforting, so blissful.
Have you ever believed impossible things?
If you haven't eaten breakfast yet, here are some impossible things that thousands of people devoutly believe and insist on convincing their family and friends.
One, NASA scientists have discovered a "missing day" in time which corresponds to biblical accounts of the sun standing still for a day.
Actually, the "missing day" discovery goes back to a book written by Harry Rimmer in 1890, titled, The Harmony of Science and Scripture. The discovery has been particularly popular since at least 1936, when it began to be reported by radio preachers. I can't begin to understand the math that would reveal a missing day in history, but perhaps that is not important.
Two, Scientists drilling in Siberia went too far and ended up punching a hole through to Hell, where the screams of the damned drifted up to them.
Accompanying this report are possibly contradictory, possibly plausible stories that the scientists (a) ran screaming from the hole, shouting, "I can't listen to the agony," or (b) promptly accepted Jesus Christ as their personal savior, or (c) both.
Three, a group known as "The Second Coming Project" is seeking to clone Jesus from the DNA of holy relics, such as the Shroud of Turin.
It's hard to tell from these reports whether the project was inspired by Jurassic Park, the novel and movie in which long extinct dinosaurs are cloned when scientists retrieve their DNA from mosquitoes trapped in prehistoric tree sap, or whether the scientists knew that carbon dating of the Shroud of Turin reveals it to be 1500 years too young to have been Jesus' burial garment. The curious thing is that no one from the Second Coming Project has been interviewed by Fox News.
Four, airlines will not pair Christian pilots and co-pilots out of fear that the rapture will snatch away both crew members capable of landing the flight.
I can't remember when I first heard this report, and there are several versions of it. It may be the reason the Wright brothers didn't fly together at Kitty Hawk in 1903.
And, Five, perhaps the hardest claim to believe of all of them:
Jesus Christ was raised from the dead.
Thomas will be remembered as "Thomas the Doubter" until the end of time, and many Christians reserve a special place of scorn for him. How, we ask ourselves, could this ingrate doubt that his Lord has been raised from the dead?
Despite our derision, it seems likely that we would have been in the same place as Thomas. If there is one thing we have learned about life, one thing we have seen with our own eyes, one thing we have experienced as irrefutable and irreversible truth, it is that death is the end.
The dead do not rise.
As soon as life leaves the body, the body's inner parasites multiply exponentially and the body begins its inevitable return to dust. "I will not believe," Thomas says. And when you come right down to it: why would he? Would you?
Let's give Thomas credit: he says what he means and he isn't trying to deceive anybody. You don't often encounter that kind of integrity, even in the church.
I have a social media friend who tells about an experience she had while visiting a church. The pastor – no doubt one of those glib guys who brandishes his broadly beaming mug on his webpage and on Facebook – told the congregation: "If you don't have a smile on your face, you shouldn't be here. Christianity is a religion of joy."
The woman, whose daughter is seriously ill, fled the service in tears. She did not come to church to smile. She came looking for comfort and she is told that God dismissed her because she was not smiling.
When Jesus appeared to his disciples, they were in no mood to smile, either. They had every reason to expect that their fate would be the same as Jesus' fate – in fact, Jesus had predicted that would come to pass. In days following Jesus' arrest and crucifixion, they had abandoned him and hid themselves in shame, tortured by a gnawing sense of failure. But when Jesus found them in hiding, all he said was, "Peace be with you."
Thomas missed that first appearance of the resurrected Jesus and he continued to dwell in the miasma of doubt.
But let's not let that darkness define Thomas for all time. When he did finally encounter the resurrected Jesus, when he could run his fingers across the nail holes in his hands and the sword wound in his side, a faith was born in Thomas that was unlike all others.
Thomas, as we all know, responded to Jesus' offering of peace with an unequivocal declaration: "My Lord, and my God."
Thomas was a doubter and he said so. What a great model he was for the rest of us doubters. We may come under some social pressure to falsify our testimony, and we may be told we are Judases if every day with Jesus is not sweeter than the day before.
But once we experience the presence of Jesus we can assure ourselves that Jesus will be with us, in times of joy, in times of sorrow, in times of discouragement, in times of exultation.
And so it was with Thomas, who never turned his back again on the living Christ.
Thomas was very busy following his final appearances in scripture. After he had embraced Jesus as "my Lord and my God," he embarked on a missionary journey that rivaled Paul's. He traveled thousands of miles to South Asia, and founded two of the world's oldest Christian churches - the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church and the Mar Thoma Church of India. The testimony of these two churches thrives today, and their message is the same good news Jesus brought to the disciples, and the same good news we are compelled to bring to our neighbors everywhere: Jesus is alive.
And we respond in hope and faith when we feel the presence of Jesus:
“My Lord and my GOD!”
Selah.






