Ill need to see some proof. Can you back that
up? How can you be certain? Have you used any of those expressions today?
Hello, I’m Father Greg Friedman, with the Sunday Soundbite for the Second
Sunday of Easter.
Influenced by the scientific mindset which shapes so much of our way of looking at the world,
most of us want proof for anything beyond our experience. We dont want to be
taken in by extravagant claims or wild speculations.
So todays Gospel, the story of Doubting Thomas,
has a modern appeal. Thomas wants proof of the Resurrection. Scripture scholar
Father Raymond Brown notes that, in Johns Gospel, Thomass story is part of
a string of experiences linking faith to something concrete: the Beloved Disciple
sees folded cloths in the tomb, Mary Magdalene hears Christs voice, the disciples
see the risen Lord. Its natural for Thomas to want concrete evidence.
But the evangelist and Jesus, Father Brown notes,
are interested in a different reaction: What about those who believe without
any physical evidence? Clearly, John wants his readers to make an act of
faith, for Jesus calls such believers blessed.
When we hear this Gospel proclaimed at Mass today,
we can draw some reassurances from our fellow believers. The idealistic portrait
of the Church in the first reading may not mirror our own parishes in every
detail. But when our individual faith wavers, we can gain strength from the
Holy Spirit at work in the midst of a community of faith.
I’m Father Greg Friedman with the Sunday Soundbite
for St. Anthony Messenger Press, on the Web at FranciscanRadio.org.