OPENING CHORUS(es) and OPENING PRAYER
OPENING COMMENTS
- Today is the Second Sunday of Easter.
- The theme for this week is Peace comes to us.
- In Psalm 16:1–11, the psalmist displays confident trust in God’s promise of life after death.
- In Acts 2:14a, 22–32, Peter confirms and declares that Jesus was not abandoned to the grave but was raised to new life.
- In 1 Peter 1:3-9, we read Peter again affirming that we have been given new life because of Christ’s resurrection.
- And in our pericope in John 20:19–31, Jesus appears to the disciples after his resurrection, which leads to John’s promise that whoever believes in Christ will possess new life.
OPENING SONG
SERMON
Peace Comes to Us
John 20:19–31 NIV
On the evening of that first day of the week, when the disciples were together, with the doors locked for fear of the Jewish leaders, Jesus came and stood among them and said, “Peace be with you!” 20 After he said this, he showed them his hands and side. The disciples were overjoyed when they saw the Lord.
21 Again Jesus said, “Peace be with you! As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.” 22 And with that he breathed on them and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit. 23 If you forgive anyone’s sins, their sins are forgiven; if you do not forgive them, they are not forgiven.”
24 Now Thomas (also known as Didymus), one of the Twelve, was not with the disciples when Jesus came. 25 So the other disciples told him, “We have seen the Lord!”
But he said to them, “Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were, and put my hand into his side, I will not believe.”
26 A week later his disciples were in the house again, and Thomas was with them. Though the doors were locked, Jesus came and stood among them and said, “Peace be with you!” 27 Then he said to Thomas, “Put your finger here; see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side. Stop doubting and believe.”
28 Thomas said to him, “My Lord and my God!”
29 Then Jesus told him, “Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.”
30 Jesus performed many other signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not recorded in this book. 31 But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.
John 20:19–22, 23-29, 30-31 NIV
Picture this: You are home, and the doors are locked. It’s late at night after the biggest disappointment of your life. Maybe you’ve just lost your job, received difficult news, or let someone down. You’ve locked the world out; you’re hiding. The shades are drawn. Your fear, shame, and uncertainty fill the room with a heaviness you can feel in the air. You replay every “what if,” every regret, and every anxious thought.
This is where we find Jesus’ disciples — locked away, feeling defeated and uncertain about what comes next.
And here is the good news right at the start: it’s precisely behind these closed doors that the risen Jesus shows up. He does not wait for us to clean up our mess before entering. He steps through every barrier — physical, emotional, and spiritual — to meet us right in the despair of our fear and confusion.
So, let’s imagine we’re all in that room together with the disciples, and see what happens when the Prince of Peace walks in.
And as we do, I want you to hold onto this one point. If you forget everything else, remember this: Peace comes to us.
We will start by looking at John 20:19-20.
On the evening of that first day of the week, when the disciples were together, with the doors locked for fear of the Jewish leaders, Jesus came and stood among them and said, “Peace be with you!” After he said this, he showed them his hands and side. The disciples were overjoyed when they saw the Lord.
On the evening of that first Easter, with the doors locked “for fear,” Jesus comes and stands among his disciples. The first words out of his mouth are “Peace be with you.”
Imagine how the disciples might have braced themselves. Almost all of them had abandoned Jesus; they fled when he was arrested. John is identified as the only male disciple present at the cross. Perhaps they expected Jesus to express disapproval or to list what must be done to repair their relationship.
Instead, Jesus offers a blessing: “Peace be with you.” He simply comes into their midst and declares peace. And they were overjoyed.
Jesus does not start with their performance. He starts with his presence.
This matters because it tells us something about how Jesus meets us. It is not our moral perfection or self-sufficiency that brings Christ near. The disciples were hiding, grieving, and probably deeply ashamed, feeling they had failed their Lord. Then Jesus enters in their great need.
He shows them his hands and side — wounds that speak of suffering and victory all at once — and he repeats the greeting: “Peace be with you!”
Again, Jesus does not start with what they had done. He starts with who he is and what he has done.
And when he shows them his scars, he’s not just proving it’s really him. He’s preaching without words.
Those wounds say:
“I carried the nails.”
“I carried the spear.”
“I carried the curse.”
“I carried the full weight of sin and death.”
And here’s the part we need to say plainly: Jesus has done for us, in us, what we cannot do for ourselves. That’s what we mean when we say Jesus’ work is vicarious — that Jesus acted in our place, on our behalf, as our representative. He took what we deserve. He gave what we could never earn.
The disciples did not go searching and find peace. They did not achieve peace. Peace came to them. Jesus is our peace; Jesus is God with us.
Sometimes the peace we imagine is just “nothing bad is happening.” But Jesus’ peace is not denial. It’s not pretending while our heart is breaking.
The peace that Jesus gives is not something that denies our pain, but peace by his presence in that pain. His peace is also not the absence of trouble, but the promise that he will never leave us nor forsake us. It is the peace of not being alone.
Jesus brings peace that comes through real suffering. And because Jesus is human and endured the cross, he understands suffering. His is a peace that has journeyed through crucifixion and has broken the power of death. A peace anchored in love and power that cannot be shaken.
The word for peace in John 20 means peace as in wholeness, harmony, safety, and prosperity. It refers to the restoration of a right relationship with God. Peace like a relationship that was broken and is being repaired. Like a life that was scattered and is being gathered back together.
Jesus does not say, “Peace be with you” like a polite greeting. He is our peace and he gives himself for us. Peace comes to us.
Jesus meets us in the very places where we feel least worthy to welcome him. And yet, the doors we try to lock to keep out our fears cannot keep out Christ. No emotional wall, no mountain of guilt, no fortress of regret is too strong for the one who walks through locked doors.
If your heart is weary, your soul anxious, your mind plagued by questions, remember: Peace comes to you.
So, let’s see what Jesus does next in verses 21–23.
Sending Witnesses, Not Experts
Again, Jesus said, “Peace be with you! As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.” And with that he breathed on them and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit…”
After greeting his disciples with peace, Jesus immediately says, “As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.” The mission is not cancelled by their doubt or hiding; it’s reborn in his grace.
And notice the order again. Peace first. Sending second.
Jesus does not say, “Get yourselves together and then I’ll send you.” He does not say, “Prove you’re loyal and then you’ll have a role.” He shares his peace with us, and then he gives us purpose.
And he roots it in God himself: “As the Father has sent me…”
That is not a small detail. It tells us mission is not the Church’s idea. It is God’s heart.
Here we witness the triune pattern clearly:
The Father is the Sender — he sends in love.
The Son is the Sent One — he comes near in flesh, suffers for us, rises for us.
The Holy Spirit is God in us — giving life, courage, and power we do not have on our own.
This is not three separate gods. This is the one God who is Father, Son, and Spirit — one God acting for our salvation. The Father sends the Son to bring us home. The Son does not come only to show us a path; he becomes our peace by his finished work on the cross. And the Spirit does not merely give us a boost; he gives us the very life of Christ so we can live as people of peace in a fearful world.
Then Jesus breathes on them. That image matters. The line “Receive the Holy Spirit” is not a side note. It is the fuel of the whole mission. It’s as if in that breath, Jesus is saying: “I do not send you in your own strength. I am giving you my Spirit.”
And here is where we need to make Christ’s finished work unmistakable: the disciples are being sent as people who have been rescued.
Jesus sends people out who know what it’s like to be scared, to need forgiveness, to be forgiven. He commissions people who know that they need grace. Jesus sends us as witnesses.
And when Jesus talks about forgiveness here, we need to hear it as good news. The Church has been handed a message: Jesus is the source of forgiveness. He is not only announcing forgiveness — he purchased forgiveness with his blood.
And we are sent to announce what is true because of his finished work: that peace and reconciliation are offered to all.
Mission is sharing what we receive by joining with God in what he is already doing in the world — restoring, redeeming, healing, reconciling — through everyday lives in everyday places.
- At work, when you refuse to crush someone and instead offer patience.
- At home, when you choose forgiveness instead of cold distance.
- In your neighborhood, when you notice pain and step toward it with kindness.
That’s God’s peace spilling out into the world.
Peace comes to us.
But what about doubts — especially the kind that feel like locked doors inside our own minds?
We read in verses 24–29 that Thomas was not there during that first encounter. So, when the other disciples tell him about seeing Jesus, he responds: “Unless I see the nail marks… I will not believe.”
And this is where we get the expression “a doubting Thomas.” But the truth is, most of us would have reacted the same way. Thomas does not ask for anything more than the others received; he just says it out loud.
Maybe that’s you. You’re not trying to be difficult. You’re being honest. “I want to believe. But I cannot make myself believe.”
And what does Jesus do with that?
A week later, the disciples are together again — behind closed doors — and Thomas is included. Jesus comes again, offering the same words: “Peace be with you.”
He meets Thomas’ skepticism with invitation — not scolding but kindness: “Put your finger here; see my hands … Reach out your hand and put it into my side. Stop doubting and believe.”
Here is a Savior who is not threatened by our questions, who makes room for honest inquiry, and who offers himself as the answer. He says, “Thomas, look at me.” Because the wounds tell the story. The scars are the sermon.
Thomas’ response — “My Lord and my God!” — is not just some intellectual “aha” moment; it is the soul’s cry of someone for whom God has just become real. This is not just an idea. This is a Person. The risen Jesus is standing here, alive, and his wounds mean something for me.
That is vicarious grace: Jesus died for us and instead of us. He carried what we cannot carry. He paid what we cannot pay. He took our sin into his own body and buried it in his grave. And in rising, he brings us into his life with the Father, by the Spirit.
Jesus then says, “Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.”
This is important for future generations — for you and me. Faith is trusting Jesus’ presence and promise, even when we cannot see his wounds with our eyes.
It’s not your grip on God that saves you. It’s God’s grip on you. You are still included when you have doubts. Often, doubt is faith reaching for something to hold. “I want to believe; help me understand.”
The Father is not disgusted by your weakness.
The Son does not withdraw from you in your questions but comes close with scars.
The Spirit does not abandon you but draws you to the Father’s heart when belief feels hard.
Peace comes to us.
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Closed Doors to Open Lives (John 20:30–31)
The Gospel of John tells us this story so that “you may believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.” Jesus is inviting each of us into something real and personal.
“Believing” is not a one-time event, but a lifelong journey marked by encounters with Christ who meets us again and again, even in locked rooms.
And John’s conclusion reminds us: the resurrection is not just a happy ending to an ancient story. It’s the beginning of God’s new world, reaching through time right into our lives.
The “locked doors” are not just details of the disciples’ circumstances; they become a picture of every place in life where fear, shame, and disappointment keep people shut in.
Think of how often we carry burdens — regrets from the past, anxieties about the future, wounds that make it hard to trust or hope again.
The resurrection of Jesus means that none of these closed doors is ultimate. Through the power of his Spirit, Christ is forever entering those places, offering not only his presence but his very life.
This resurrected life that we receive is Christ’s very life given to us in the Person of the Holy Spirit. In Christ’s life we can see his peace overtake our fear. In his life we experience forgiveness for ourselves and the ability to extend it to others.
The resurrected life is about what Christ has already done and now shares with us.
In this story of the locked room, we see a movement:
- from hiding to openness,
- from fear to courage,
- from isolation to community and purpose.
This life is shaped by Jesus’ peace — a peace the world cannot give and which all the world’s locked doors cannot keep out.
The disciples’ locked room becomes a sanctuary, not by escaping danger, but by the presence of the risen Lord at its center.
And let’s not miss this: those first believers, once paralyzed by fear, become bold ambassadors of Christ’s peace. But why?
Not because they became impressive.
But because Jesus breathed on them.
Because Jesus gave them his Spirit.
Because Jesus made peace through his cross.
Because Jesus rose and stood among them alive.
The closed doors that once imprisoned them now swing open as they’re sent in the Spirit’s power to proclaim forgiveness in Christ. They are living witnesses to the truth that no obstacle is greater than the love of God revealed in Jesus.
That’s mission: carrying God’s peace into the places that still feel locked. Telling others that Peace comes to us.
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Today, you may feel like you’re hiding — locked away from hope or joy, weighed down by anxiety or regret. Maybe your faith feels frail, like Thomas’s did.
Hear this: Jesus walks right into those spaces and shares his peace with you.
He meets you with the scars that overcame death and the grave. He meets you with breath — his Spirit — guiding and empowering you. He meets you with words that commission you to be his messenger of grace.
The Father sends the Son.
The Son gives himself for you in his finished work on the cross.
The Spirit gives you Christ’s life and peace from the inside out.
Your doubts do not keep him away. Your failures are no match for resurrection power. The doors you close cannot keep out his love.
So, when Jesus says, “Peace be with you,” he is not giving you a slogan. He is giving you himself.
Peace comes to us!
SONG OF RESPONSE
- What is the main takeaway for you?
- Peace comes to us
- … in the Person of Jesus Christ, who is the Prince of Peace … who is our Peace.
- We have peace because Christ is in us
- How are we able to have peace?
- By having Christ in us
- We have peace because Christ is in us … and He is bigger & greater than any problem or challenge we might ever have
- We can cope … and overcome … by looking to Him and asking for His help
- What are some ways that you can speak “peace” over someone’s life?
- Pray for him/her
- Let them know God is with them even now.
- Is it comforting to know we’re simply called to share what we’ve received, not called to be experts?
- Yes
- It means we CAN share.
- It means WE can share.
- What do you do if you have doubts about your faith?
- Ask God the help us (to help our unbelief)
- Do a study on whatever is contributing to that doubt
- Have you seen Christ move through the walls of your life or heart?
- If so, how?
CLOSING PRAYER
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Upcoming ONLINE meetings … This coming Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
- Our next ONSITE (face-to-face) meeting … April 26 (two Sundays from today)
- PENTECOST service … on Sunday, May 24 … when we plan to re-start weekly Sunday meetings
