Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh To-day
we are keeping the day of St Thomas the Apostle. Too often we
remember him only as a doubter; indeed he is the one who questioned
the message which the other Apostles brought to him when they said:
Christ is risen! We have seen Him alive! But
he is not one who doubted throughout his life or who remained
unfaithful to the fullness of the divine revelation of Christ. We
must remember that when the Apostles and the Lord heard of the
illness of Lazarus, Christ said to them: Let us return to Jerusalem.
To which the others said: But the Jews wanted to kill you there. Why
should we return? Only Thomas the Apostle answered: Let us go with
Him and die with Him. He was prepared not only to be His disciple in
words, not only to follow Him as one follows a teacher, but to die
with Him as one dies with a friend and, if necessary, for a friend.
So, let us remember his greatness, his faithfulness, his wholeness. But
what happened then when after the Resurrection of Christ, the
Apostles said to the one who had not seen Christ risen, that they
had actually seen the risen Christ? Why did he not accept their
message? Why did he doubt? Why did he say that he must have proofs,
material proofs? Because when he looked at them, he saw them
rejoicing in what they had seen, rejoicing that Christ was not dead,
rejoicing that Christ was alive, rejoicing that victory had been
won. Yet, when he looked at them he saw no difference in them..
These were the same men, only full of joy instead of fear. And
Thomas said: Unless I see, unless I probe the Resurrection, I cannot
believe you. Is
it not the same thing that anyone can say to us who meets us? We
proclaimed the Resurrection of Christ, passionately, sincerely,
truthfully, a few days ago. We believe in it with all our being; and
yet, when people meet us in our homes, in the street, in our place
of work, anywhere, do they look at us and say: Who are these people?
What has happened to them? The
Apostles had seen Christ risen, but the Resurrection had not become
part of their own experience. They had not come out of death into
eternal life. So it is also with us; except with the saints, when
they see them, they know that their message is true. What
is it in our message that is not heard? Because we speak, but are
not. We should be so different from people who have no experience of
the living Christ, risen, who has shared His life with us, who sent
the Holy Spirit to us as, in the words of C.S. Lewis, a living
person is different from a statue. A statue may be beautiful,
magnificent, glorious, but it is stone. A human being can be much
less moving in his outer presence, yet he is alive, he is a
testimony of life. So
let us examine ourselves. Let us ask ourselves where we are. Why is
it that people who meet us never notice that we are limbs of the
risen Christ, temples of the Holy Spirit? Why? Each
of us has got to give his own reply to this question. Let us, each
of us, examine ourselves and be ready to answer before our own
conscience and do what is necessary to change our lives in such away
that people meeting us may look at us and say: Such people we have
never seen. There is something about them that we have never seen in
anyone. What is it? And we could answer: It is the life of Christ
abroad in us. We are His limbs. This is the life of the Spirit in
us. We are His temple. Amen. |