3-5-21 - Seeing Is Believing

You can listen to this reflection here. Sunday's gospel reading is here.

Hey, disciples, can you take a hint? How many times did Jesus have to tell you what was going to happen? He mentioned that “rising again after three days” thing when he was coming down the mountain after the transfiguration; he mentioned it when he talked about what would happen to the Son of Man – arrest, trial, execution… and after three days rising again. And he says it here, talking about “raising the temple after three days.”

But he was speaking of the temple of his body. After he was raised from the dead, his disciples remembered that he had said this; and they believed the scripture and the word that Jesus had spoken.

I can’t blame them for not being able to comprehend these words of Jesus’. They sound like a strange figure of speech – and Jesus said a lot of strange things. How should they have known he meant this one literally? This one most impossible thing?

After Jesus is risen, on his second visit to his followers in that upper room, he says to Thomas, who had missed the first visit and would not believe Jesus was resurrected until he saw him in person, “Blessed are those who have not seen, yet have come to believe.” I always wish Thomas had replied, “Easy for you to say!” (His response was much humbler and holier than that…)

Because in truth none of Jesus’ followers really believed until they saw the unbelievable right in front of them. So we might cut ourselves some slack when we have trouble believing, without the benefit of seeing Jesus with our physical sight. We have to work a little harder – or simply trust more – and remember all the ways we do see resurrection at work.
  • Cancer patients who have experienced healing and are now cancer-free are resurrection at work.
  • Addicts who have come solidly into recovery after years of self-destruction and self-loathing are resurrection at work.
  • Communities that have moved from blight to habitable housing and secure neighborhoods are resurrection at work.
  • Countries that have managed to choose peace and end years of bloodshed are resurrection at work. 
These examples err on the side of the obvious, and maybe all these transformations could take place without God's involvement. I say “maybe” because these sorts of “back from the brink” transformations require one or more people to give sacrificially, humble themselves, resist hostility and refuse the temptation to “win.” Such transformations require vulnerability, submission to a person or process, and a truly self-giving love, which I believe can only come from God, whether or not God gets named.

What are some examples of resurrection life in your life, in your community, in the world? Name them, claim those stories, remember them, tell them when you’re with someone who says, “There can’t be a God – look at all the evil and death and destruction.” That’s when we can say, “And look at all the life where it didn’t seem like life was possible. Here's a story...”

We don’t have to wait for heaven to see that our faith is valid. God shows us “risen from the dead” all the time. Let’s open our eyes and see Life.

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