The Apostles going forth to preach -- Limbourg brothers |
This story from
Acts starts with an extract of the speech that Peter made in the market place
shortly after the disciples’ explosive experience on the Day of Pentecost. His
speech is widely regarded as the earliest and definitive statement of the
Christian ‘kerygma’ -- the essential Gospel, or Good News of redemption in
Christ. This extract leaves out the context – that people had dismissed the
disciples’ enthusiasm as drunkenness, a charge which Peter is anxious to rebut
– in order to highlight the point Peter is most anxious to make – that Jesus stood
in King David’s line, but brought the Messiahship of God to a fulfillment far
surpassing even David’s greatness. Since, as most in his audience would have
known, Jesus had recently been crucified as a criminal, this is quite a claim,
and powerful evidence of the dramatic difference that the Resurrection had made
to both the theology and the psychology of the disciples.
St Peter -- Durer |
The Epistle
may or may not have been written by Peter himself, but it conveys the same
vibrant message to a fledgling church, this time in the form of a song of
praise rather than a sermon. In these few beautiful sentences we witness a
transition from theology to liturgy – and indeed, thanks to the 19th
century English cathedral composer S S Wesley, this text has become one of the
most widely sung choral anthems for Easter.
The Incredulity of St Thomas -- Caravaggio |
The Gospel
passage for this Sunday has also stimulated great art – Caravaggio’s famous painting
of ‘doubting’ Thomas examining the wound in Jesus’ side. Its slightly chilling
realism is a powerful reminder of how, taken past a certain point, doubt can
shut us off from wonder. Thomas insists that he must see the bodily evidence
with his own eyes. The post-Resurrection appearances of a bodily Jesus,
however, proved to be a special gift to a very few disciples. The strange fact
of the Resurrection, and the significance of its redeeming power – in short,
the ‘mystery of faith’ that Christians proclaim Sunday by Sunday – is waiting
to be experienced in the Body of Christ that is given to us sacramentally, and available
to all who will receive it in penitence, trust and adoration.
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