Intro
When Jesus speaks His divine peace to His disciples, He shows them His wounds 
He received on the cross.  For Jesus, the crucified One, is now risen from the 
dead.  He is the Messiah--and His wounds prove it. 

But Thomas denied what he hadn’t experienced.  Instead, Thomas demanded a 
religious experience of his own choosing before he would believe.  He demanded 
to see the nail prints of Jesus.  He demanded to put his hand in Jesus’ side, 
where the spear had pierced Him.  He demanded on experiencing the truth of 
Christ’s resurrection in the way he wanted to receive it.  

Main Body
But faith doesn’t come from having religious experiences, where God has to 
prove Himself to sinners.  Faith comes by hearing.  That’s what Scripture tells 
us.  “Faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ” (Romans 
10:17).  And so the Holy Spirit gives us new birth into new life by the Gospel 
we hear.  

God speaks.  That’s how He created the world.  And that’s how He also creates 
faith, replacing a stony heart into one pulsing with spiritual life.  That’s 
how He changes us from unbelievers into true believers, who live on every word 
that comes from the mouth of God. 

Jesus speaks, and by His speaking, He brings us His peace.  He says, “Peace be 
with you.”  Did you notice that Jesus didn’t say, “May peace be with you”?  For 
Jesus isn’t wishing or praying; He is giving, and His words give what they say. 
 And so Jesus says, “Peace be with you.”  And when Jesus says, “Peace be with 
you,” that means His peace is with you.  For Jesus has said so.  His words 
aren’t wishes; they are all-powerful.  And so when Jesus says it, it is so; and 
it is so, because He says it. 

Jesus’ words give us peace.  But what peace is that?  It’s the peace that He 
gained by His perfect life, death, and resurrection.  Whenever we think of our 
Lord Jesus, we should not only think about what He does, but also about what He 
says.  For Jesus joins His words to His work.  And so what Jesus says and what 
He does fit together into a perfect harmony.  

Jesus isn’t just talk.  He’s also action.  He says, “Peace be with you,” and 
then He shows His Apostles His hands and His side.  He speaks His word and 
points to His work.  The two are joined.  Then, after showing them His work, He 
speaks to them again, saying the same words: “Peace be with you.”  

And what peace is this?  Look at His hands and His side.  It is the peace that 
Jesus has earned by His work.  His work was dying for us.  He labored in agony 
when the nails pierced His hands and feet, and He was crucified on the cross.  
There, He worked, and He worked hard.  

That was the hardest work anyone has ever done.  That was when Jesus fought 
against the evil that was poured out upon Him.  That was when He fought against 
the devil’s temptations.  That was when He fought against the sin that was 
given to Him.  There, Jesus worked.  He worked to fulfill all righteousness.  
And He labored and bore the burden of guilt for the entire human race.  

And so Jesus shows the holy work He had done by showing the marks of the nails 
and spear.  The scars on His body testify to the truth of His words.  And so 
when Jesus says, “Peace be with you,” He is speaking the truth.  He gives you 
what He has to give.  He gives you what He earned by His hard and bitter labor. 
 

This is where we mess up: We want to be like unbelieving Thomas.  Like him, we 
want to base our faith on our experience.  That’s where we get it wrong.  We 
don’t base our faith on our experience, but on Christ’s experience.  For our 
faith doesn’t come from our words; it comes from Christ’s words.  Our faith 
doesn’t result from anything we say, do, or offer to God; it comes from Jesus.  
He gives us what belongs to Him.  His work has earned it, His words give it, 
and our faith receives it. 

The heart of our faith is the forgiveness of sins that Jesus gives us.  And 
with the forgiveness of sins comes the peace that Jesus gives.  We can add 
nothing to this forgiveness to be right with God.  That’s why the peace Jesus 
gives us is real, because it’s based on His work, not ours. 

But if we didn’t believe this, it would be for nothing.  For without faith, we 
don’t benefit from the forgiveness that God gives.  That’s why Jesus sent His 
Apostles.  Our Gospel reading for today records this, but so also does Matthew 
28.  

Jesus sent His Apostles to preach the Gospel and give out His Sacraments.  Why? 
 So others would receive the Holy Spirit.  Why the Holy Spirit?  Because the 
Holy Spirit brings us to faith.  That’s why Jesus sent the Apostles to preach 
the Gospel and give out His Sacraments.  For everyone needs faith.  

Today, God still sends men to preach the same Gospel and give out the same 
Sacraments, which He first entrusted to His Apostles.  God still sends pastors, 
even as He has sent pastors since Jesus first sent out the Apostles.  God is 
the One who sends them.  They don’t send themselves.  They aren’t pastors 
because they decide to be pastors.  No, God sends them through the call of the 
Church.  

That’s why the Church doesn’t hire preachers.  God sends them.  Jesus said, “As 
the Father has sent Me, I also send you.”  Now, was Jesus only speaking to 
those men who were present with Him in the room?  No, Jesus was also speaking 
to all future pastors in His Church.  Although Jesus directly sent His 
Apostles, the same apostolic ministry is to continue until the end of time.  

Since the Apostles, through the call of the Church, Christ has sent His 
pastors.  We see this taking place in the book of Acts.  There, the Apostle 
Paul was addressing the pastors serving in Ephesus.  Jesus didn’t directly call 
those men to serve as pastors.  Yet, the Apostle Paul told them to “keep watch 
over… all the flock of which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers and to 
shepherd the church of God, which he bought with his own blood” (Acts 20:28).  
The Holy Spirit, through the Church, called those men to be overseers, pastors, 
of the congregations they served.  And it is no different today. 

Jesus breathed on His Apostles and said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit.  If 
you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, 
they are retained.”  Jesus speaks through His preachers.  When we hear them 
speak, we hear Jesus speak.  

When the pastors of Christ’s Church preach God’s law, God Himself is judging us 
and showing us our sins.  Although the man speaking is a sinner like you, the 
Law he preaches has divine authority.  It’s true that a mere man can’t judge 
your heart and expose your conscience to your sins.  God does that.  And God 
speaks through His pastors.  

So when the pastor sent by Christ tells you, that because of Christ, your sins 
are forgiven, it’s as if Jesus Christ Himself were saying that to you.  Why?  
Because, through His pastor, Jesus Christ Himself is saying that to you.  

We receive Christ’s pastors because Christ sends them.  Jesus says to His 
pastors, in Luke 10:16: “The one hears you, hears me; the one who rejects you, 
rejects me; and the one who rejects me, rejects the One who sent me.”  Jesus 
doesn’t send pastors to preach false doctrine.  If they do, “keep away from 
them.  For such [pastors] aren’t serving our Lord Christ, but their own 
appetites” (Rom 16:17-18). 

There is no divine call except to preach and teach the truth of God.  Pastors 
who are called, who preach the Gospel faithfully and give out the Sacraments of 
Christ according to Christ’s institution are sent by Christ.  They may not be 
hired and fired at will.  To fire a faithful pastor is the same as tossing 
Jesus out from His own Church.  As Jesus said, “The one who rejects you rejects 
me.” 

That’s why the Church still calls men to be pastors, not hire them.  For those 
who are hired can be fired.  But why do we insist on this distinction, of 
calling instead of hiring?  We do so to protect ourselves from hirelings who 
will preach whatever our itching ears want to hear.  For if a pastor’s status 
depends on pleasing the people, then most pastors will do whatever they have to 
do to please the people.  

What’s the deal?  It’s this: You can’t trust a pastor who can be hired and 
fired at will.  When Jesus sends pastors, He puts them under holy orders.  They 
are first accountable to Him.  That’s why the Apostle Paul and Pastor 
Sosthenes, who helped co-write 1 Corinthians, said, “This is how one should 
regard us, as servants of Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God” (1 Cor 
4:1). 

Why does any of this even matter?  It matters because Jesus wants us to receive 
His peace.  That’s why God’s Law must expose our sin that separates us from 
Him.  That’s why Christ’s pastors must tell those who hang on to their sins, 
refusing to repent, that God is still holding those sins against them.  But 
this does have a divine purpose.  For when the Holy Spirit brings someone to 
repent, the pastor is to tell him that, because of Christ, his sins are 
forgiven.  That’s the source of God’s peace.  For if God has forgiven you, you 
also have His peace.  

Conclusion
But there’s more: You also can forgive your neighbor who sins against you.  Not 
only can you do this, but God expects you to do this.  But we can only give 
what we have.  And so we confess our sins to God.  We receive His forgiveness.  
And God gives us His forgiveness in words spoken by those whom He sends.  Then, 
we take these words to heart, and we give to others what we also have received. 
 That is the life of the Christian.  Amen. 


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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