Intro
The Lenten season is finished.  And yet, we don’t move on to something better, 
even though we have broken our Lenten fast with the Easter feast.  For what can 
be better for us than Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God who takes our sins away?

Main Body
In our Gospel reading, we find Jesus still fresh from the tomb on that first 
Easter Day.  The wounds of death scarred His hands and side.  Jesus suddenly 
appeared to His disciples turned Apostles, minus Judas, and minus Thomas, whose 
whereabouts were unknown.  Jesus said to them, “Peace be with you.”  Shalom, 
wellness and completeness, be with you.  And as He said, so it was.  Then and 
there, Jesus gave them His peace that day. 

And so we come full circle.  In Lent, we pondered the pure and holy Lamb of 
God, the victim of our sin.  In Easter, we see Jesus, the risen victor over 
death and hell.  But He remains, and still is, the Lamb who bears and takes our 
sins away.  For the peace that Jesus gives is based on the forgiveness that He 
earned on His cross of death. 

Today, it is as Jesus said that first Easter evening: “Peace be with you.”  
Christ’s lasting legacy is peace.  But His legacy is not peace as we usually 
understand the word.  Jesus’ peace was “shalom.”  That wasn’t just the end of 
hostilities, but that all was as it should be.  All is now in its proper place 
and state of being. 

Jesus’ peace is the peace that surpasses understanding, the peace that lasts 
through the stresses and storms of life.  His is a peace that will see you 
through the valley of the shadow of death.  It will bring you into heaven’s 
high courts, where you, too, will stand in glorious, risen flesh before the 
Father’s throne.  Indeed, the Lamb of God gives you peace--everlasting peace. 

That’s why the Church celebrates Easter for more than one Sunday.  For 40 days, 
this paschal candle, the emblem of the risen Christ, will stand near the 
pulpit.  Its bright flame recalls those 40 extraordinary days when the 
astonished disciples lived with their resurrected Lord.  With their own eyes, 
they saw Him.  They touched His living flesh, eating and drinking with Him 
after He had risen from death.  With their own ears, they heard His 
life-giving, death-destroying Word. 

Indeed, Christ has died, Christ is risen, and Christ will come again!  The same 
Lord who was put to death for our offenses, was raised for our justification, 
and will come again in glory to claim His Bride, the Church.  

Although we have not seen Jesus as His first disciples did, yet we still love 
and believe in Him.  For in the precious Word of Christ’s Gospel and in His 
holy Sacraments, we are continually receiving what God gives to save us in body 
and soul.  That’s the joy-causing reality for us, even when life spins out of 
control.  

Throughout the Easter season, we celebrate with undiminished joy, which is 
good, because God knows that so much can rob us of our joy these days.  Private 
and public dangers threaten all around.  Fear and confusion grip the nations of 
the earth, while wars and rumors of wars echo and re-echo around the globe.  
There’s illness and hardship, and distress of body, mind, and soul.  All these 
rob us of inner peace and joy. 

But on a day when dismay, fear, and depression were still having their way with 
Jesus’ disciples, Jesus came to them with His astounding blessing.  They had 
locked the doors out of fear over what could happen to them.  But Jesus entered 
anyway to speak His words of life and hope.  “Peace be with you!” He said to 
them. 

It was the standard greeting of His day but divinely amplified.  This was no 
“Hi, how are you?” or “Have a lovely day.”  For after Jesus said those words, 
He showed them His hands and His side.  

And do you know what they saw in His living flesh?  They saw the wounds of 
death.  The peace that Jesus gave was the peace that He paid for with His 
blood, divine blood.  That’s why the peace that He gives is not an earthly 
peace but peace everlasting. 

Jesus’ Apostles saw the holes where nails had been.  They saw the gaping gash, 
where the point of the soldier’s spear had pierced Jesus’ side and from which 
the blood and water poured out when He died.  Standing before them was the Lamb 
of God who takes our sins away, the Lamb of God who died that we might live. 

But Christ was dead no more.  Marks of death adorned His living flesh and bone. 
 What they saw was no figment of their imagination, no abstraction of good 
triumphing over evil, or no pious wish for the progress of mankind.  No; in 
that locked room, they saw none other than the incarnate Son of God embodied in 
human flesh.  

The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world was now the Lamb of God who 
gives us peace.  And that’s exactly what He did.  He came and spoke peace to 
the disciples.  “Peace be with you,” He said.  That was, and remains, an 
extraordinary statement, without precedent or parallel in ordinary, social 
conversation.  

Jesus wasn’t merely extending a greeting, a wish, or a prayer.  He was using 
performative speech.  What Jesus said, He did.  Through the words He spoke, 
Jesus gave actual peace to His disciples.  He was granting to them the end of 
hostilities between God and man.  It was a spiritual cease-fire.  Jesus 
ratified the universal peace treaty that He began at the cross when He breathed 
His last and cried out in triumph, “It is finished” (John 19:30). 

The peace of the Lord continues, for the great cosmic battle between God and 
man is done and over.  Jesus has won peace for us all.  Jesus has conquered our 
sin.  He has breached the stronghold of the grave.  Even hell itself has lost 
all power to destroy us.  

In Jesus, life has triumphed over death.  Death has lost its teeth.  Oh, it can 
scowl and glower, but now it only has a toothless bite.  The sting of death is 
gone, for Jesus, our Lord, has removed our sin and given us His peace.  And 
once sin is gone, nothing in all creation can ever separate us from the love of 
God, not even death itself. 

Jesus sent His Apostles, the Church’s first pastors, to breathe out the 
Spirit’s breath when they proclaimed the forgiveness of sins that Jesus earned 
on the cross.  Jesus said to them, “As the Father has apostled me, so also am I 
sending you” (John 20:21).  That’s why we have, as the book of Hebrews states, 
a Sabbath rest for the people of God (Hebrews 4:9).  For when we hear the 
life-giving Word of Absolution, of Christ’s forgiveness spoken into our ears in 
real time, God is giving us His Sabbath rest. 

And so we have the life of Jesus given to us.  By faith, we receive, through 
Jesus’ performative Word, the benefits of His saving work in the power and 
presence of the Holy Spirit.  

Jesus said to His Apostles, “If you forgive anyone his sins, they are forgiven” 
(John 20:23).  Those were not empty words.  Jesus commissioned those men, those 
Apostles, those first pastors in the New-Covenant Church, to serve as His 
emissaries.  They were to give out, according to Christ’s command, the 
forgiveness that Jesus had won for all on the cross. 

And it is still the same, today.  When we hear from the mouth of the pastor, “I 
forgive you all your sins,” it’s not the pastor’s forgiveness that we 
receive--as if that would do us any good!  No, we receive Christ’s 
forgiveness--the real and genuine article, the removal of guilt and shame in 
Jesus’ name.  Now that’s not so because the pastor says so, but because Jesus 
says so.  He, the Lamb of God who takes our sins away, is the Lamb who brings 
us peace.  And He gives us that peace in His Church. 

“Peace be with you!”  We also hear these words of Christ before we eat His body 
and drink His blood in His Holy Supper.  As it was in that locked room that 
first Easter evening, so it is here this day.  Through Word and Sacrament, the 
Holy Spirit restores our hearts, forgives our sins, and renews our lives 
because of Jesus.  

Although we daily live and breathe on a spiritual battlefield, the peace of the 
Lord continues to bring us peace within.  That’s our shield and protection, our 
bulwark and defense against all that threatens us.  “Peace I leave with you; my 
peace I give you,” says our risen Lord.  “I do not give to you as the world 
gives” (John 14:27). 

That’s where we come in, you and me.  Left to ourselves in this world, we have 
no peace.  Left to ourselves, we have, not only worry and fear, but also hurt 
and loss, with shame and guilt to top it off.  Left to ourselves, we are but 
spiritual corpses.  

But we are not alone.  The Lord Jesus Christ, the risen victor over sin and 
death, has given and bequeathed to His Church His living and lasting peace.  
This peace is dispensed, given out, in the words of Absolution and in the 
eating and drinking of His Holy Supper.  Then, there is peace once more, 
Christ’s peace, peace eternal.  

Conclusion
In the forgiveness of our sins, we have the peace that Jesus gives us.  Jesus 
“came and preached peace to you who were far away and peace to those who were 
near.  For through Him, by one Spirit, we both have access to the Father” 
(Ephesians 2:17-18). 

So, peace to you, this day--the peace of Christ that surpasses all 
understanding.  For Jesus means exactly what He says and gives precisely what 
He means.  The peace of the Lord is with you always.  To this we can only add 
our glad “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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