George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
September 8
The Doubting of Thomas
But he said unto them, Except I shall
see in his hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of
the nails, and thrust my hand into his side, I will not believe--Joh 20:25
The Supreme Importance of the
Resurrection
There is no reader of the New Testament who
has not observed the supreme importance given to Christ's resurrection. It
underlies all arguments; it inspires all pleadings. It is the mould in which
the apostles' thought is cast; it is the morning star that lights their feet. I
do not know that we have kept the accent there. We are so fond of asking what
would Jesus do, that we almost forget the most stupendous thing that Jesus did.
It calls for a tingling sense that Christ has risen to give us back again the
apostolic music. In the Life of Dr. Dale of Birmingham there is no passage more
arresting than the page where he tells how it flashed on him that Jesus lives.
He had been ministering, preaching, praying, when suddenly, as in an
inspiration, there broke on him the sense that Jesus was alive. We need to be
touched like that. We need a new faith that the stone was rolled away. We need
a new baptism of the conviction of Thomas, when, clasping those risen feet, he
cried, "My Lord and my God."
The Character of Thomas Gives Weight to
His Conviction
First note, then that the character of
Thomas gives tremendous weight to his conviction. Do we not sometimes wonder at
the Master's choice of disciples? Do we not feel that some of the twelve must
have been very uncongenial company for Jesus? Why did He choose them, then? I
can understand how a St. John would serve the world. But what service could a
man of the character of Thomas render? I think the chief service of Thomas to
the world was his magnificent witness to the resurrection. Peter was
passionate, impulsive, rash, springing to his conclusions just as he sprang
that morning on the waves; but when a great miracle is in the balance, I want
the witness of another character than that. And John?--John loved so
splendidly, that a loveless world has ruled him out of court. But the world
cannot rule Thomas out of court; his character gives tremendous weight to his
conviction. For Thomas was a very stubborn man. There was a grim tenacity about
him that almost made him dour. Some men have only to see a thing in print to
credit it. They would believe anything on the joint testimony of ten friends.
But the ten disciples came hurrying to Thomas; and Peter and James and John
were crying "We have seen the Lord," and Thomas knew what truthful
men they were, yet Thomas stubbornly refused to be convinced. There was
something very dour in that--and it was wrong, as stubbornness generally
is--but in the measurements of history it was superb. If that man is convinced,
I am convinced. If the man who snaps his fingers at Peter and John comes round,
I yield. And the next Sunday Thomas is on his face, crying "My Lord, my
God." Then, too, Thomas was a despondent man; brave but despondent, a more
common combination than we think. Do you remember how when Christ was summoned
to the grave of Lazarus, it was such a hazardous thing for Him to venture near
Jerusalem that His disciples tried to dissuade Him from the journey?
"Goest thou thither again?" said one. "Lord, if he sleep, he
shall do well," parleyed another. But Thomas said, "Let us also go,
that we may die with him." It was the word of a brave but a desponding
man; a man who naturally saw the darker side--and we can thank God there was
such a melancholy heart among the twelve. It is easy to persuade a merry heart.
When I am full of hope, I shall credit the sunshine, though all the sky be
cloud. But a melancholy man is hard to turn; and when a melancholy heart like
Thomas's turns in an hour, passes from death to life, accepts the joyfullest
fact in the world's history and worships, I bow the head before the infinite
wisdom that set such a man among the twelve.
His Conviction Was Reached by the Dark
Road of Doubt
So the character of Thomas gives tremendous
weight to his conviction. Now mark, in the second place, that this conviction
was reached by the dark road of doubt. I wonder if we could classify this doubt
of Thomas? Well, there are some who doubt because their will is biased. That
doubt runs down to life and character and is a dishonest, miserable thing. "Ah,
if I only believed what you believe," said one to Pascal, "I should
very soon be a better man." "Begin by being a better man,"
Pascal replied, "and you will very soon believe what I believe." There
are those who will tell you they doubt this or that and give you a score of
reasons for their doubts, and at the bottom it is a moral question. There is
some habit that would have to go; there is some doubtful practice that must
cease; there is some little reputation that would vanish, and the cloak of
doubt is used to dally with sin. But no man would charge Thomas with that;
whatever he had, he had a clean heart. He was a despondent, but not a dishonest
doubter. Then there are others whose doubt is intellectual, and this is the
prevalent doubting of today. But I do not think that is the doubt of Thomas. I
cannot think that a man who had seen Lazarus's resurrection could be
intellectually skeptical of the resurrection of Lazarus's Lord. His doubt
sprang from another source than that. He doubted because he felt so deeply, and
that perhaps is the sorest doubt of all. You mail a score of letters in a week,
and you never doubt about their safe arrival. One day, you mail a precious
manuscript, and instantly the possibilities of some mischance are wakened, and
you cannot rest, you doubt its safety so much. It is because you feel so
strongly, that you doubt. And Thomas felt so strongly that he doubted too. For
the rising of Jesus meant everything to him. His heart was agonized lest it
were false. Perhaps there would be more of Thomas's doubt today if there were
more of Thomas's love.
Thomas's Doubts Were Dispelled by
Christ's Gentleness
Lastly, these doubts were dispelled by the
gentleness of Christ. Thomas set up one test. "Comrades," he said,
"I love you; but it is all too wonderful, and I cannot believe you. But
hark, when I see with these eyes the gashes of the nails, and put this hand
into the wound which the spear made, I shall believe our Lord is risen."
Then the next Sunday evening Jesus is in their midst, transfigured, beautiful;
and He is saying, "Thomas reach forth thine hand, and touch, and be
convinced--it is thy test." And do we ever read that Thomas did it? Never.
And do you dream he peered into the gashes? Here was his little test, and he
forgot his test. The little particular was swept aside in the overwhelming
argument of love. It was the look, it was the tone, it was the love and
gentleness of Christ that won the day. Thomas was at His feet crying, "My
God!"
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