II Easter
April 18, 2004
JESUS HAS A WHEELBARROW
by John Christianson
John
20:19-31
Here they are, the remaining eleven disciples, all together again for the first time since the Last Supper, just ten days earlier. In my imagination, I jump from this passage in John, back to the prophecy our Lord made in Lukes account of that Last Supper.
28 "You are those who have stood by me in my trials; 29 and I confer
on you, just as my Father has conferred on me, a kingdom, 30 so that you may eat and drink at my table
in my kingdom, and you will sit on thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel.
And I jump ahead to Revelation, chapters 4, 11 and 20, where John sees those disciples sitting on those promised thrones.
I close my eyes, and I imagine the twelve thrones
and I see them identical, except for their legs. The one with the lions feet on the legs thats Peters. Impetuous Peter, who gave his memories to
Mark the lion evangelist! The one
with the human feet on the legs thats Matthews; Johns throne has eagles
talons on the legs. But the most
fascinating throne of all is the one I imagine Thomas sitting on. In place of legs, the base of the throne is
a wheelbarrow an ordinary wheelbarrow, with a wheel in front and two legs and
two handles in back. Theres Thomas,
for all eternity, sitting confidently on a wheelbarrow.
Ask the average Christian what they remember about
Thomas, and you might draw a total blank.
If anything, they might recall the nickname, Doubting Thomas. Not much of a legacy!
Im told that when I was born I was named after my
Mom and Dads oldest brothers. The only
question was, should I be Thomas John or John Thomas. My mother won by pointing out that John was
the disciple that Jesus loved, but Thomas was doubting Thomas. So John Thomas I became.
Maybe my name would have been different if my
parents had remembered the end of todays gospel instead of just the middle of
it. At the end, we dont have Doubting
Thomas any more. We have Confessing
Thomas. Centuries before the Council of Nicaea, the first Christian, to
recognize the divinity of Christ! What
a profound, mind-boggling, blasphemous sounding confession it was, My Lord, and my God! Peter had called
Jesus the Christ, the Son of the Living God.
Thomas carried it a step further.
He called him Lord and God!
And not just Lord and God either he called him MY Lord and MY God. Sometimes in our faith we stand shoulder to
shoulder with the Church, and we say, OUR
Lord and OUR God. Theres a special power in that. But sometimes, Like Thomas, we find
ourselves standing all alone in an intensely personal encounter with God, and
the personal possessive pronoun becomes singular. MY Lord and MY God!
Lets leave Thomas sitting on that peculiar throne
for a bit. I want to share a story I
head many years ago.
Its supposed to have taken place in an area much
like Lyndale, where 160 acre farms were being divided up into 15 or 20 acre
homes. One resident named Tom watched a
fine new house being constructed on the adjacent property. When it was finished, he watched in disbelief
as two steel towers were constructed in the back yard, some three-hundred feet
high and maybe four-hundred feet apart complete with ugly guy wires to steady
them. Then, he watched a steel cable
being stretched between the tops of the two towers, like a gigantic
clothesline.
The next day, Tom saw his new neighbor, clambering
up the ladder steps of one of the towers, pulling along a pole about twenty
feet long. When he got to the top, very
hesitantly, the man began inching out on the cable, like a tight rope walker,
balancing himself with the pole in his hands.
Time and time again he seemed to be losing his balance, only to steady
himself until he made it all the way to the other side. Then back.
Then back and forth. Several
hours a day he was up there practicing.
One day, Tom noticed that the man had a shorter pole
in his hands as he walked back and forth. He was getting more and more
confidence. Then, one day, there was no
pole at all. He just held his arms out
to balance himself. He was getting
better and better. After a few more
weeks, the fellow was walking the tight-rope with his hands in his pockets.
Then, he saw something unbelievable. The man actually was wheeling a wheelbarrow
across the cable, back and forth, from one side to the other, day after day.
Then, one day, he thought the wheelbarrow looked
different. He checked with his
binoculars, and sure enough, it was full of bricks.
Finally, after watching this exhibition another
month or so, he walked out to meet his neighbor. He shook the mans hand, and he said, You have to be the most
amazing tight rope walker in the world.
I cant believe my own eyes how brave and skillful youve become.
Oh, the neighbor said, I wish I believed that.
Next month I have to walk a tight rope across Devils Canyon, pushing a hundred
and eighty pounds of bricks in a wheelbarrow. Im scared to death. That thing is so deep thereve been people
who fell in and their obituaries were already in the paper before they hit the
bottom.
Well, Tom said, let me assure you, you have
nothing to worry about.
Oh, I just dont know.
Hey! You
dont have a thing to worry about. Tom
said. Youll do it! I know.
Ive been watching you for months.
The neighbor looked at him. You really believe that, dont you.
I sure do, Tom declared. No question about it!
The neighbor thought a moment. Then he said, I have an idea! You take the place of the bricks.
So, now you can see how, in my imagination, Thomass
throne got in the wheelbarrow. That
word, my that Thomas repeated twice in his confession: My
Lord, and my God. Thats when he climbed into the wheelbarrow
isnt it. That Jesus is Lord and God?
Why, even the devil knows that, according to James. But its that claim of ownership that makes the difference. My Lord, and my God.
Finally, we have the closing words in todays
gospel:
30Now Jesus did
many other signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not written in
this book. 31But these are written
so that you may come to believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and
that through believing you may have life in his name.
Can you guess what that means? It means that not only does Jesus have a wheelbarrow theres still room in it. Climb in, if you havent already done it. You know that youre already in it? Well, share the word with your neighbors. Jesus has a wheelbarrow a big one.
Amen.
(Comments to John at john.christianson@comcast.net )
Lyndale Lutheran.