In both of today’s readings, Acts 3: 11-26 and Luke 24:
35-48, Luke asks the same question. When Jesus heals the crippled man through
Peter and John, they ask the people: “Why are you amazed at this, and why do
you look so intently at us as if we had made him walk by our own power or
piety?” In the Gospel, while the
disciples from Emmaus explain how they recognized Jesus, Jesus suddenly appears
in their midst and says: “Peace be with you.” The disciples and the eleven
apostles are taken aback. Jesus says to them: “Why are you troubled? …[W]hy do questions arise in your hearts?
Look at my hands and my feet, that it is I myself. Touch me and see, because a
ghost does not have flesh and bones as you can see I have.”
Yes, why am I surprised when Jesus appears in the person of
a physician, a nurse, a teacher, a parent, a public servant, loving,
comforting, healing, meeting the unmet need of a desperate, grieving
individual? Why do positive responses from people pondering a distressing
situation leave me startled? Why am I discombobulated when a little child
responds to a tragedy in a way that awakens the hearts of millions around the
world to help Veterans of the Iraq war or victims of natural disasters or a
child battered with cancer whose family needs comfort and financial aid?
Do I not realize that Jesus is risen? that Jesus is alive in each of us? that Jesus works through us in the same way that He worked among the sick and the lame, the deaf and the blind, the dead and the demonized when he physically walked this earth?
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