The risen Christ comes to each of us all the time no matter what we are going through. He shows us His wounds that have won for us an interior peace, forgiveness, and renewed faith that we do not deserve in any way, “Peace be with you.” Let Him forgive us for all our sins all the time and then let us forgive ourselves and others too so that we can partake in the very peace of the risen Christ.
The risen Christ met His disciples huddled around, afraid and terrified behind locked doors because of the Jews, “On the evening of that first day of the week, when the doors were locked where the disciples were, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood in their midst.”(Jn 20:19-31)
What did Jesus do? He did not try to drive the Jews away and prevent His disciples from any imminent harm. Neither did He ask His disciples to double-lock the doors for their safety.
On the contrary, He offered them inner peace that He had won for them by His passion, death, and resurrection, “Peace be with you.’ When He had said this, He showed them His hands and His side.” He offered them peace that they did not deserve because they had abandoned Him during His passion and death.
This is what our risen Lord often does in our lives. He may not remove the things that disturb our peace of mind and heart in this world, but He always offers us an inner peace that we could never earn or deserve, and which nothing can take from us. This is the peace that He possessed throughout His earthly life. This is the peace that He won for us by His death and resurrection. This is the singularly unique peace that He promised us when He said, “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid.”(Jn 14:27)
The risen Christ continues to offer this peace to us. Sadly, we do not dispose ourselves to receive and experience this interior peace. We are futilely searching for peace in having favorable conditions, pleasant relationships, hassle-free lives, etc.
There are three sure ways that we can experience this peace of Christ.
Firstly, we allow God to forgive us for all our sins all the time. The peace of Jesus comes from His perfect union with the Father by the power of the Spirit. This union with His Father shaped His attitudes and actions in His earthly life, “He who sent me is with me; He has not left me alone, for I always do what is pleasing to Him.”(Jn 8:29)
We have the peace of Christ when we examine our thoughts, words, actions, and omissions seriously each do and do so in the light of God’s words and His undying love for us. We bring these sins to the sacrament of Confession because that is where we have a divine guarantee of complete forgiveness for our sins, “Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins you retain are retained.”
We experience this peace of Christ when we are reconciled with the Father and show this reconciliation by our actions. Like Jesus, we experience the abiding presence of God with us as we strive to please God in all things. This abiding presence of God with us becomes an immense and uninterrupted source of inner peace in our chaotic world.
Secondly, we also forgive ourselves for our sins and failures. Jesus lived every moment of His earthly life as a beloved Son of the Father. The risen Christ does not give in to self-pity or dwell on His sorrowful passion and unjust death. Rather He shows His wounds to all as a testament to His Father’s undying and faithful love for Him, “He showed them His hands and His side.”
We too experience the peace of Christ when we do not give in to an exaggerated sense of pity over our sins and failures. Such self-centered sorrow and self-condemnation completely destroy any sense of inner peace and hope in us.
Let us always remind ourselves that we are reconciled to God in Jesus Christ as His beloved sons and daughters. He sees the good that is in us no matter what we are going through or what we have done. We may struggle with sin constantly but that does not diminish our identity as God’s beloved children who can be saints one day. Such a thought will surely bring us inner peace in our struggles.
Lastly, we must forgive others. Jesus always forgave those who hurt Him, even on the cross when He forgave and prayed for His executioners, “Father, forgive them for they do not know what they are doing.”(Lk 23:34)
Inner peace is impossible when we are holding on to our resentments and hurt feelings towards those who have hurt us and caused us pain. We put conditions on our forgiveness without knowing that we are only prolonging our inner turmoil by doing so. Let us forgive them unconditionally for our own sake so that we can have the peace that Christ won for us by His death and resurrection.
My dear brothers and sisters in Chris, without inner peace we cannot see the amazing things that the risen Christ is doing in our lives and in the world today and we cannot cooperate in these things. When we allow external factors to completely obliterate our inner peace, we become part of the problem because we become agents of chaos in our world. But when the peace of Christ reigns within us, we collaborate with Him in doing amazing things in our world.
St. Peter shows us an example of inner peace in action, “They even carried the sick out into the streets and laid them on cots and mats so that when Peter came by, at least his shadow might fall one or another of them. A large number of people from the towns in the vicinity of Jerusalem also gathered, bringing the sick and those disturbed by unclean spirits, and they were all cured.”(Acts 5:15-16)
Who is the instrument of the risen Christ in all these healings? St. Peter. A man who slept when Jesus was in agony in Gethsemane. A man who denied Jesus before a little maid during the Passion of Christ. A man who could not wait to go back to his fishing activities after the resurrection. But he is also a man who received forgiveness for all his sins and who forgave himself. This is how he became an instrument of the risen Christ in healing all persons.
The risen Christ comes to each of us all the time no matter what we are going through. He shows us His wounds that have won for us an interior peace, forgiveness, and renewed faith that we do not deserve in any way, “Peace be with you.” Let Him forgive us for all our sins all the time and then let us forgive ourselves and others too so that we can partake in the very peace of the risen Christ.
Happy Easter!
Glory to Jesus!!! Honor to Mary!
The readings at Mass for Divine Mercy Sunday (C) are: Acts 5:12-16 | Psalms 118:2-4, 13-15, 22-24 | Revelation 1:9-11, 12-13, 17-19 | John 20:19-31.
Image credit: “The Incredulity of Saint Thomas” (detail) | Caravaggio, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Please help spread the Gospel. Share Father’s post with family and friends on Facebook and other social media.
About the author:
Fr. Nnamdi Moneme, OMV, is a Roman Catholic priest and religious of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary currently serving in the Philippines. He teaches theology and is a seminary formator for candidates to the priesthood and religious life. Father also gives Ignatian retreats and serves as spiritual director to many of the lay, religious, and clergy in the area.
He earned his first degree in Physics from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Nigeria. Ordained in 2009, he studied at St. John’s seminary, in Brighton, Massachusetts. Father has an STL/MA in Moral Theology from the University of Santo Tomas in Manila, Philippines.
Father Moneme blogs at https://toquenchhisthirst.wordpress.com/.
We are grateful for your support of Integrated Catholic Life…
We welcome both one-time and monthly donations. A monthly subscriber giving just $10 a month will help cover the cost of operating Integrated Catholic Life for one day! Please help us bring enriching and inspiring Catholic content to readers around the world by giving today. Thank you and may God Bless you for supporting the work of Integrated Catholic Life!