Thomas in the Bible: From Doubt to "My Lord and My God"
Doubting Thomas is one of history's most misunderstood disciples. His journey from absence at the resurrection to the highest confession in the Gospels reveals a man of passionate, ultimately triumphant faith.
Ключевые стихи
John 20:27-28
"Then He said to Thomas, "Reach your finger here... Do not be faithless, but believing." And Thomas answered and said to Him, "My Lord and my God!"
John 20:29
"Jesus said to him, Thomas, because you have seen Me, you have believed. Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed."
Thomas Before the Resurrection
Thomas appears three times in John before the resurrection — each time showing courageous but gloomy devotion. In John 11:16, when Jesus heads toward danger, Thomas says "Let us also go, that we may die with Him." In John 14:5, he honestly voices the disciples' confusion about where Jesus is going. He is brave, loyal, and honest.
The Absence and the Demand
Thomas was absent when Jesus appeared to the disciples (John 20:24). When told "We have seen the Lord," he demands: "Unless I see the nail marks... I will not believe." This is not cynicism — it is the same standard of evidence the other disciples had already received.
The Encounter and the Confession
Eight days later, Jesus appears again and addresses Thomas directly: "Put your finger here... Do not be faithless, but believing." Thomas' response — "My Lord and my God!" — is the highest Christological confession in all four Gospels. The doubter becomes the confessor.
Applications for Today
Thomas' story invites honest doubt into the presence of Jesus rather than out of faith. If you have doubts, bring them to Jesus — not away from Him. Jesus does not rebuke Thomas for doubting; He meets him where he is. The same Jesus meets us in our honest questions.
Размышление
Like Thomas, what doubts are you carrying that you need to bring honestly into the presence of Jesus?
Редакционная заметка
Character study of Thomas in the Gospel of John, from doubt to the highest Christological confession.