Collect Series
“Peace be with you… Receive
the Holy Spirit.”
The Gospel opens in a locked
room.
The disciples are not gathered
in triumph, but in fear.
The doors are shut. Their hearts are shut. Their hopes feel shattered.
And into that space—without
force, without accusation—Jesus comes.
“Peace be with you.”
Not once, but three times. This is not just a greeting. It is the first
act of mercy.
Jesus does not say: “Where
were you?” “Why did you abandon me?”
Instead, He gives them exactly
what they do not deserve and deeply need:
peace, presence, and restoration.
The Wounds That Speak Mercy
Jesus shows them His hands and
His side.
These wounds are not hidden.
They are not erased by the Resurrection.
They remain—transformed, not
as signs of defeat, but as signs of love that endured.
This is the heart of Divine
Mercy Sunday.
In the revelations to Saint
Faustina Kowalska, Jesus asks that we contemplate the rays flowing from His
heart:
- Red – the blood (life poured out)
- Pale – the water (mercy washing and
healing)
The same reality is present in
this Gospel:
The open side of Christ becomes the source of mercy for the world.
Thomas: The Honest Disciple
Then comes Thomas.
He is
often remembered for his doubt—but perhaps he is simply the most honest.
He
does not settle for second-hand faith. He wants encounter. “Unless I see… unless I touch…”
And
what does Jesus do? He returns. He comes
again—for one person.
This
is Divine Mercy in action:
- Patient
- Personal
- Persistent
Jesus
meets Thomas exactly where he is, not where he “should” be.
“My Lord and My God”
When
Thomas encounters Jesus, everything changes.
Notice:
he never actually touches the wounds.
The
invitation alone is enough.
What
he receives is not proof—it is mercy.
And
his response is the most profound profession of faith in the Gospel:
“My
Lord and my God.”
Divine Mercy Sunday – The Heart of the Gospel
This
Sunday is not an “extra theme.” It is the unfolding of the Resurrection itself.
Mercy
is not something Jesus does after rising—
Mercy is what the Resurrection reveals.
- The locked doors → opened by mercy
- The fearful disciples → restored by mercy
- The doubting Thomas → embraced by mercy
And
now…
You.
Personal Reflection
Where are the “locked doors”
in your life right now?
- A fear you haven’t voiced
- A disappointment that still lingers
- A place where your faith feels uncertain
Jesus does not wait for you to
fix it.
He comes into it.
And He speaks the same words:
“Peace be with you.”
A Prayer for Mercy Sunday
Jesus,
You come into the closed rooms of my life
without judgment, without hesitation.
Show me Your wounds—
not to shame me,
but to remind me how deeply I am loved.
In my doubts, be patient with
me.
In my fears, speak Your peace.
In my weakness, pour out Your mercy.
Like Thomas,
may I come to know You not just in my mind,
but in a living encounter—
and say with my whole heart:
My Lord and my God. Amen.

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