Peace Behind Locked Doors
Second Sunday of Easter or Sunday of Divine Mercy John 20:19–31 The disciples in today’s Gospel are gathered behind locked doors—afraid, uncertain, and unsure of what comes next. It’s a scene that feels surprisingly familiar. We all have our own “locked rooms” —places in our hearts where fear, disappointment, or doubt keep us closed in. And it’s into that space that Jesus enters. Jesus doesn’t wait for the disciples to calm down or get their act together. Jesus doesn’t wait for perfect faith. He steps right into their fear and speaks the words they most need: “Peace be with you.” Not once, but twice—because sometimes peace needs to be spoken more than once before it sinks in. Then Jesus shows them his wounds. The Risen Christ doesn’t hide the marks of suffering; he transforms them. Jesus' wounds become signs of love, not defeat. And in doing so, Jesus teaches us that our own wounds—our losses, our failures, our fears—can also become places where grace breaks throug...