Divine Mercy Sunday meets us not in our perfection, but in the middle of our unfinished stories. The Gospel opens with locked doors and anxious hearts. Into that fragile space, Jesus comes and says, “Peace be with you” (John 20:19). Jesus does not wait for courage; He brings peace first. And then, strikingly He shows them His wounds. The Risen Christ does not erase the marks of the Cross; He transforms them into sources of Mercy.
Thomas is often labeled “doubting,” but perhaps he is simply honest. He refuses second-hand faith: “Unless I see… I will not believe” (John 20:25). And Jesus does something remarkable, He returns just for him. No rebuke, no disappointment. Only an invitation: “Put your finger here… Do not doubt but believe” (John 20:27). Divine Mercy is God’s refusal to give up on us. He meets us precisely where we struggle to believe.
We know this dynamic in ordinary life. In a family, when trust is broken, the deepest healing does not come from pretending nothing happened, but from a love willing to reopen the wound together to forgive, to rebuild, to begin again. Mercy costs something, but it restores everything.
Then, Jesus breathes His own life into them: “Receive the Holy Spirit. Whose sins you forgive are forgiven” (John 20:22–23). Mercy is not meant to stop with us; it is meant to pass through us to others.
And this is where it becomes intensely Eucharistic. The same Jesus who stood among them now stands among us, His wounds glorified, His mercy alive. In every Eucharist, heaven does not remain distant; heaven becomes touchable. We do not place our fingers into His wounds as Thomas did, but we receive Jesus: Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity.
At this altar, Mercy is not remembered; Mercy is given. So come as you are, not as you think you should be. Bring your doubts, your sins, your hunger. And hear again His first word to you: Peace be with you!
Your Priest,
Father Charles Enyinnia