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What Does the Resurrection Change?
WEEK 4 DAY 4 — WHEN DOUBT MET THE RISEN CHRIST
I’m really glad you’ve stayed with this journey today.
Yesterday, we talked about fear losing its authority once death no longer has the final word.
When death is defeated, fear no longer gets to decide our lives.
But that still leaves another struggle many people carry quietly.
Doubt.
Because even courageous people still have questions.
And even people who believe can find themselves unsure.
Thomas wasn’t in the room when Jesus first appeared.
By the time he hears the reports, he’s already heard a lot.
The tomb is empty.
The women say they’ve seen Jesus.
The others are saying the same thing.
And Thomas says what many people still feel.
“Unless I see… I will not believe.”
That’s not defiance.
That’s honesty.
And Jesus responds in a very specific way.
He comes back.
Not for the whole group this time.
Just for Thomas.
John tells us in John chapter twenty that Jesus stands in front of him and says,
“Put your finger here.
See my hands.
Bring your hand and place it in my side.”
Jesus does not say, “You should know better.”
He does not shame Thomas for his hesitation.
And He does not ask for blind trust.
He invites Thomas to investigate what is true.
The scars are still there.
Still visible.
Still speaking.
From the very beginning, Christian faith has been grounded in witness.
Eyewitnesses were named.
Counted.
Many were still alive.
Peter later writes in Second Peter chapter one,
“We were eyewitnesses.”
Jesus understands something crucial about the human heart.
Doubt is not healed by pressure.
It is healed by proximity.
And notice this carefully.
Thomas does not find Jesus.
Jesus finds Thomas.
The turning point is not Thomas getting closer on his own.
The turning point is realizing Jesus is already standing there.
And when Thomas sees clearly, doubt doesn’t linger.
It collapses.
“My Lord and my God.”
What follows is not confusion—but clarity.
Not hesitation—but conviction.
This is where many of us get stuck.
We’re told to “come closer,”
but we don’t know how.
So let’s make it simple—and consistent with Scripture.
You don’t come closer to Jesus by straining for certainty.
You come closer by stopping your retreat.
Here’s your action step today.
When doubt surfaces—and it will—don’t try to solve it first.
Don’t argue with it.
And don’t pull away from God.
Pause.
Acknowledge the doubt honestly.
Then say this out loud, wherever you are:
“Jesus, if You are alive, You are already here.
I stop backing away.
Help me see what is true.”
Then stay still for one full minute.
No explaining.
No fixing.
No distancing.
Just remain present.
Because Jesus doesn’t remove doubt from a distance.
He removes it by coming near.
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