Sunday Sermons
This is a recording from the sermon preached at St. David's Episcopal Church on Sunday, April 12th, on the Second Sunday in Easter. In this sermon, Rev. Daniel Bentley argues for “Justice for Thomas,” challenging the “Doubting Thomas” label and presenting Thomas as an exemplar of faith who insists the risen Jesus’ wounds matter, showing that Easter does not undo Good Friday but glorifies and vindicates it. Rev. Bentley notes Thomas’ confession, “My Lord and my God,” and links Thomas’ discernment to a story attributed to St. Martin of Tours about recognizing a false vision of Christ without wounds. He then addresses doubt as normal and generative for faith, offering a “doubt toolkit” for the congregation: talk with clergy, look to martyrs, and read writers like Rachel Held Evans on faith as risk and continued trust.00:00 Justice for Thomas01:31 Wounds and Resurrection02:40 My Lord and My God03:14 St Martin’s Vision04:42 Why Doubt Matters06:21 Doubt as Companion07:24 A Toolkit for Doubt08:22 Rachel Held Evans on Risk09:53 Jesus Meets Our Doubts00:03 Final Blessing This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com [https://stdavidsepiscopaldc.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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