Second Sunday of Easter
April 27th, Year
of Our + Lord 2025
Our Redeemer and Our Savior’s Lutheran Churches
Custer and Hill City, South Dakota
Breathe - John 20:19-31
Sermon Audio available HERE.
Breathe. A breath out, then a breath in. This is where it begins, and where it always must return. Just breathe.
When God created the man and the woman in His image and likeness, life began with a breath. God formed the dusty clay into the shape of the man, the “adam.” Then the Lord God breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and Adam became a living being. Sculpture, mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, anesthesia and surgery can all find their roots in the creation of the man and the woman.
The Genesis chapter two detail of how God made Adam and Eve is remarkably personal, intimate. Enough to make a German heritage Eastern Montana boy pretty uncomfortable.
But this is the God we have, the God who loves humanity, who wants to live in close communion with us, despite how we are.After God put Adam into a deep sleep and took his rib to form for him a suitable partner, Genesis doesn’t say that God breathed life into the woman. But there is no human life without breath, so it’s not unreasonable to think that Eve also received the divine respiration. A breath out, from God, a breath in, by a human: that’s the start. Then a breath out, and a breath in, again and again, and forever and ever. That was the plan.
Our first parents ruined the simplest path to the perfection of God’s eternal plan. But in the Upper Room on the evening of the Resurrection, we discover that God still has the same plan, the same idea about sharing His eternal breath, a plan now perfected and shared by Jesus.
Breathing isn’t something we usually pay attention to. This absolutely necessary process is usually unthinking, automatic: breath in, breath out, totally routine. Routine, until it’s not. If an emergency or a desire for athletic accomplishment causes you to run to your max, your breath quickly becomes all you can think about. When stress winds you tighter and tighter, threatening to overwhelm you, your friends encourage you to calm your nerves, by taking some deep breaths. Breathing exercises abound that promise to help you fall asleep, or allow you to clear your mind.
And occasionally we experience the truth
that without breath, there is no life.
My father almost died as a teenager, rescuing a younger kid who was
drowning in a stock reservoir. The
closest I’ve come to suffocating was when a bully held me underwater in the
city pool in Forsyth, Montana. How about
you? Maybe you’ve helped fight a
wildfire, and found yourself suddenly surrounded by smoke and flames, gasping
for air. The original version of
COVID-19 took many souls through terrifying fights for breath, fights which too
many lost. The list of diseases that rob
us of our respiration is too long to recount.
And then there is the respiration-stopping power of sin. Guilt for sin and the damage it causes can sit on your chest like an anvil. Fear of the consequences, fear of exposure, can leave you gasping. Spiritual suffocation is not the same thing as physical, but it’s also not entirely different. The same Lord God who made our physical bodies also created our souls, and the brokenness of sin affects them both.
Just one bit of evidence to make the case: Speaking happens when we pass air over our voice box, and shape the escaping breath with our mouth. There is no speaking without breathing. And what is the hardest thing to do when you have done something wrong, something cruel, something sinful? Often, the hardest thing for any person who still has some trace of conscience left is to admit out loud what you have done. To speak out loud the truth about our sin, to confess our specific guilt, is so painful. We don’t want to breathe a word of what we have done. And so we see the physical and the spiritual intertwine.
How stale and stuffy was the air in the Upper Room, as the disciples hid, fearing God and man? They had just endured the worst three days ever. Seventy-two hours earlier, Jesus had hosted that strange Passover meal. Their feet washed by their Master. Long discourses about the Father and the Spirit, and suffering, and mansions in the sky. The mysterious will of God that is fulfilled in suffering. And of course, the transformation of the Passover meal itself. This bread is my Body, said Jesus, given for you. Eat it. This cup is the New Testament in My blood, shed for you for the forgiveness of sins. Take it, and drink.
Then to the Garden, the agonizing prayers, and the arrest. Was this the moment, the moment for us to join Jesus in fighting against evil? “No, put away your swords.” Our hero Jesus was submitting to evil. That was too much. We ran, we all ran, until our breath left us.
Friday. Sham trials. And our shame, as we could not muster the courage to speak up for Jesus. They crucified Him! We watched Him die. We even fell short of the task of caring for His body. A Council Elder and a Pharisee, they buried Jesus. We, His chosen disciples, we hid.
Now, after the darkest, longest Sabbath ever, we hear reports. The women say He is not in the tomb, even that He is alive. Peter and John run to the tomb. Peter later says he has seen the Lord; but can we trust that Peter isn’t hallucinating? What is going on? What will the Council do next? Will they come for us?
And so the Eleven are in the Upper Room, hiding, still mourning, the door barred from the inside for fear of the Jews. For fear of ending up on a cross, like Jesus. No one wants to die on a cross. So shameful, so painful. Death on a Roman cross normally comes by suffocation. The execution squad stretches you out and nails you to the wood by your hands and feet. To breathe, you must press up on your feet and stand straight. But that is excruciating. Literally. Eventually, maybe after many hours, even days, your strength gives out. You can no longer stand to breathe, and so…
But not Jesus. Despite all appearances, despite being nailed to a Roman cross, He was in control. From the Cross, Jesus continued to pray, to speak words of grace, to care for His mother, even to make promises to one the thieves crucified next to Him. And then, around three in the afternoon, Jesus gave up His Spirit. He breathed His last, and took on the final enemy, on His terms.
Satan and fallen humanity had done their worst. Even more, the Father’s righteous anger against sinful humanity was, in an invisible mystery, poured out, expiated, totally expended, on Jesus. Then, our last enemy, that moment when human beings stop breathing, then death came. But only when Jesus said so. Jesus’ death was strange, otherworldly; even the Roman execution squad said so.
Nevertheless, the Eleven had seen Jesus with their own eyes, seen Him hanging there, breathless, dead, water and blood flowing mingled down from His pierced side. So yes, there are some strange reports on this first day of the week. But these reports cannot overcome the image burned in their memories. They saw Jesus hanging there, without breath. He was laid in a cold dark tomb. His story is over, and the Eleven fear their stories may soon end the same way.
So the Eleven, well, ten of the Eleven, are hiding, locked in a stuffy, dark room. Did they hear each other breathing? Did Thomas volunteer for whatever errand took him away, just to escape the atmosphere? How long could they survive, breathing that defeated, cursed air?
Into the suffocating fear of that Upper Room came the Risen Jesus. Jesus came, speaking words of Peace. The rebellion started by Adam is over. In Christ Jesus His Son, God the Father is no longer at war with mankind. The risen Jesus came into the room, despite the barred door. He came, speaking peace, and giving new breath. He breathed on His disciples. The same God who breathed life into Adam all those thousands of years before, now breathes new life into these ten sons of Adam, converting them into newborn sons of the Most High, giving them the breath of life that lasts forever, even beyond our last earthly breath.
And what’s the point of that breath? In a word, the point of Jesus’ breathing into the disciples is God’s mission of forgiveness and new life. Once they got over their shock at seeing Him, Jesus repeats His opening line: "Peace be with you.” The war between man and God being over, Jesus commissions them as Apostles, sent to build His Church. “As the Father has sent me,” said Jesus, “even so I am sending you." And when He had said this, He breathed on them and said to them, "Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of anyone, they are forgiven; if you withhold forgiveness from anyone, it is withheld."
Because God is love, because Jesus poured out the love of His Father on the Cross, now God’s creating breath is also His forgiving breath. Martin Luther famously encourages us that, when we wash our faces, we should remember our Baptisms. Good advice. And the same can also be said of our respiration. When you breathe in, and breathe out, remember that, along with the Eleven, you are forgiven. You are restored to peace with God, through the resurrection of Jesus. Breathe in this Good News.
Remember that breathing in the Good News,
the Gospel, involves more than your lungs.
Indeed, while you need to be breathing while you take it in, you don’t
breathe in the Gospel through your lungs, but rather through your ears. The Holy Spirit whom Jesus breathed into His
disciples that Resurrection night has bound Himself to a very concrete reality;
we know where to go to find Him: in His
Word. The Almighty miracle-working God
who revealed Himself to us in Jesus Christ does His best work through human
speech. Words on a page, read out loud
by sinners like you and me, this is the breath of God for you, and for me, and
for the whole world.
We can remember our Baptisms when we wash our faces; we can remember Christ’s forgiveness with every breath we take, but only if we continue filling our ears and our hearts with the Truth of God’s Word.
And then, after we have breathed in deeply, we will have to breathe out. Again, the physical and the spiritual overlap. When we take a deep breath, … we will eventually have to let it out, in order to take in another. So also, as we breathe in God’s living and active word through our ears, as it enlivens the lungs of our soul, we will have to breathe out. Breathe out God’s Word, in prayer and praise. God is your Father, and He loves to have conversations with His children. We see this in the first two words of the prayer Jesus taught us: Our Father… Breathe in, and breathe out, in conversation with your Abba Father. And, the more we breathe in God’s Word, the more we will see the truth of His forgiving love, on every page.
Breathe in conversation with God, and also breathe on each other. Life as a Christian in this sinful world, life as a child of God who still struggles each day with sin, this life is not always as easy and pleasant as a warm spring breeze. So we should really help each other out, by speaking more Words of Truth, Words of Christian encouragement, to one another. Perhaps using psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, and simple truths about Jesus that you learned in Sunday School.
Speak simple truths to each other, like “Jesus loves you, this you know, for the Bible tells you so.” “God is love, and He poured out His love for sinners, on the Cross.” “God’s law is good and right and worth following.” “Jesus is the Way, and the Truth and the Life, no one comes to the Father, except through Him.” “If we confess our sins, God is faithful and just to forgive our sins.” And, of course, “Christ is Risen! He is Risen Indeed, Alleluia!”
As we develop the blessed habit of breathing God’s Word on each other, within the Church, within the Body of Christ, we will also find it easier to let it spread beyond, to exhale the breath of life on other souls for whom Jesus died and rose, souls who have forgotten, or have never known His forgiving breath. God will even from time to time give you a front row seat, to watch His ongoing work of salvation, extending His refreshing breath to more souls, drawing them near, to breath God’s good air, beside you and me.
We see this dynamic with Thomas. We also see that it takes time, and that finally the decisive work belongs to God. The other ten disciples breathed on Thomas, they told him what they had seen. But Thomas had seen Jesus hanging, dead on the Cross. Thomas needed more, more proof, more divine breath. So, like He did for the others Resurrection evening, Jesus did for Thomas, eight days later. “Here Thomas, see my hands, touch my side, it is I. Stop doubting, and believe.”
My Lord and My God. Your Lord and Your God. Blessed are you, says Jesus, for you have not seen, and yet you believe in the resurrected Christ. Blessed are you, for you have peace with God by the forgiveness of all your sins. Blessed are you, because Christ has breathed into you, through the Word that Thomas and the others proclaimed to the ends of the earth.
Breathe in, breathe out, and rejoice, in Jesus’ Name, Amen.