Acts 2:42-7; 1 Pet. 1:3-9; Jn. 20:19-31
There is a powerful scene in Leo Tolstoy’s classic novel War and Peace. Amidst the chaos of battle, young Prince Andrei lies wounded on the battlefield of Austerlitz. Moments earlier, his heart was filled with pride, ambition, and dreams of glory. But now, as he lies helpless on the cold ground, he looks up at the vast blue sky stretching endlessly above him. For the first time in his life, he feels an overwhelming inner stillness. The sky seems so calm, so peaceful, so different from the violence surrounding him. At that moment, Prince Andrei realizes something profound: true peace is not found in power, victory, or control. It is found when the soul becomes small enough to see the greatness of God, and when one’s heart surrenders its fears and illusions. As the world around him raged with gunfire, he discovered a peace that came from beyond the battlefield.
This same peace is what Jesus offered His disciples on the evening of the resurrection. They were not soldiers lying on a battlefield, but their hearts were wounded by fear, guilt, and uncertainty. “It was evening on the day Jesus rose from the dead,” the Gospel tells us, and the disciples had locked the doors of the house because