  
   Poor Thomas! He made one remark and has been branded as “Doubting 
Thomas” ever since. But if he doubted, he also believed. He made what is
 certainly the most explicit statement of faith in the New Testament: 
“My Lord and My God!” (see John 20:24-28) and, in so expressing his 
faith, gave Christians a prayer that will be said till the end of time. 
He also occasioned a compliment from Jesus to all later Christians: 
“Have you come to believe because you have seen me? Blessed are those 
who have not seen and have believed” (John 20:29). 
 
Thomas should be equally well known for his courage. Perhaps what
 he said was impetuous—since he ran, like the rest, at the showdown—but 
he can scarcely have been insincere when he expressed his willingness to
 die with Jesus. The occasion was when Jesus proposed to go to Bethany 
after Lazarus had died. Since Bethany was near Jerusalem, this meant 
walking into the very midst of his enemies and to almost certain death. 
Realizing this, Thomas said to the other apostles, “Let us also go to 
die with him” (John 11:16b). 
   Comment:  Thomas shares the lot of Peter the impetuous, James 
and John, the “sons of thunder,” Philip and his foolish request to see 
the Father—indeed all the apostles in their weakness and lack of 
understanding. We must not exaggerate these facts, however, for Christ 
did not pick worthless men. But their human weakness again points up the
 fact that holiness is a gift of God, not a human creation; it is given 
to ordinary men and women with weaknesses; it is God who gradually 
transforms the weaknesses into the image of Christ, the courageous, 
trusting and loving one. 
            Quote:  “...[P]rompted by the Holy Spirit, the Church 
must walk the same road which Christ walked: a road of poverty and 
obedience, of service and self-sacrifice to the death.... For thus did 
all the apostles walk in hope. On behalf of Christ's Body, which is the 
Church, they supplied what was wanting in the sufferings of Christ by 
their own trials and sufferings (see Colossians 1:24)” (Vatican II, Decree on the Church’s Missionary Activity, 5). | 
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