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Second Sunday of Easter, 2026

What follows is a worship service which, I pray, you can participate in at a time(s) that are convenient to you. This 'service' will take about forty five (45) minutes.

I pray that you will feel called to ACTIVELY PARTICIPATE in this service.

The text that is in regular typeface (that is what you are reading at the moment) is to be read quietly, while the text that is in
bold face (like you are reading right now) is meant to be read aloud.

Opening Hymn:

Let us continue by watching, and please do feel free to sing or read aloud the lyrics, as we commence our praise and thanksgiving.

When you are ready - click the "play" button on the video window, below:

A Call To Worship:

We meet in the name of God,

Creator of the universe,

source of true humanity,

mother and father of all. Amen.

An Assurance of Forgiveness:

(click the 'play' button below to listen)

The Absolution
00:00 / 00:18

The Sentence For Today (let us say aloud):

Protect me, O God, for I take refuge in you.

The Special Prayer For Today (let us pray aloud):

Almighty and everlasting God, who in the Easter mystery established the new covenant of reconciliation: Grant that all who have been reborn into the fellowship of Christ's Body may show forth in their lives what they profess by their faith; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Our first reading for today:

(click the 'play' button below to listen)

Acts 2:14a,22-32
00:00 / 02:28

Our second reading for today:

(click the 'play' button below to listen)

1 Peter 1:3-9
00:00 / 01:25

Gradual Hymn:

Let us continue by watching, and please do feel free to sing or read aloud the lyrics, as we raise out voices in praise and thanksgiving.

When you are ready - click the "play" button on the video window, below:

A reading from the holy gospel according to Saint John.

John 20:19-31
00:00 / 02:25

Listen to David speak to this gospel

Hope Returns !
00:00 / 13:54

or, if you prefer, you can read the sermon, below:

Sermon for Easter 2, 12th Apr 2026

Welcome sisters and brothers and peace be with you. MAY the words on my lips and the meditations in our hearts be acceptable in your sight O Lord, our strength and our Redeemer. <Amen>

It was a quiet evening in a small apartment. A young woman sat alone, her phone lighting up her face in the dim room. She had just lost her job, her savings were running low, and the messages she scrolled through only seemed to deepen her anxiety - world news of conflict, division, bluster, bullying, uncertainty. Earlier that day, she had texted a friend: “I don’t know what to believe anymore… about the future, about hope, even about God.”

Later that night, there was a knock on her door. She hesitated - no one was expected. Slowly, she opened it. Standing there was her neighbour, someone she barely knew, holding a warm meal and saying simply, “I thought you might need this. Remember, you’re not alone.” <PAUSE>

That moment didn’t solve everything. The young woman’s problems, the world situation, didn’t disappear. However, something shifted. In the middle of fear, doubt and an uncertain - - - a presence broke through. Hope stood at the door. <PAUSE>

That is where we find the disciples in today’s Gospel, John 20:19–31.

It is evening. The doors are locked. Fear fills the room. These are not bold, confident followers of Christ. These are frightened people, hiding, unsure what comes next. The one they trusted has been crucified. The future they imagined has collapsed.

Into that locked, fearful space, Jesus comes.

He doesn’t wait for them to figure things out. He doesn’t wait for their faith to be strong. He simply appears and says, “Peace be with you.”

This is the first gift to us from the risen Christ: peace in the midst of fear.

Notice what Jesus does not say. He does not rebuke them for hiding. He does not say, “Why did you abandon me?” Instead, he brings peace. A peace, in a world ancient or modern, that is NOT the absence of trouble, BUT the presence of Christ himself.

How often do we live behind “locked doors”? Those doors of anxiety, fear, disappointment, or global uncertainty? Like those disciples, we try to protect ourselves. We can close off, we can withdraw, we can doubt.

Yet, the risen Jesus still comes. NOT because we are strong, BUT because He is faithful, reliable, trustworthy. <PAUSE>
Then Jesus shows them his hands and his side. The wounds are still there. Resurrection has not erased the scars.

This is the second gift to us from the risen Christ : hope that includes our wounds.

We often think that faith means everything becomes perfect, but do you notice how the risen Christ still bears scars. That means our pain, our struggles, even our failures - none of these are wasted. In Christ, they are transformed.

Your wounds do not disqualify you from faith. They may, in fact, become the very place where you encounter God most deeply. <PAUSE>

Then Jesus breathes on them and says, “Receive the Holy Spirit.”

This echoes the very breath of God in creation. It is new life. New beginning. These fearful disciples are being remade.

And then comes the mission: “As the Father has sent me, so I send you.”

This is the third gift to us from the risen Christ : a purpose that goes beyond our worries and fears.

Even in their uncertainty, even before they fully understand, they are sent. Faith is not about having everything figured out. It is about being willing to step forward, trusting that Christ goes with us. <PAUSE>

Ah ha - - - then we meet Thomas!

Thomas was not there that first evening. When the others tell him, “We have seen the Lord,” he cannot believe it. He says, “Unless I see… unless I touch… I will not believe.”

Thomas often gets labeled as “doubting Thomas,” but I have always felt that this is too simple, too harsh. Thomas is honest. He voices what many feel but are afraid to say.

And here is the good news: Jesus meets Thomas in his doubt.

A week later, Jesus comes again. The doors are still closed. The disciples are still gathered. This time, Christ speaks directly to Thomas: “Put your finger here… see my hands.”

Jesus does not reject Thomas. He invites him.

Doubt is not the opposite of faith. Sometimes, doubt is the doorway to deeper faith - - - if we bring it honestly to Christ.

Thomas responds with one of the most profound declarations in all of Scripture: “My Lord and my God!”

From doubt to faith - not because Thomas figured it out on his own, but because Jesus met him where he was.

And then Jesus speaks words that reach to us across the centuries, “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.”

Yes, my sisters and brothers, that is us.

We have not seen the risen Christ with our eyes. We have not touched his wounds. Yet, we are invited to believe - not blindly, but trustingly.

We see Christ in moments of unexpected kindness, like that neighbour at the door.

We see Christ in the courage to keep going when life is hard.

We see Christ in the quiet assurance that we are not alone.

The Gospel ends by saying these things are written “so that you may come to believe … and that through believing you may have life in his name.”

Not just existence. Not just survival. Life, LIFE - a full, meaningful, hope-filled life.

So where does this leave us today?

Maybe you feel like the disciples - afraid, uncertain, locked behind closed doors.
Maybe you feel like Thomas - questioning, needing proof, struggling to believe.
Or maybe you are somewhere in between.

Wherever you are, the message is the same in the midst of a troubled world:

Christ comes to you.

He speaks peace and hope into your fear.

He meets you, with peace and hope, in your doubt.

He breathes new life, new peace, new hope into your spirit.

AND he sends you out, filled with peace and hope, with purpose. <PAUSE>

The doors may still be locked. The questions may not all be answered. BUT Christ IS present.

And sometimes, that presence looks like a simple knock on the door … a reminder that you are not alone. <PAUSE>

Shalom Shalom. lsalam ealaykum. Peace be with you.

I runga e te Ingoa o te Atua, te Matua, te Tama me te Wairua Tapu. <AMINE>

Pause and Reflect

Just take a moment now to pause. Bow your head, close your eyes.
 

Allow these words of Holy Scripture and this interpretation of them today to speak to you.

An Affirmation of Our Faith

Let us affirm our faith by saying aloud, and together, "The Apostles Creed":

apostles_creed_pic02.jpg
Image by Allef Vinicius

... and now let us pray for the Church, the World, and Ourselves, giving thanks for God's sacrifice and goodness.

​Let us pray aloud, and together:

Mighty God, what an amazing gift we have received!  We have been born again through the resurrection and even though we have not seen the Risen Christ we love and believe in him, rejoicing with all Christians in an indescribable and glorious joy.
 
<longer silence for personal reflection>
 
Gracious God, like Thomas we will still face times of doubt and uncertainty but we know that we are not alone in our doubts and that you, our Father in heaven, continue to love us whatever our state of mind or body.  We give you thanks for the fellow Christians that surround and support us in our own faith communities.

<short silence> Lord, in your Mercy: Hear our Prayer
   
Creator God, we pray for peace in our troubled world.  Wherever nations are at war, especially in Ukraine and Iran, and people are suffering, we pray for true reconciliation.  Protect all people in the nations of the world, and help them and their leaders to influence their country and the world for the peace and good of all.

<short silence> Lord, in your Mercy: Hear our Prayer

Father God, we pray for the times when our doubts, our fears and our blinkered vision prevents us from taking care of our immediate family and household or when through our busy-ness, we take no part in the life of our neighbourhood or wider community. Uplift us by the sacrifice of Christ and remind us all that we are servants of others.
 
<short silence> Lord, in your Mercy: Hear our Prayer
 
Faithful God, we hold before you, those whom life has damaged and all who find it difficult to trust in You.  We pray that You will push aside their doubts and fears and bring them hope, comfort, and healing and with it an inner peace.

Give the song of joy to all who are now on the road to recovery and recuperation and the song of thanks to all who helped them on that road.

We especially raise before You now all those who have asked for our prayers from around the world … those we know in New Zealand, in Singapore, in Argentina, in France, in Australia, in the US, in Canada, in Austria, in Ukraine, in China, in Germany, in the Czech Republic, and any others we now name aloud, or in the silence of our hearts, and those who are known only by You.

<short silence> Lord, in your Mercy: Hear our Prayer

Merciful God  we pray for those who approach death with great fear and those who have died unprepared to meet You. Have mercy on them, forgive them all that is past and gather them into Your everlasting kingdom of peace and joy.

We especially raise before you at this time our recently departed sisters and brothers, Peggy (England), Grace (Nigeria), Margarita (Spain), Teresa (USA), Oliver (Canada), Emilio (Ecuador), Joshua (Kenya), Mark and Bryan (UK), Alexander (USA).

We pray for all the faithful departed, may they now rest in eternal peace as they most surely have risen in glory.

<Short silence> Lord, in your Mercy: Hear our Prayer

In a moment of silence we pray for ourselves, our families, friends, for all whom we love and for our personal ministries.

Make us worthy of the sacrifice and resurrection of Your Son.

(Short Silence) Lord, in Your mercy: hear our prayer

Everlasting God we thank You that our time of prayer renews our faith and trust in You and Your risen son Jesus Christ.  Send us out into the coming week ready to show our gratitude and live the Good News of Easter.

(Short Silence) Lord, in Your mercy: hear our prayer

Forth in the peace of Christ we go; Christ to the world with joy we bring; Christ in our minds, Christ on our lips, Christ in our hearts, the world’s true King.

Merciful father: accept these prayers for the sake of Your Son, our Saviour, Jesus Christ.  AMEN.

lord's_prayer_pic01_edited.jpg

Remembering that we are confident to pray this day, and every day, because Jesus Christ continues to teach us:
 

Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come,

your will be done,
on earth as in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
Forgive us our sins
as we forgive those who sin against us.
Save us from the time of trial
and deliver us from evil.

For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours
now and for ever.   Amen.

Let us conclude our prayers by praying together and aloud:

 

God of mercy,
you have given us grace to pray with one heart and one voice,
and have promised to hear the prayers
of two or three who agree in your name,
fulfil now, we pray,
the prayers and longings of your people
as may be best for us and for your kingdom.
Grant us in this world to know your truth,
and in the world to come to see your glory. Amen.

The Blessing

May The Risen Lord Christ turn His face towards each and every one of you.

May He cause His light to shine upon you, and

may He grant you His peace, and

 

The blessing of Almighty God who is Father, Son and Holy Spirit,

be with you and all of those whom you love,

on this day and forever more.

A Closing Hymn:

Let us conclude our worship today by watching, and please do feel free to sing or read aloud the lyrics, as we unite in another hymn our praise and thanksgiving.

When you are ready - click the "play" button on the video window, below:

The Dismissal

Go now, go out into the world

to love and serve The Lord.

 

Go in peace.

AMEN, we go in the name of Christ.

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