Afraid Yet Filled with Joy: An Anglican Easter
Matthew 28:1-10 • 1 Corinthians 15:3-8
The via media of Easter — the interplay of doubt and faith, the beauty of the Easter collect, and the Thomas tradition of honest inquiry
Anglican / Episcopal
Scripture, tradition, and reason in balance
The Via Media of Easter: Doubt and Faith Together
The Thomas Tradition: Honest Inquiry Is Not the Enemy of Faith
The Beauty of Easter: When Truth Becomes Beautiful
Applications
- 1Bring your doubts to the risen Christ. Thomas did, and he received the deepest faith of any disciple. Honest inquiry is not the enemy of faith.
- 2Pray the Easter collect slowly this week. Let the beauty of the words carry the truth into your heart.
- 3Sing an Easter hymn every day this week. "Jesus Christ Is Risen Today" or "The Day of Resurrection." Let beauty be an argument.
- 4If someone you love is struggling with doubt, do not lecture them. Walk with them. The risen Christ met Thomas where Thomas was — He will meet them too.
Prayer Suggestions
- Almighty God, who through thine only-begotten Son Jesus Christ hast overcome death and opened unto us the gate of everlasting life: Grant us so to die daily to sin that we may evermore live with Him in the joy of His resurrection.
- For those who come to Easter with more questions than answers — meet them as You met Thomas. Not with rebuke but with presence. Show them Your wounds.
- Let the beauty of Easter — the music, the liturgy, the light — be a vehicle of truth. Where arguments fail, let beauty persuade.
- Alleluia. Christ is risen. The Lord is risen indeed. Alleluia. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Chariots of Fire (1981)
Eric Liddell says in Chariots of Fire: "God made me fast. And when I run, I feel His pleasure." Liddell's faith was not separate from his embodied experience — it was confirmed by it. Thomas needed to touch the wounds. Liddell needed to feel the pleasure. The Anglican tradition trusts that faith comes through the full range of human experience — intellectual, physical, aesthetic. The resurrection is true, and you are allowed to need to see it, touch it, and feel it before you believe it. That is not weakness. That is Thomas's tradition.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
The resurrection does not depend on the strength of our faith. Our faith depends on the reality of the resurrection. Begin with what God has done.
If you are here with more questions than answers, you are in the tradition of Thomas — and Thomas's doubt became the deepest confession of faith in the Gospels.
Thomas said "I need to see." Jesus said "Come and see." The Church said "Doubting Thomas." Maybe we should have said "Honest Thomas."
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
How does the Anglican tradition approach Easter doubt?
The Anglican via media holds space for doubt as part of the faith journey. Thomas's honest inquiry — "Unless I see, I will not believe" — is honored as a legitimate path to deeper faith. Jesus did not rebuke Thomas; He met him with embodied evidence. The Anglican tradition trusts that honest questions, brought to the risen Christ, lead to authentic faith.
Why does beauty matter in Anglican Easter worship?
The Anglican tradition trusts beauty as a vehicle of truth. The Easter hymns, the Easter collect, the liturgy — all are forms of theological argument. The sheer creative output inspired by the resurrection (music, art, architecture, poetry) is itself evidence that something extraordinary happened. Beauty persuades where arguments sometimes fail.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the easter / resurrection sunday sermon.