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The Daily Devotional
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Behind Locked Doors: The Gift of Unstoppable Peace
Reflection
The first Easter evening was not a jubilant, triumphant celebration; it was a scene of profound anxiety. The disciples huddled in a dimly lit room with the doors locked tight. They were terrified of the religious authorities, but they were likely also suffocating under the weight of their own shame. Just days earlier, they had scattered in the garden. They had abandoned their rabbi and their friend when He needed them most. Now, they were locked away, grieving a shattered dream and their own crushing failure.
Imagine a child who has just broken a cherished family heirloom. Anticipating anger and punishment, the child retreats to their bedroom, shuts the door, and locks it. They sit in the dark, heart pounding, listening for footsteps. When the parent finally arrives, they don’t kick the door down in a rage, nor do they stand in the hallway demanding an apology before engaging. Instead, the parent finds the spare key, gently turns the lock, steps into the messy room, and simply sits down on the floor. Before discussing the broken heirloom, the parent pulls the trembling child close and whispers, "It's okay. You are safe. I love you."
This is a glimpse of what the risen Christ does for His disciples. He doesn't wait for them to muster up the courage to unlock the door. He doesn't demand they draft a formal apology for their betrayal and cowardice. He simply steps through the locked doors of their fear, stands in the very center of their mess, and offers the one thing they least deserve and most desperately need: "Peace be with you." In that single, grace-filled greeting, fear begins to give way to peace. He is not a ghost coming to haunt them for their failures; He is a Savior coming to heal them.
But one of them was missing. Thomas wasn't there to hear that first greeting, and when the others shared the impossible news, he met it with fierce, understandable doubt. We often use "Doubting Thomas" as a critique, but his reaction is deeply, understandably human. He had seen the brutality of the cross and knew the finality of a Roman execution. To believe without proof felt like setting himself up for a second heartbreak. He needed to see the wounds. He needed to know the risen Christ was the exact same Jesus who had suffered.
A week later, the doors are locked again. And once again, closed doors cannot keep Christ out. Jesus appears, and He doesn't shame Thomas for his skepticism or scold him for his wounded faith. Instead, Christ meets Thomas exactly where he is, offering His scarred hands and pierced side. In response to this profound, accommodating mercy, Thomas utters the highest confession of faith in the entire Gospel: "My Lord and my God!" Doubt, when met with the gentle presence of Christ, gives way to an unshakable faith.
There is deep comfort in knowing that Jesus does not require our lives to be perfectly orderly, courageous, or free of doubt before He enters. So often, when dealing with grief, being uncertain about the future, or harboring doubts about our faith, our instinct is to lock the door. We shut out our community, retreat from prayer, and build walls of self-protection. We think we need to conquer our fears or resolve our skepticism before we can face God. Yet, the Gospel assures us that Jesus specializes in walking through our barricades.
Where are the locked doors in your life today? Perhaps you are waiting for reassurance after a painful professional failure, or you find yourself retreating from others because the demands of the world simply feel too overwhelming. Maybe, like Thomas, your faith has been wounded by harsh realities, and you are terrified to hope again. The invitation today is not to instantly manufacture a brave face, but to recognize that we cannot lock Christ out of our pain. We are invited to stop trying to heal ourselves in isolation and instead listen for the voice that speaks directly into our anxiety.
The quiet gift of resurrection peace is not the absence of trouble, nor is it the erasure of our past scars. After all, Christ still bore His wounds. True peace is the abiding presence of the Savior who meets us in our darkest, most isolated rooms, breathes His peace upon us, and gently transforms our deepest fears into the confident cry: My Lord and my God.
Prayer
God of mercy and peace, we confess that we so often retreat behind locked doors when the world becomes overwhelming, and our faith is bruised. Thank You that no barrier of fear, no wall of shame, and no fortress of doubt can keep Your love from reaching us. When we are consumed by anxiety and skeptical of hope, gently step into the center of our lives and speak Your word of peace over our troubled hearts. Help us, like Thomas, to encounter Your wounded, resurrected presence, that our honest doubts might be transformed into a joyful, courageous faith. Guide us to carry this quiet, unstoppable peace into a world that is so desperate for Your light. Amen.
Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA
The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
