Dorothy L. Sayers, in her...
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Dorothy L. Sayers, in her radio play, The Man Born to Be King, writes the following about the character of Thomas in this text:
It is unexpected, but extraordinarily convincing, that the one absolutely unequivocal statement, in the whole Gospel, of the Divinity of Jesus should come from Doubting Thomas. It is the only place where the word "God" is used of him without qualifications of any kind, and in the most unambiguous form of words (not merely'theos' but 'ho theos mou' with the definite article). And this must be said, not ecstatically, or with a cry of astonishment, but with flat conviction, as of one acknowledging irrefragable evidence: ''2+2=4,' 'That is the sun in the sky,' 'You are my Lord and my God.'
Dorothy L. Sayers,
The Man Born to Be King, Eerdmnan's, 1979, pp. 314-315
It is unexpected, but extraordinarily convincing, that the one absolutely unequivocal statement, in the whole Gospel, of the Divinity of Jesus should come from Doubting Thomas. It is the only place where the word "God" is used of him without qualifications of any kind, and in the most unambiguous form of words (not merely'theos' but 'ho theos mou' with the definite article). And this must be said, not ecstatically, or with a cry of astonishment, but with flat conviction, as of one acknowledging irrefragable evidence: ''2+2=4,' 'That is the sun in the sky,' 'You are my Lord and my God.'
Dorothy L. Sayers,
The Man Born to Be King, Eerdmnan's, 1979, pp. 314-315
