Luke 24:13-35 · On the Road to Emmaus
Jesus Is Made Known in the Breaking of the Bread
Luke 24:13-35
Sermon
by Steven Burt
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Luke’s narrative here is one of those narratives that we can easily picture. It was late afternoon on the very first Easter day, and two disciples -- apparently not of the original twelve -- but nevertheless, two disciples, were walking along the dry dusty road from Jerusalem to Emmaus. They were pretty down-in-the-mouth for they had just lost their messiah, Jesus of Nazareth, the one they had thought would be the Savior of Israel. So they were walking along this dusty country road, and there was no air moving at all. The flies were buzzing around and they could hear the stillness -- no sounds of cars or even a distant airplane overhead. The road ahead, particularly far off a half-mile ahead, seemed to be shimmering and watery as the heat rose from it. It was hot, and they couldn’t wait for the sun to go down. So they passed the time by yakking back and forth, maybe trying to straighten out their heads, trying to make sense of their grief and disillusionment.

Their leader, their Messiah, their teacher and mentor, had allowed himself to be crucified. Even when Peter had raised a sword in the Garden at Gethsemane -- the night Jesus was betrayed and the mob came to take him away -- even then he had made Peter put the sword away. He had allowed himself to be taken. He had allowed himself to be crucified unjustly. It just didn’t make sense to these two on the road.

About that time, as they were looking off at the heat pools shimmering on the road ahead, someone, Jesus, drew up from a side road and walked with them toward Emmaus. They didn’t recognize him. Not even when he pointed out that in the Old Testament, in Scripture, the prophets foretold that an essential part of the Messiah’s task was to suffer before entering his glory, as part of his enthronement and his mission. This traveler on the road to Emmaus pointed out to the two disciples how all the Scriptures (from Moses on) bore this out.

And when they neared the village, Jesus acted as if he were going further, but they held him back, saying, “Stay with us; the day is almost over; it’s nearly dark.” So he went into the house to stay with them.

Considering the nearness to suppertime, it’s not surprising that they sat down to table, or that Jesus took the bread, blessed it, broke it, and gave it to them.

And then it happened -- their eyes were opened and they saw clearly -- their eyes were opened as surely as they were for the blind man whom Jesus had healed by the Pool at Bethsaida. It was as if the scales fell off their eyes and they could see clearly again through their grief and confusion. Their eyes were opened and they clearly recognized him!

And he disappeared…

And they arose right then and rushed back and told the eleven apostles -- the twelve minus Judas who had hanged himself -- they rushed back and told them what had happened on the road -- and how Jesus had made himself known in the sharing of the bread.

For me, that last line sums it up: “He made himself known in the sharing of the bread.” I think that Jesus is made known to us in many ways; but I think that seeing the reality of Christ in our lives happens frequently through sharing meals together. In the most basic way we feel God’s presence in certain events, particularly in meals.

I saw a picture recently in my hometown weekly newspaper. lt was a closeup of the smiling, wrinkled face of a 105-year-old lady. She was blowing out birthday candles on a cake. All around her, almost forming a halo of faces, like the communion of saints, I suppose, were the United Methodist Women from my home church. They were the ones who gave the party and the cake for this beloved old member of the church and the women’s group. I’m sure Christ was present there in the sharing of the bread (or cake, in this case). It happens all the time.

In the early church there were two kinds of Communion meals that have worked their way together into our current ritual. There was the Passover meal, a ritual meal celebrating the deliverance from Egypt by way of the Red Sea. It was celebrated with a sprig of parsley, some matzoh, and a bit of salt water. it wasn’t very filling for a hungry person, but it carried a great deal of meaning because of the repeated ritual and litany. The emphasis wasn’t on eating, but on remembering and being thankful.

Then there was the love feast, a real evening meal. It was more like a church supper, with a sharing of what one had. It could actually fill you up if you were physically hungry, and there was a provision that the poor be fed, too. So in a way, it was both a church supper and a soup kitchen. The emphasis wasn’t so much on remembering, but was more on fellowship, common sharing, and giving thanks.

Eventually the two meals converged in the church, and we developed this Communion meal called the Eucharist, which means “thanksgiving.” Giving thanks and sharing at least a little bit of food seemed to be the common point of the two meals, and the importance of ritual from the Passover meal or Seder was emphasized. But rather than use the Passover elements -- the salt water, the parsley sprig, and the matzoh -- Christians used what Jesus had used in the Last Supper in the Upper Room -- simple commonly-found elements of bread and wine.

Even today in the church universal, as we celebrate the Eucharist, we find variations in emphasis from denomination to denomination and from local church to local church. Some churches, like the Roman Catholic and the Episcopal, lean more toward the importance of ritual. Others, including numerous Methodist churches, lean more toward fellowship and a shared experience, with small groups of people gathering together at the rail to take Communion by breaking the bread together.

I suspect that church suppers -- both evening fellowship meals and evening paid suppers -- are the result, not only of financial needs, but of deep-felt needs to experience the presence of Christ in a way more like the early love feasts.

It may be that there isn’t as much meaning in the more ritualized communion meal for many folks. I don’t think it’s accidental that many neighborhood or home Bible studies have coffee and a snack. Even here on Sunday morning, our Bible studies follow our coffee and fellowship time.

“Jesus is made known in the sharing of the bread.”

But there’s another part besides the meal in today’s scripture lesson. These two disciples on the road to Emmaus don’t just eat a meal with a stranger. They also spend time with him on the road, breaking not only bread together, but breaking open the Scriptures, the Word of God, together. They talk about God and about the death of the Messiah. Along with Jesus, they explore what the Scriptures say about the crucifixion event and everything that led up to it. They begin to see something getting clearer.

Maybe the best comparison is to the man whose blindness is healed in two stages. After the first part of his healing, when asked what he can see, he says, “I see people, and they look like trees walking. Things are kind of fuzzy and indistinct -- but they’re coming.” Then, after the second stage of his healing, he can see perfectly fine. These two disciples on the Emmaus road begin to see in a sort of fuzzy way as Jesus talks with them and helps them search the Scriptures to determine what the death on the Cross means and what it means in their lives. That’s the first step.

Sharing an intimate fellowship meal, sensing and accomplishing one’s mission by taking in a person needing a meal, acting hospitably -- that was the second step. That’s when they were healed of their spiritual blindness and of the blinding confusion and grief that was immoblizing them. So the Bible study and the discussion on the road were important, too. But even then, their blindness wasn’t healed. It took the whole package for the healing. It took both steps, both stages for clear vision. The study, the expounding of the Word of God, the interchange of ideas and the expressing of doubts -- that was all combined with the fellowship and a sense of mission over a shared meal -- to produce a healing because of the real presence of Christ.

“Jesus was made known to them in the breaking and the sharing of the bread.”

And so it is with us. Now that we have heard the words of Holy Scripture, and we have heard them worked around and wrestled with, let us wrestle with them and stretch ourselves, that we might experience the first step of healing and clear vision. And let us also complete that with a Communion meal, a meal of thanksgiving together at the table of our Lord Jesus Christ. Let our eyes be opened and our hearts rejoice. Let Jesus be known to us in the breaking and sharing of the bread together.

C.S.S. Publishing Company, Fingerprints on the Chalice, by Steven Burt