Luke 24:13-35 · On the Road to Emmaus
The Gifts of Word and Table
Luke 24:13-35
Sermon
by Mike Ripski
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Turn in The Hymnal to the very front – where the pattern for worship is located. Note the title given to the way we Christians worship together. Our worship is a Service of Word and Table.

This morning’s text illustrates how the risen Christ meets us through Scripture and Sacrament.

PART I
(Luke 24:13-28 is read.)

It is Easter evening. Two who’d been part of the Jesus Movement were heading home to Emmaus, about 7 miles outside Jerusalem. They are trying to make sense of Jesus’ suffering and crucifixion. Their disappointment and grief were mixed with the preposterous claim by some of the women that, while they’d found the tomb empty, angels had told them that Jesus was alive.

As they walked and discussed how to make sense of the nonsensical, they were joined by the risen Jesus. “Their eyes were kept from recognizing him.” He asks them what they are talking about.

One of the two, Cleopas replies: “Are you the only one who doesn’t know about Jesus of Nazareth and what he said and did, and how he suffered and was crucified? We believed that he was the one to liberate Israel.” Was he taking out his emotions on this stranger, who not only has the audacity to invade their privacy and interrupt their conversation, but who seemed not to have a clue what they were going through?

Of course, we know that the One who has joined them is precisely the One whose plight has so disturbed them, and whose response must have disturbed them as well: “Oh, how foolish you are, and how slow of heart to believe all the prophets have declared!” They must have been startled by this ignorant Stranger’s judgment of them. He launches into a Bible study.

He interprets the stories of their faith from a new perspective. That new perspective sees God’s liberating, redeeming, restoring, re-creating, saving work in Moses and continuing through the prophets down to himself. He traces God’s Dream for Creation expanding to include the whole world: Gentiles and Samaritans and prodigal sons and daughters, the poor, the disabled, the diseased, the least, the last, and the lost, and even enemies.

In his interpretation of the Scriptures, Jesus makes possible their coming to see that the way they had been viewing them kept them from seeing him and what God was doing through him – and what God wanted to do through them.

Jesus asks them, “Was it not necessary that the Messiah should suffer these things and then enter into his glory?” They interpreted Jesus’ suffering and crucifixion as failure, as misplaced trust, as cynicism. “What fools we were to get our hopes up! Everyone knows you can’t fight City Hall. We thought he was the one to get Rome’s heel off our neck and restore Israel to its prominence back in the day of King David.”

Their eyes were kept from recognizing him. Because our expectations, assumptions, and beliefs about how life works allows us to see only what is consistent with those expectations, assumptions, and beliefs. They filter out all that contradicts them.

The reason why our worship of God includes our listening to Scripture is that the Living Word of God has the power to expose, judge, and shatter those expectations, assumptions, and beliefs that we bring to it for confirmation and reinforcement. We worship God when we yield to a Word that exposes our biases, prejudices, half-truths, and lies for what they are.

Has a sermon or Bible study ever made you aware of the blinders and distorting lenses that we wear but don’t know we do? You see what you’ve never seen before. A light comes on and shows you what you recognize as truth. You experience the difference between information and transformation. You know judgment that you are grateful for. You find yourself saying, “I was wrong.” And it feels good to be able to say it, because it is freeing.

And, while you come to see at a particular point in time and in a particular place, in retrospect you can see God’s involvement with you long before you became aware of it. Just as the Risen Jesus walked and talked with Cleopas and friend long before they became aware of it. “Were not our hearts burning within us while he was talking to us on the road, while he was opening the scriptures to us?” The embers of what our Wesleyan heritage calls “Prevenient Grace” are burning within us, but we have little consciousness of them until the wind of the Spirit blows and turns their smoldering into fire that consumes what is unholy with us.

PART II
(Luke 24:29-35 is read.)

Jesus’ Bible study burned their hearts but didn’t open their eyes to recognize him. It prepared them for an experience that would. Which is why our pattern of Christian worship includes both Word and Table.

As they neared their home at Emmaus, the Stranger appeared to be continuing on. They bid him to stay with them. It was evening. It was supper time. They offered him what they had: hospitality and bread.

At this Table there is enough grace for everyone. Divine Love isn’t limited. When a second child enters a family, love isn’t divided so the family members now only receive a fourth rather than a third. Divine Love doesn’t divide, it multiples. It’s like the miracle of Jesus’ feeding the thousands with a few loaves and fishes.

Isn’t it odd how the Stranger-Guest becomes the Host. The Stranger becomes the head of the family. He does what the head of the family did, when the family gathered to break bread together.

He took the bread; he blessed, gave thanks for the bread; he broke the bread; and he gave the bread to them. It’s the 4-fold movement that recognizes that food and fellowship are sacred gifts. That eating together is a glimpse of heaven, of God’s Dream realized. Miracles take place as walls come down, as relationships are reconciled, as strangers become friends, as lives are woven together into a fabric of community.

Our eating here at this Table is the model for our eating at every table. Jesus is present at our Wednesday night suppers and potluck dinners just as he is present here. It’s why we need to be on the lookout for any who are eating alone. Evangelism has been depicted as one beggar telling another beggar where to find bread. It is bread that feeds both the body and the spirit.

It was when Jesus broke the bread and gave it to them that their eyes were opened and they recognized him. I can’t explain how it happened. The testimony is that it did. And if their blinders and distorting lenses can be removed in the breaking of bread together, so may ours. It is why our worship entails our acceptance of the invitation to the Table where we experience what is possible when we receive and give, give and receive.

When they recognized him, he vanished from their sight. Jesus is always the Stranger, whom we are getting to know through the Word and at the Table. Jesus won’t let us turn him into an idol. Into a household god that we possess and control.

No, he is always more than we know. Always leading us where we haven’t been. Always inviting us to be convicted, converted, and consecrated over and over again until our love is pure like his – because we are enjoying being who our baptism declares we are: the beloved daughters and sons of God.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Mike Ripski