Luke 24:13-35 · On the Road to Emmaus
The Indwelling Christ And Holy Communion
Luke 24:13-35
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Our scripture lesson for our communion meditation is the 24th chapter of Luke.  Will you follow me as we hear the word of God, beginning with the 13th verse of the 24th chapter?  (Read Luke 24:13-24) Let us pray.

Come Holy Spirit, heavenly dove, with all your quickening powers.  Come shed abroad a savior’s love and that will quicken ours.  Amen.

A few weeks ago, I shared with you a story of a Benedictine monk who is a friend of mine.  Now I want you to know that I do have some protestant friends, but I want to tell you about another monk, another friend, Brother Simon Reynolds.  He is one of the most, if not the most, significant person to enter my life during the past 10 years, and he came via the mail.  I met him through a letter.  Back during 1975 and 76, at the Upper Room, we were having a program that we call ‘Under God a New Birth of Freedom.’  It was our contribution to our nation’s celebration of the bicentennial.  And we sought to help this nation of ours recover what it means to be a nation under God. 

As a part of that, we invited preachers all over the nation to submit sermons to us on that theme, Under God a New Birth of Freedom.  We were to select the very best sermons and publish them in a book in order that churches across the nation might study with this kind of focus.  I don’t know how the announcement got in the Roman Catholic press, because we didn’t give it to them.  Even so, it ended up in a little monastery in Lafayette, Oregon, and we received a very brief homily named Simon Reynolds.  It was such a brief thing that it didn’t meet the requirements of our sermon contest, but it was so powerful and so packed with meaning that I wrote Brother Simon immediately and complimented him on his message, and suggested that he write for the Upper Room.  By return mail, he told me had never heard of the Upper Room.  Well that hurt my feelings, so I sent him a copy of the Upper Room, and by return mail, I received his subscription. 

He said, “Enclosed you will find my check for a one year subscription to the Upper Room, it’s the best thing since the apostles.  Now I always tell that part of the story.  He said I may not be around to read it this whole year, because I’m 82 years old.”  Well, that was the beginning of what has become for me one of the most meaningful relationships of my life.  Brother Simon and I exchanged letters about every six weeks or two months.  To show you the kind of fellow he is, shortly after we began to correspond with each other, I sent him a copy of my book, Dancing at My Funeral, because that’s very autobiographical and I thought that would enable him to know who I am and sort of get him on board with me.  On the back of that book is a picture of our family, Jeri and Kim and Kerry and Kevin.  By return mail, Brother Simon wrote, “Kim, Kerry, and Kevin are the best arguments I know against abortion and birth control.”  He said, “Were girls like Jeri around 60 years ago?  If so I made a tremendous sacrifice being a monk.”  He’s the most marvelous fellow I know.  His letters sparkle with life, they’re punctuated with humor. 

And although he is living in a monastery, Brother Simon is in touch with the world, in touch with truth, in touch with the needs and feelings of persons in an uncanny, almost unbelievable way, given the circumstances.  I have spent only one day personally with Brother Simon.  I slipped off from the general conference at Portland five years ago and went off to his little monastery and spent the day with him, and that day was far more important than the 10 days of general conference.  We talked all that day, we talked all that day about the indwelling Christ and the presence of Christ in Holy communion, because you see, the Methodists’ understanding of Holy Communion and the Catholic understanding of Holy Communion is the same, except the role that the priest plays in the process.  Because the MethodistChurch, and if you don’t know this yet I want you to know it, the MethodistChurch believes that Christ is really present when we come to take this bread and wine. Jesus Christ is really present in the Eucharist.  So we spent out day talking about the indwelling Christ and the presence of Christ in the Eucharist.

Four or five months after that day that I spent with him, I was sharing in a national renewal conference in which a great number of Roman Catholics participated, in fact, it was sponsored by the Roman Catholic Church.  And we had had a marvelous conference and came to a climactic worship experience in that conference and were going to celebrate Holy Communion and they wouldn’t allow me to take the bread and the wine.  It was in one of those conservative dioceses that hasn’t caught up with Pope John the XXIII, and unfortunately, I think our present Pope is not ever going to catch up with him, but that’s beside the point.  They wouldn’t let me take the bread and the wine, and that was a very painful experience.  It had been such a marvelous kind of thing going on and then to be denied the elements of Holy Communion, crushed me.   

I wrote Brother Simon about it and told him how pained I was.  By return mail, I received this letter, and I want you to hear it.  “My dear brother Maxie, I made contact this week with the very soul of you, early in the week by mental telepathy and by letter.  Wednesday and Thursday, my supra conscious started registering “Maxie Maxie Maxie”, by its spiritual Morse dot and dash code, and that set me Hail Marying for the Dunhams, and made me tack Jeri’s poster fresh every morning below my daily calendar to the left of my room door.  So it’s Dunhams my going out and Dunhams my coming in.  I asked Lady Guadeloupe, (that’s the patron saint of their monastery) I asked Lady Guadeloupe how to tell Maxie about Jesus in the blessed sacrament.  She said ‘use Jeri and the word ontological.’” Now ‘ontological’ is a two bit theological, philosophical word that you don’t need to know too much about, except that it has to do with beginnings, with foundations, with sources.  So he, Jesus is there ontologically, body and blood, soul and divinity, whether I think of him there or not.  Why use Jeri? Now listen to this.  “Kim, (that’s our oldest daughter) Kim was with Jeri one month ontologically before either she, Jeri, or you knew it.  A living existence independent of your thought of it, there and how God willed her to be there.  Do you get the picture.  The fertilized egg growing in the womb.  No one knowing about it until at least a month has passed.  There and how God willed her to be there.  As a boy in church, I remember saying, I wish I lived when Jesus did.  The answer came immediately, ‘You are living with me.  I am living with you.’  He’s been living with me ever since.  Sort of first month, Kim like.  I confess, occasionally, I tried to dodge his presence, but then my whole world crashed and I hurried back chastened and secure.  Therefore, I can feel your pain in not communing completely.”  Then he said, and this again will show you the kind of fellow he is, “I’ve been reading things about teaching children math.  Now here’s an 82 year old monk in a monastery reading about teaching children math.  One teacher told her pupil, use your imagine when I ask you, if you have 9 goodies in your right hand and 7 goodies in your left, how many have you?  A pupil responded, 14.  Teacher, wrong.  9 and 6 are 15.  I know that, the pupil answered, but you said use your imagination, so I ate one, gave one away, therefore, 14 is the correct answer.”  Then Brother Simon asked, “Is faith using your imagination in that fashion?  And is this not the ecumenical key, now listen, in Holy Eucharist there are bread species substance, and Jesus substance.  Your Maxie image in a mirror has no Maxie substance, but it’s Maxie nonetheless.  Now that’s a mind full.  You’ll have to ponder it.  Your Maxie image in a mirror has no Maxie substance, but it is Maxie nonetheless.” 

Now I share that long letter, for Brother Simon to make the point about the real presence of Christ in Holy Communion and that’s relevant not just to the Lord’s supper, but to the whole of life.  His testimony makes that point.  He heard Christ say, ‘You are living with me.  I am living with you.’  And he responded, ‘He’s been living with me ever since.’  Sort of first month, Kim like. 

Now this is Paul’s concept of the indwelling Christ, coming alive experientially.  And that’s what this sermon series is all about.  The shaping power of the indwelling Christ.  Focus for a moment on Brother Simon’s metaphor of my image in a mirror, having no Maxie substance, but being Maxie nonetheless.  He was making the point about the real presence of Christ in the substance of bread and wine, but it goes even beyond that to underscore the daily reality of Christ’s presence in our lives. 

On this day, we center on the presence of Christ in the elements of bread and wine which are at the heart of Holy Communion.  There are some poignant verses in our scripture lesson that underscore this reality.  When he was at table with them, he took bread and blessed it, and broke it and gave it to them, and their eyes were opened.  And their eyes were opened.  In reflection they asked, “Did not our hearts burn within us while we talked to him on the road, while he opened to us the scripture?”  And what was their response, they returned to Jerusalem immediately, where they found the disciples who had experienced the risen Lord.  The confirmed that resurrection by saying, he appeared to us, and he was known to us in the breaking of bread.  So when you come to this table today, you’re not only observing the death of Jesus, the broken body and the spilled blood, you are celebrating the resurrection. 

At Emmaus the word became act at the table.  The stranger became the host, then their eyes were opened.  We must never forget the sacrifice of our Lord, his death for our life.  But we must never forget the resurrection.  Holy Communion holds those two, the death and resurrection of our Lord, together in vibrant aliveness.  Our problem, the problem of the church all these years, is that we are forever pushing Jesus into some dim, distant, dusty past.  We make him a nice man who once lived, once taught, once died some other place than here, at some other time than now, among people other than ourselves.  It was good while he was here we say, but alas he has left us, gone but not forgotten.  We do this to keep the whole Jesus story neat, removed, abstract, antique. 

The amazing proclamation of this Sunday resurrection meal that we eat today is that we need not impatiently wait until some distant future when Christ will return from some distant past.  We need not cool our heels in a 2000 year interim period between his first coming and his second coming.  The old cop out, but what can anybody do, doesn’t work anymore.  This Lord will not let us off that easily, because he is alive.  And his indwelling presence can become the shaping power of our lives.  Running from Emmaus, breathlessly breaking into Jerusalem, Cleopas and his companion made an Easter-like declaration.  He’s back.  Tombs cannot contain him.  Even the tombs we build, which try to tuck him away in our dusty history, in our pessimistic defeatism, in our puny notions about what he can and cannot do.  Tombs cannot hold him, he’s back.  Alive.  Go back to the metaphor of Brother Simon, your Maxie image in a mirror has no Maxie substance, but it is Maxie nonetheless.  The bread and the wine do not actually carry the flesh and blood of Jesus, but like our images in a mirror, they carry the reality of that presence.  He is here.  Come to the table and let him be known to you in the breaking of bread, and go from this place to allow the indwelling Christ to become the shaping power of your life.    
Maxie Dunnam, by Maxie Dunnam