Luke 24:13-35 · On the Road to Emmaus
When Heartbreak Turns to Heartburn
Luke 24:13-35
Sermon
by Robert Leslie Holmes
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Here again we find Luke the physician at his best. Although not one of the original twelve, in his own exquisite and unique way this doctor-disciple of Jesus gives us details with clarity indicating that he is close to Jesus and the disciples and can speak with the authority of an eyewitness to the things he tells us. In his opening phrase in the passage, Luke tells us that "two of them were going to a village called Emmaus." Just a few verses earlier in verse 10 of this chapter, Luke indicates that the two are apostles. However, near the end (v. 33) he writes, "That same hour they got up and returned to Jerusalem; and they found the eleven and their companions gathered together." So, we must assume that Luke's use of the term "apostle" is to be understood in a broader sense than merely assuming that it is a pure synonym for the eleven remaining after Judas takes his own life. Three words fit the story. The first of them is doubt.

Doubt!

We read, "They stood still, looking sad" (v. 17). The following statement by one of them, called Cleopas, indicates that they are two devotees of Jesus whom they describe as "a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people and... our chief priests and leaders handed him over to be condemned to death and crucified him" (Luke 24:20). So it is not stretching the facts to say that their hearts are broken. Not only have they lost someone they admired as a true prophet of God; to make matters worse, it was their own chief priests and leaders who caused this travesty of justice to happen. Furthermore, they add, "We had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel. Yes, and besides all this, it is now the third day since these things took place." Three days! Three long days since hope has been snatched from them! Now, his body is missing and they have no idea of its whereabouts (see v. 21). For these two -- as it is even today for many people -- the notion that Jesus Christ, God's Son who was crucified on a rough Roman cross and rose on the third day is news too good to be true.

Clearly from their positive evaluation of Jesus' ministry, they have been around him on more than one occasion for they know him as "a prophet mighty in deed and word." Yet doubt's dark clouds have enveloped them and they have forgotten that Jesus preached that he would rise again after three days: "He began to teach them that the Son of Man must undergo great suffering, and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests, and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again. He said all this quite openly" (Mark 8:31-32).

Others have told them: "Moreover, some women of our group astounded us. They were at the tomb early this morning, and when they did not find his body there, they came back and told us that they had indeed seen a vision of angels who said that he was alive. Some of those who were with us went to the tomb and found it just as the women had said; but they did not see him" (vv. 22-24). Yet having heard from Jesus and the women who found the tomb empty, these men, who are on their way to Emmaus, the place whose name means "warm springs," have no good news. Their hearts are broken by their failure to take the word of Jesus along with the word of the disciples who have been to the empty tomb. So blinded are their eyes by doubt that even when Jesus joins them for their walk along that road, they do not recognize him.

Luke tells this story as a lesson for present-day people like us. We can be so caught up in our doubts about faith that we fail to see and hear the obvious. Again and again the Bible tells us that if we look around, we will see evidence of God. Consider, for example, these words, "The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above proclaims his handiwork. Day to day pours out speech, and night to night reveals knowledge" (Psalm 19:1-2). Again, Saint Paul writes,

The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who by their unrighteousness suppress the truth. For what can be known about God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them. For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse. (Romans 1:18-20 ESV)

He is saying that all around us there are evidences of God. There is no place for doubt and doubters have no excuse.

As a pastor, I am persuaded that many church people really do not believe in the resurrection of Jesus. If they did, there would never be an empty pew in any church in the land. Some of us, like Zechariah when the angel told him that his barren wife Elizabeth would bear a son who would be John the Baptist, are just happy to bumble our way through life uncertain and unhappy. Moreover, given the choice like these two disciples we meet in today's scripture reading, some church people choose to believe bad news over good news.

Not many years ago, a new highway was under construction somewhere in England. An old vacant and abandoned dilapidated building sat in its pathway. When the wreckers tore it down and cleared off the ground where that building had stood for generations, they found nothing that caught their attention. A few weeks later, however, after that ground was exposed to sunshine and rain, flowers sprung up. No one could identify them. A botanist was called in. He said, "I think I know what it is but I'm afraid to believe it." Soon more botanists came. Someone said, "These are plants the Romans imported to England during their occupation about 2,000 years ago. For a long time we have presumed them extinct." The first botanist said, "That is what I was thinking but I was afraid to believe it!"

Afraid to believe it! For some people, even church people, Jesus Christ, God's Son crucified on a rough Roman cross and rising on the third day is news too good to be believed. Frozen by doubt, they miss the best news the world will ever hear!

Difference!

"Beginning with Moses and all the prophets, he (Jesus) interpreted to them the things about himself in all the scriptures" (v. 27). Scripture does not give us the details, but perhaps he explains who he is to them in words similar to these:

In Genesis I am the seed of the woman.
In Exodus I am the Passover lamb.
In Leviticus I am the high priest.
In Numbers I am the pillar of cloud by day and the pillar of fire by night.
In Deuteronomy I am the prophet like unto Moses.
In Joshua I am the captain of our salvation.
In Judges I am your judge and lawgiver.
In Ruth I am your kinsman redeemer.
In 1 Samuel I am the ark and mercy seat.
In 2 Samuel I am the king declared by the prophets.
In 1 Kings I am the true temple where all God's people gather.
In 2 Kings I am the mighty miracle maker.
In 1 Chronicles I am Adam's descendent who reigns forever.
In 2 Chronicles I am ever protected royalty.
In Ezra I am our faithful scribe.
In Nehemiah I am the rebuilder of broken down walls.
In Esther I am Mordecai.
In Job I am the dayspring from on high.
In Psalms I am the Lord your shepherd.
In Proverbs I am God's word fitly spoken.
In Ecclesiastes I make sense out of nonsense.
In Solomon's song I am the lover and the bridegroom.
In Isaiah I am the holy one of Israel.
In Jeremiah I am the righteous branch.
In Lamentations I am the weeping prophet.
In Ezekiel I am the wonderful four-faced man.
In Daniel I am the fourth man in the burning furnace.
In Hosea I am the forever faithful husband.
In Joel I am the Baptist with the Holy Spirit and fire.
In Amos I am your burden-bearer.
In Obadiah I am mighty to save.
In Jonah I am swallowed up but alive on the third day.
In Micah I am the messenger of beautiful feet.
In Nahum I am the avenger of God's elect.
In Habakkuk I am God's evangelist, crying, "Revive thy work...."
In Zephaniah I am the Savior.
In Haggai I am the restorer of God's lost heritage.
In Zechariah I am the true king rejected by his own people.
In Malachi I am the son of righteousness.

The difference is the second word that jumps at us out of this passage. These two disciples on the way to Emmaus were afraid of change. It is all too easy for us to get stuck in our ruts and we reason that if the resurrection of Jesus really is true, then we must change our way of thinking and living. Indeed, that is exactly true, because no one can honestly examine the resurrection and remain the same. For example, after we believe in the resurrection we can no longer be satisfied to live with our old half-measure commitment to Jesus and his church.

In Isaac Newton's first law of motion, Newton asserts that everything continues in a state of rest unless it is compelled to change by forces impressed upon it. He is right. Almost everything about this world is in a constant state of flux. Another way of stating the same truth is to say that change is one of life's few constants.

There's an old story about two fellows who lived their whole lives in a large northern city. One day in a conversation about something one of them had read about rural life, they decided they needed to see it for themselves. Together they resolved to sell out and give up city life for good. They would do what the early settlers had done generations before them and live off the land. They would plant their own vegetables and raise their own meat. That would mean they would take the proceeds from what they had sold and buy a farm. Looking in a newspaper, they saw an advertisement saying that a Texas ranch was for sale. They agreed that it looked just like what they would need and bought it sight unseen, except for a single picture in the advertisement. Now that they owned a farm, they would need a truck. So heading out to a dealership on the outskirts of the city, they bought a nice truck. The next morning they got up early and headed for Texas. Arriving at their new ranch, they were very excited. It soon became obvious that they needed a mule. They got in their pickup and went to their nearest neighbor to see if he had a mule he might want to sell. The neighbor said, "I sure don't." Nevertheless, they decided to visit the man for a while; even though he lived about a mile away, he was their nearest neighbor. As they talked with the neighbor, some watermelons that were stacked against the neighbor's barn caught their eye. They had never seen watermelons so large before and curiosity got the best of them. "What are they?" they asked him. By now, the neighboring rancher seeing they were unenlightened city fellows, decided to have some fun at their expense. "Them's mule eggs!" he told them. "Mule eggs?" they exclaimed. "Yup! Take one home and keep it warm. When it hatches you'll have your mule." "Wow!" they exclaimed together, "What a deal, a mule of our own and we can raise it as a baby." Gullible, they bought the biggest one they could see and carefully laid it in the back of their pickup. Soon after that, they headed toward their new home. Along the way, they decided to each take turns sitting up at night in case their mule egg hatched in the middle of the night. However, on the way home they hit a pothole and the watermelon rolled out. It hit the road, bounced, and burst wide open. Seeing what happened in their rearview mirrors, they quickly found a place to turn around and drove back to where it happened. In the meantime, a huge Texas jackrabbit came by and spotted the burst watermelon lying in the middle of the road. He hopped over to it and began to eat. The city fellows drove up a couple of minutes afterward and saw the long-eared jackrabbit sitting in the middle of the road munching on the watermelon. The two new ranchers screamed with delight when they saw those long ears, "Our mule!" As they jumped out of their pickup the scared jackrabbit ran off. The two city fellows followed it in hot pursuit. As jackrabbits do, it first hopped around in a circle. The two men tried to catch it but the faster they ran after it the faster it ran away from them. Finally they were exhausted and could go no further. Winded, they collapsed one on top of the other, each one gasping for breath. After a minute or two, one of them raised himself up on his elbows and declared to his buddy, "Ben, I guess our mule got away." Ben replied, "It's okay, Bob. I'm not sure I want to plow as fast as he can run anyhow!"

We smile at that story because it sounds a bit silly! But think about this: Is it not true for some of us that our single greatest hindrance to really doing business with the resurrected Jesus is that we are just not sure we want to plow that fast anyhow? We want a Jesus who will let us live at our own speed. We do not want to go too hard or too far with him. Yet the truth is we will get no more out of Christian faith than we are prepared to put into it. There is no real joy in halfhearted Christianity that does as little as possible with Jesus and expects very little to happen.

These two men on the way to Emmaus simply are not prepared for God to work in new ways in their little world. As a result, they almost miss the greatest miracle of all time because they are not ready for the possibility of God doing a new and glorious thing.

They are totally amazed to learn that they have walked the seven miles from Jerusalem to Emmaus in the company of the very one they loved, the risen Jesus, whom they had seen and heard many times before. What is it about us that hinders us from experiencing the risen Lord's great surprises?

Decision!

Here is the third word that calls for our attention in this passage. Sooner or later, each of us must decide how we will respond to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus. "They said to each other, 'Were not our hearts burning within us while he was talking to us on the road, while he was opening the scriptures to us?' " (v. 32). Their heartbreak turns to heartburn! Not the kind of heartburn that calls for Prilosec, but good heartburn. Their hearts, once broken with sadness, now burn with passion for the living Lord of the cross.

Those Emmaus disciples are slow to recognize the truth when they first see him. Perhaps that is because they are walking away from Jerusalem, where the community of Christians met. When they do see Jesus, their lives and their world are positively transformed as never before. What are you prepared to give in return for the risen Christ's calvary love? Do you really believe he rose again from the dead on the third day? To believe that calls for change. "If anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see, everything has become new!" (2 Corinthians 5:17). Make no mistake; some things have to change when you decide to follow Jesus. Old attitudes and lifestyles have no place in his kingdom and they really cannot have any place with us when we become citizens of it.

In Jesus' name, I invite you to come to the new Jerusalem, the church of the Lord Jesus Christ. Come believing, expecting, and working for wonderful things to happen for you and for those you love. Exchange your broken heart for a heart that burns with a passion for his truth. Wouldn't it be wonderful if tonight, before you go to sleep, you could thank God that your new heart in Jesus began to beat this very day?

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., A jiffy for eternity: cycle A sermons for Lent and Easter based on the Gospel texts, by Robert Leslie Holmes