Third Sunday of Easter
April 6, 2008
The Rev. Charles Henrickson

“On the Road and at the Table” (Luke 24:13-35)

Many of you I’m sure have seen this painting before. 
The original German title is “Gang nach Emmaus,” the
“Walk to Emmaus,” by 19th century Swiss artist, Robert
Zünd:

http://www.poster.net/zuend-robert/zuend-robert-gang-nach-emmaus-9700107.jpg

It’s a picture of Christ and the two disciples on the
road to Emmaus.  Of course it’s based on the Holy
Gospel for today.  It’s a lovely painting.  And what a
wonderful walk it must have been!  To have Jesus there
at your side as you walk along!  You feel like you’d
like to put yourself into the picture, so you could
just walk along with them and listen in.

Let’s do that for a while.  Let’s zoom in on the
picture, so we can see and hear what’s going on.  What
was it like?  Well, it didn’t start out so wonderful
on that Sunday afternoon.  Those two fellas
there--they’re on their way home from Jerusalem, going
back to the town of Emmaus.  But they’re sad,
confused, and discouraged.  Their faces are downcast. 
The reason is that their master, Jesus, had been
crucified just a couple of days earlier, on Friday. 
They had been followers of Jesus, among his larger
group of disciples.  So naturally that’s all they can
think about, the tragic events of the last few days.

All of a sudden a stranger catches up to them and
joins them as they walk.  Of course, we know that it’s
Jesus.  But they don’t.  “Their eyes were kept from
recognizing him,” the text says.  Implied is that God
is keeping them from recognizing Jesus at this point. 
God has something for them to learn and experience
first.  So this stranger asks them what they’re
talking about.  They fill him in, saying that they’ve
been talking about “Jesus of Nazareth, a man who was a
prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the
people, and how our chief priests and rulers delivered
him up to be condemned to death, and crucified him. 
But we had hoped that he was the one to redeem
Israel.”

These disciples had certain hopes about Jesus, but now
those hopes were dashed, their dreams were shattered. 
All their hopes had ended.  Because Jesus was dead. 
He had been crucified, no less, before he could do
anything to achieve the goal they had wanted him to
accomplish.  “We had hoped that he was the one to
redeem Israel.”  But now who would deliver their
nation from the hands of the Romans?  Who would lead
their nation to glory?  No one, it seems, at least for
the foreseeable future.  These two men felt like God
had let them down.  How long, O Lord, how long before
the promised Messiah finally arrives?  Apparently, it
must not have been Jesus, because he didn’t get the
job done.

But the stranger rebukes them:  “O foolish ones, and
slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have
spoken!  Was it not necessary that the Christ should
suffer these things and enter into his glory?”  Jesus
rebukes them for not recognizing what had been there
under their nose all along.  The Scriptures--the part
we call the Old Testament--the Scriptures had been
telling them all along what would happen to the
Messiah, but they had missed it. Just like everybody
else, they didn’t get it.  They were looking for
another kind of Savior, one that fit their own
expectations.  They were certainly not looking for a
Messiah who would be rejected--rejected by their own
religious leaders.  They were not expecting a Messiah
who would have to suffer and die in shame and
weakness.

So Jesus then takes them through the Scriptures, in
order that they can see what they’ve been missing. 
What a Bible study that must have been!  What
Scriptures did he use?  Jesus could have taken them to
the stories of Moses, Elijah, Jeremiah--prophets who
spoke God’s word to God’s people and yet were
rejected.  He most surely would have taken them to
Isaiah 53, the song of the Suffering Servant:  “He was
despised and rejected by men; a man of sorrows, and
acquainted with grief.”  Jesus may have taken them
also to Psalm 22, the cry of the righteous sufferer: 
“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”  This
stranger on the road opened up the Scriptures to them,
so they could see that what had happened to Jesus
actually was God’s plan, that it had been prophesied,
that it was necessary that the Christ should suffer
these things.

Those same Scriptures tell us why it was necessary
that the Christ should suffer and die.  Beginning back
in Genesis 3, where God told Adam and Eve that in the
very act of the serpent striking the woman’s seed in
the heel, that one would strike the serpent in the
head and thus destroy his power.  Then think of all
the Scriptures where it takes a death, the shedding of
blood, to make a sacrifice for sin.  Again, think of
Isaiah 53:  “He was wounded for our transgressions; he
was crushed for our iniquities. . . . And the Lord has
laid on him the iniquity of us all.”

Now it says in our text that, “beginning with Moses
and all the Prophets, he interpreted to them in all
the Scriptures the things concerning himself.”  In
other words, Jesus gives them, and us, the
interpretive key for understanding all of Scripture. 
He gives us the lens to look through to see the
Scriptures aright.  Here on the road Jesus gives the
church a lesson in how to read the Bible--the overall
way to approach the Scriptures, the way to interpret
and understand the Scriptures correctly.  That
approach and that understanding has, as its heart and
center, a suffering Christ.  Jesus himself says that
that is the way the Scriptures are to be understood. 
Jesus’ own interpretation of the Bible stresses the
necessity and centrality of the suffering Christ.

Therefore any preaching today that does not have as
its core a suffering Christ is not Christian
preaching.  Any church that simply doles out
“principles for living” and panders to so-called felt
needs--oh, they may tack a little bit of Jesus on the
side--but a church that turns the Divine Service into
entertainment, that uses puts the accent on our being
ablaze with activism instead of on receiving God’s
gracious gifts, a church that replaces the Passion of
Christ with the programs of men--such a church,
however successful it may look, is going in the wrong
direction.  The church that does not have the cross of
Christ at the center of its life, Christ crucified at
the center of its worship and preaching--that church
has left the Emmaus road and has taken a wrong turn.

The Emmaus disciples had been looking for a
“successful” Messiah, as they envisioned it. 
Therefore they thought that things had turned out
rather badly, that this whole Jesus enterprise was a
disaster, a failure.  They had hoped that Jesus would
be the one to redeem Israel.  And because he died,
they thought that he had failed.  Little did they
realize that it was precisely in dying that he would
redeem Israel!  This was how he would redeem the whole
world!  It was a redemption far greater and far
different than they were expecting.  With his holy
precious blood and his innocent suffering and death,
Jesus Christ has redeemed us lost and condemned
persons.  He has purchased and won us, rescued us and
set us free--from all our sins, from the death that
sin brings, and from the enslaving power of the devil.
 Yes, our Redeemer died that we might live, really
live, now and forever--just as he is risen from the
dead, lives and reigns to all eternity.

All that the Emmaus disciples knew, as they headed
down the road that day, was that Jesus died, and they
didn’t know why.  “This is now the third day since all
this sad business took place.  Oh, some of our women
went out to the tomb this morning and found it empty,
and they came back with some wild story about Jesus
being alive.  But who can believe that?”  You and I,
though, we know that the women’s report, as amazing as
it sounds, is true.  It is true!  Jesus is alive!  God
has vindicated his righteous Messiah.  He’s walking
right beside them on the road, and they don’t even
realize it.  But soon they will.

The three travelers come to the town, to Emmaus.  It’s
getting late in the day.  “Stay with us, sir.  Abide
with us.  Come into our home and be our guest for a
while.  Come, eat with us.”  So the stranger enters
their house.  But while he is at table with them, the
guest becomes the host!  In some ways, what Jesus does
here at this table is very much like what he had done
in Jerusalem a few nights earlier:  “He took the bread
and blessed and broke it and gave it to them.”  And so
now, in Emmaus, it is in the breaking of the bread
that their eyes are opened and they recognize Jesus
for who he is.

Again, Jesus sets the pattern for the church.  First
there is the teaching and then there is the eating. 
There is the opening up of the Scriptures and the
breaking of the bread. This then is what the church
has always done, from the earliest days, when it
gathers together on the first day of the week.  There
is the Word and the Sacrament, on the Lord’s Day, in
the presence of Christ.  The Divine Service of both
Word and Sacrament--that is the normal, historic,
biblically based, gospel saturated, Christian,
Lutheran thing to do when the church comes together
for its chief service of the week, every week.  Not
one or the other, Word “or” Sacrament, but both
together, Word “and” Sacrament.  Christ’s disciples
want all of what our Lord has to give us.

Today as we have dropped in on this picture, the “Walk
to Emmaus,” we have gone with Jesus “On the Road and
at the Table.”  And so the Emmaus disciples go from
shattered hopes and shuttered eyes to burning hearts
and opened eyes.  They go from being slow of heart to
having faith burning in their hearts.  Their eyes are
opened and they see Jesus.

Well, it’s a beautiful picture, isn’t it?  “On the
Road and at the Table” with Jesus.  What a blessed
experience that must have been!  Too bad we couldn’t
have been there to enjoy it.  But wait a minute!  How
foolish we are, how slow of heart we are to believe! 
What has been under our noses all along?  No, we can’t
go back to Emmaus.  But Jesus comes here to us!  Jesus
is with us, “on the road and at the table.”  As we
walk along the road of life, our risen Lord walks with
us.  “Surely I will be with you, all the days, to the
close of the age.”  Jesus is here now, in the
gathering of God’s people.  “For where two or three
are gathered together in my name, there am I with
them.”

Jesus is here right now, opening up the Scriptures to
us.  We even acknowledge his presence in our midst by
standing up for the Holy Gospel, when we hear our Lord
speaking to us.  Here we receive his life-giving words
to prepare us and strengthen us for our life on the
road.  Likewise at the table.  Jesus is here, too,
really present.  Here at the table, our Lord receives
foolish and slow sinners like you and me into
fellowship with him.  The crucified yet living one
gives us his own body and blood to eat and to drink,
for the forgiveness of sins.  In this breaking of the
bread, our eyes are opened, the eyes of faith, for
here we see our Lord face to face.

This Emmaus story has a wonderful message for you
today, my friend.  It says that Jesus will be with you
“on the road and at the table.”  He has been with you,
ever since the day of your baptism.  He will continue
to walk with you, as you travel along your own Emmaus
Road.  As you encounter your own set of
disappointments and unmet expectations, when your
hopes are dashed and your dreams are shattered, Jesus
will be there with you, walking right beside you. 
Week after week, Jesus will open up the Scriptures for
you, the Scriptures concerning himself, the one who
died and rose to give you life and hope.  Time and
time again, Jesus will host you here at his table,
where we enjoy sweet fellowship with him.  Truly Jesus
is abiding with us.

You know, somebody ought to do a painting called the
“Walk to Bonne Terre”!  Because, like that “Walk to
Emmaus,” our risen Lord Jesus goes with us, too. 
Jesus is with us, “On the Road and at the Table.”


Charles Henrickson
4749 Melissa Jo Ln
St. Louis, MO 63128
(314) 845-8811 (home)
(314) 779-8108 (cell)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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