1. When your heart
burns!
âNow behold, two of them were travelling that
same day to a village called Emmaus, which was
seven miles from Jerusalem. And they talked
together of all these things which had
happenedâ Luke 24:13-14.
2. Do you like to go for a walk? Well this was a walk
to remember for the two on the road to Emmaus,
but they had forgotten Jesusâ promise of His
resurrection, and even on the 3rd day since His
crucifixion, with reports that the tomb was
empty, they still held no hope, it would be too
good to be true that Jesus was alive again.
This story shows how quick we are to give up
hope.
Let us put ourselves in their shoes as they set out
on the seven-mile walk from Jerusalem to
Emmaus.
It was a:
3. A HEART-BREAKING EXPERIENCE.
Have you ever noticed that some of the saddest
words in our language begin with the letter D?
For example, discouragement, disappointment,
doubt, disillusionment, defeat, despair and
DEATH.
All of these are summed up in the words of these
two men to the stranger who joined them on the
Emmaus road.
They had left the discouraged and confused band
of disciples with the events of the first Good
Friday fresh in their minds.
4. The Lord Jesus they had worshipped, loved
and followed had been horribly put to
death, a cruel death of the most shameful
kind, on a Roman CROSS.
Only a week before on Palm Sunday, the
disciplesâ hopes had risen to excitement,
when the eager crowds had hailed their
Lord and Master as the longed for deliverer.
Now He lay dead in a sealed tomb! Their
hopes were dashed; their dreams were
over!
5. The band of disciples of Jesusâ was
leaderless and falling apart, with two of
them already on their way home.
Their entire world had come apart. The
two despondent disciples summed up
the situation very neatly saying, âWe
had hoped that He was the one who
was going to redeem Israel.â
6. Human hope is an easily broken, and when
it dies it is difficult to restore.
Hopelessness is a disease of the human
spirit and it is desperately hard to cure.
When you see someone you love and care
for overtaken by illness, which goes on,
and on, despair sets in. It almost becomes
impossible to hope for recovery, to be even
afraid to hope because of not being able to
cope with another letdown.
7. The two had a wall of hopelessness around
them. As the travellers made their weary
way to Emmaus a stranger came alongside
them.
It was going to turn into one of the most
wonderful walks in history! We know, of
course, that it was the Risen Jesus, but
somehow they did not recognize Him.
They were not allowed to recognize Jesus
for a purpose. I believe it was so that they
might be in the same position as we are
some 2,000 years later.
8. The stranger saw they were downtrodden
and asked them, âWhat are you discussing
together as you walk along?â
And so they poured out their sad story to
someone who seemed so willing to listen.
The way that Jesus dealt with the situation is
a lesson to all that are in a position to help
those who have lost hope.
They need companionship. They need a
listening ear!
It is then that the heart-breaking experience
changes to a:
9. A HEART-SEARCHING EXPERIENCE.
Their expressed surprise at even being
asked what was worrying them âAre you
the only one living in Jerusalem who does
not know the things that have happened
there in these days?â They told the
stranger that this Jesus âwas a prophet,
powerful in word and deed before God and
all the peopleâ verse 19.
10. âHe wasâ - notice the use of the past tense, their
experience of Jesus was in the past, and they thought
they were alone. The CROSS had taken Him from them,
and their minds had not made sense of the changed
situation, or adjusted to it. The Cross was just a great
negative to them.
We have all heard exciting testimonies of what Jesus has
done in the past, but what about the present?
The question must be: is Jesus âa present realityâ to you
and me? Do we always recognize Him beside us?
Life has many distractions, routine, hard work and
tiredness, or ill health, which can grind us down.
11. When life loses its meaning and leaves
us washed out, this story gives us hope.
Jesus is still there. He is the unseen
âstranger,â walking with us, listening to
us and, if we are willing to hear His
voice, He will reveal Himself to us.
As the two disciples spoke of the Cross
Jesus gave them a heart-warming
experience.
12. How did he do it? Luke tells us, âAnd
beginning with Moses and all the Prophets,
Jesus explained to them what was said in all
the Scriptures concerning himself.â
Jesus must have given the Emmaus travellers
the greatest Old Testament sermon in
history, to a congregation of two!
He told them of the types, shadows and
symbols of the Old Testament revealed in
the person of Christ. Revelation opening up
before them!
13. Jesus would surely have taken the now speechless
disciples through the Suffering Servant of passages in
Isaiah.
Here was proof that Jesus had fulfilled that had been
prophesied over the centuries; of His passion and
triumph of life over death, proved that He was indeed
the Messiah.
But there was more to it than that. Christ was not there
beside them simply to help them to find solutions; He
was in the problem itself. Jesus told His two listeners,
âDid not the Christ have to suffer these things.â
In other words, did He die in vain? Was there no
purpose to His life?
14. A HEART-BURNING EXPERIENCE.
Their two-hour journey from Jerusalem to
Emmaus must have seemed like five minutes,
being so wrapped up in this fascinating
conversation with the Lord they had not yet
recognized.
Luke informs us that as they approached the
village to which they were going, Jesus acted as if
He was going further. You see, Jesus is a
gentleman; He will not force Himself if He is not
really wanted.
He awaited their invitation to come in.
15. God gave to the world the greatest
and the most perilous gift in the
world, the gift of free will; and we can
use it to invite Christ into our hearts or
allow Him to pass on and knock on
someone elseâs door.
âBehold, I stand at the door and
knock. If anyone hears My voice and
opens the door, I will come in to him
and dine with him, and he with Meâ
Revelation 3:20.
16. This door, there is no outer knob or
handle to it. I expect there is a handle, it
is on the inside!
This is very much the situation in the
Emmaus story. It was a test to see if the
disciples had more appetite for the
things of God.
They did. We are told that they urged
Jesus strongly, âStay with us ...â that is
the sort of invitation that Jesus cannot
resist!
17. A basic meal was quickly got ready. The bread is
on the table and the moment for Jesusâ disclosure
has come. How does He do it? âHe took bread,
gave thanks, broke it and began to give it to
them.â
It was the action of the breaking of bread. They
saw His hands; they were different from when He
had broken bread at the Feeding of the Five
Thousand, and at the Last Supper. They were the
nail-pierced hands of Jesus. In an instant they
knew Him.
And in an instant, He is gone...vanished out of
their sight!
18. But He is with us still by His Holy Spirit; He
is with us as we fellowship with Him in
worship and, in obedience to His
command, as we remember Him in the
âbreaking of breadâ service.
I can imagine the two standing in
amazement; perhaps embracing in great
joy, asking each other âWere not our hearts
burning within us while he talked with us
on the road and opened the Scriptures to
us?â
19. God deeply longs for each
one of us to walk with
Him in close fellowship so
He can fulfil His plans for
our lives.