Introduction
The loved one experiences an irrepressible need to be at the side of the man she loves. In the silence of the night, she thinks of him. She says his name and dreams his caresses: “His left hand is under my head and his right hand embraces me” (Song 8:3). She is desolate unless she receives a message from him. When she hears his voice she is seized by a tremor. She runs to open, turns the lock and unlocks the door. But the loved one is not there anymore. He turns, goes, and disappears and my soul goes after him (Song 5:5-6).
“They have taken away my Lord,”—Mary Magdalen exclaims through her tears. The two disciples of Emmaus walk sadly. The women bow their faces to the ground, looking for him who is alive at the tomb (Lk 24:5). They are the living portrait of the community that does not notice any longer “the beloved of her heart.” With him every night was transformed into light, the sunset a prelude to dawn, the pain in the announcement of a birth, tears in the blossoming of a smile.
“Stay with us”—the bride begs—when the Lord appears to act “as if he were going farther.” He promised to stay with her, every day, until the end of the world (Mt 28:20). Why does he leave her alone? But it is not he who turns away, she is the one incapable of recognizing him.
As soon as he begins to explain the Scriptures, her heart starts to burn. As the beloved in the Song of Songs, she recognizes the voice of her beloved, and at the breaking of the bread, her eyes light up and recognize him. He had not left her, and will never leave her.
To internalize the message, we repeat:
“Make us hear your voice in the Scriptures, and that we recognize you in the breaking of the bread.”
First Reading: Acts 2:14a,22-28
As on Easter day, also today’s first reading is taken from a discourse of Peter. If these two passages are compared, one can easily verify that they follow the same pattern: they present the life of Jesus in four stages:
– They tell the wonderful works of good done by him.
– They indicate people’s response to these gestures of love and salvation; instead of welcoming him, they rejected, crucified and killed him because they deemed him an impostor.
– The stone of the tomb did not put an end to his story: God intervened and freed him from the power of death.
– In the end, we have a reference to the Scriptures: everything that happened was foretold by the prophets.
These speeches are not the transcript of what Peter said. They are a summary of the catechesis given in the early days of the church about Jesus. This catechesis is placed on the mouth of the first of the apostles to emphasize its importance and officialdom.
In the third part of the discourse (v. 24), God’s intervention on death is introduced with an image that, in the original greek text, is particularly incisive. “God—Peter says—forced death to give birth.” The ancient people imagined that the fetuses were retained in the mother’s womb by laces that, at the time of childbirth, were broken thus causing pains. Death always wanted to hold Jesus in her womb, but God intervened. He removed the laces, untied, released and made him be born. This was the most important of his works of power: from the womb of death he has drawn life.
Second Reading: 1 Peter 1:17-21
The baptismal catechesis started last Sunday continues.
The preacher—who speaks in Peter’s name—invites the newly baptized to reflect on their status as children. You—he says—you are born again and now you can turn to God calling him Father. You have received from him a new life. That in which you’ve been introduced is a sublime condition, but it also entails serious responsibilities. It requires a coherent moral conduct. God is no respecter of persons. If, during your “pilgrimage” in this world, you will not be faithful to the baptismal commitments that you have taken, receiving the sacraments materially is of no use to you (v. 17).
Then the newly baptized are reminded of the condition they were in before becoming Christians. They led a dissolute life. They adapted themselves to the immoral principles learned from their pagan fathers. They were slaves subjected to a tyrant: sin. Their ransom is dearly paid for: Christ shed his blood to liberate them (vv. 18-19). The paschal lamb, white, without spot and without blemish, that the people of Israel sacrificed during the celebration of Easter was just an image. It is Jesus, the true Lamb without blemish who, with his own blood, redeems people from evil.
These are the exhortations with which the preacher of Rome encourages neophytes to lead a holy and blameless life. They cannot render vain the sacrifice of Christ.
Gospel: Luke 24:13-35
It is the month of April in the year 30 A.D.
Two disciples of Jesus went to Jerusalem to celebrate the Passover. They have witnessed dramatic events: their teacher, prophet, mighty in work and word, and was executed.
The days of this sad feast passed. They prepare to return to Emmaus when, early in the morning, someone run towards them with the shocking news: the tomb was found empty. Some women claim to have had a vision of angels and that Jesus is alive. At home, however, they have families waiting for them. It is spring and it’s the time to harvest barley and they must leave. Along the way, a traveler joins them. He accompanies them and in the evening something extraordinary happens.
The story of the disciples of Emmaus is one of the most beautiful pages of the Gospels. It introduces in a celestial world, where dream, instead of being dissolved, is transformed into reality. After this lovely first impression, however, perplexities and questions arise: Where is Emmaus? There was, yes, but twenty miles from Jerusalem, not ten as the text says (Lk 24:13). Some ancient manuscripts, probably to remedy this difficulty, speak of one hundred and sixty stage (about thirty miles), but it will create another problem: it transforms the two disciples into marathon runners.
It is also unlikely that having heard that something extraordinary had happened (vv. 21-24) the two left without having first checked what could really have happened.
Why couldn’t they recognize Jesus in the traveler? What sense has a miracle of this kind: is it used to create suspense? One notices that the text does not say that Jesus was hidden under a false guise, but that their eyes were kept from recognizing him… and it will be important to establish the reason for this blindness.
Why is the name of the second disciple not told to us? Did Luke already forget it?
Back in Jerusalem, the two recount to the apostles their experience of the Risen One. They were informed that the Lord appeared also to Simon (vv. 33-35). Then the story continues. While they are gathered and are talking about these things, Jesus appears in their midst. Astonished and frightened, they are convinced of seeing a ghost. They are unable to believe that he is alive. To convince them, Jesus must eat of the bread and fish in front of them (Lk 24:36-42). The reaction of the disciples is really inexplicable. They seemed taken by surprise as if nothing had happened before.
These are just some of the difficulties that are raised by a literal interpretation of the text. But some indexes orient us toward a less superficial reading. How could one not notice, for example, that the sentence: “When he was at table with them, he took bread, said the blessing, broke it, and gave it to them” explicitly recalls the celebration of the Eucharist? And, before sitting down at the table, the mysterious traveler also presides over a solemn liturgy of the Word with its three readings (“and beginning with Moses and all the prophets he explained to them in all the Scriptures…” [v. 27]) and his good sermon (“Were not our hearts burning within us when he opened to us the Scriptures…” [v. 32]). In short, he officiated a full-blown liturgy.
Then again, the phrase: “Is it not written that the Christ should suffer all this, and then enter his glory?” (v. 26) is the unopposed proof that the person who is talking is the Jesus already ascended to heaven. This situation, more than that of the two disciples of Emmaus, resembles that of the Christians of the communities of Luke. Let’s try to rebuild it.
We are in Asia Minor in the years 80-90. Almost all the witnesses of the Risen Lord have already disappeared. The Christians of the third generation are asking themselves: will it be possible for us to meet the Lord? How to testify that he is alive if we have never seen him with our eyes, nor touched with our hands, and never sat at table with him? Would we be led to believe just from what others have told us, as happens in the courts where judges put their trust in credible witnesses? This, however, cannot be called an act of faith, but it’s the conclusion of a reasoning of common sense. We also would like to really meet the Risen Lord.
Let’s reread Luke’s story as a response to the aspirations and expectations of these Christians.
We begin with the name. One of them is called Cleophas (a very well-known figure in the early church because he was the brother of Joseph, the “father” of the Lord) and the other? The other… could be an invitation to every reader to insert his name. It is an invitation to go with Cleophas along the path that leads to recognizing the risen Christ present where two are gathered in his name.
The two disciples are sad: they have seen the collapse of their dreams, the failure of their plans. They expected a glorious Messiah, a mighty and triumphant king but found themselves in front of a loser. The rabbis taught that the Messiah would have lived a thousand years, Jesus instead was dead.
It’s the story of the Christian communities of Luke. They are persecuted, victims of abuse. They see the triumph of the works of death; the wicked have the better over the pure in heart. They find themselves in the same state of mind as the disciples of Emmaus. They also stop with sad faces.
It is our story. We too find ourselves sometimes in the same state of mind. It happens when we have to admit that cunning prevails over honesty; when we are forced to acknowledge the lie becomes the official truth, imposed by those in power; when we see the prophets silenced or killed. Even then, we stop, sad, resigned in the face of an inevitable reality, forced to admit that the new world announced by Jesus probably would never come true.
But can a community born of faith in the Risen One indulge in these thoughts of death and give in to sadness? Are the sleepy and distracted but disappointed faces of the many participants in our Sunday assemblies mean anything? Are they signs of certainty in the victory of life or discouragement and despondency?
The two disciples of Emmaus are very familiar with the life of Jesus. They make a perfect summary of it, identical to what was taught in the catechism of the early church (vv. 19-20), but their synthesis has a serious flaw. It stops upon seeing the triumph of death. “Our leaders—Cleophas explains—handed him over to be sentenced to death and then killed him” (v. 20) and three days have already passed. This death is to be considered final.
Luke deliberately puts on their lips the thoughts of many Christians of his communities. They know well what Jesus did and taught. They considered him a wise person, one who, with his messages of peace and love, has changed the hearts of many people… but ended up in death like everyone else.
Whoever thinks in this way discovers only the outward appearance, the historical events in the life of Jesus. He does not have faith in him because he does not believe in his resurrection, which cannot be observed and demonstrated. The consequence of this incomplete knowledge is sadness. Without faith in the resurrection, defeats are defeats, life ends with death, and is a senseless tragedy.
How to get to this desperate situation?
The two of Emmaus have responsibilities. They have made mistakes.
First of all, they left the community whose members continued to search for an answer to what had happened. They preferred to go on their own, convinced that no one can make sense out of certain tragedies.
They have not verified if the women’s experience could be enlightening for them.
Many Christians were behaving as such in the time of Luke: in front of difficulties and persecutions, some abandoned their communities; others, almost on principle, refused the answers that came from faith. They did not even verify if they could have logic and sense.
A third error: The two disciples of Emmaus did not have the slightest doubt that their ideas about the triumphant messiah could be wrong. They were stubbornly clinging to tradition, to what they had been taught. They were impervious to the surprises and novelties of God.
Jesus does not abandon the people who choose the roads that lead to sadness. He becomes their companion in the journey.
As it always happens, the Risen One is not recognizable (someone thinks of seeing a ghost; Mary Magdalene takes him for a gardener; by the lake, he is considered a skilled fisherman). It’s not about miracles. It is a way to present the new situation of one who entered into the glory of God. It is a completely different condition from that of this world. The life of the resurrected ones is not an extension of the present life and the human eyes cannot capture it. That is the reason why the evangelists say that it was Jesus, but he was no longer the same. It was Jesus whom they touched, with whom they had eaten and drunk. He was the one who was dead: “Look at my hands and my feet and see that it is I myself” (Lk 24:39)—but he was completely different.
How do Cleophas and the unnamed disciple come to discover that Jesus, the loser, is the messiah? How can they understand that life is born from death?
The way that the Risen Lord makes them travel is through the Scriptures: It is the word of God that reveals the mystery.
Not having understood the Bible, the two disciples reason out as men. They cannot see with God’s eye that which happened. For this Jesus reminds them: “How dull you are, how slow of understanding! Is it not written that the Christ should suffer all this, and then enter into this glory?” (vv. 25-26).
The way of the cross is inconceivable and absurd for people. The only one who reads the Scriptures discovers that God is big enough to be able to extract from the great crime of men his masterpiece of salvation. It is not enough to read the word of God. One must understand it. For this, it is necessary that somebody explains it and possibly does it not as one who transmits an arid theological culture but as one “warming the heart.”
In the evening of that first “Sunday”, the disciples arrive home and Jesus is with them. When they were at table, he “took the bread, said a blessing, broke it, and gave each a piece” (v. 30). It is easy to understand what Luke wants to teach: the eyes of a Christian open and recognize the Risen Christ during the Sunday liturgical celebration.
In the story of the disciples of Emmaus, all elements of the celebration of the Eucharist are present: there is the entrance of the celebrant, then the Liturgy of the Word with the homily, finally, “the breaking of bread.”
Only at the time of the Eucharistic communion the eyes open and the disciples realize that the Risen One is in their midst, but without the Word, they would not have come to discover the Lord in the Eucharistic bread.
All must experience the encounter with the Risen One.
In the communitarian celebration they can contemplate him through the sacramental signs, but when they recognize him… he does not disappear, but the physical eyes cannot see him.
A final important element of this passage: the disciples of Emmaus, as soon as they recognized the Lord, rush to announce their discovery to their brothers and sisters and with them proclaim their faith: “The Lord is truly risen…” It is, we can say, the final hymn with which the Sunday celebration concludes. Its notes accompany the disciples for the rest of the week. They are the expression of the joy that they will bring to all men.
I said that Luke wrote for the Christians in the communities of the years 80-90 A.D., and aims to offer them the way to meet and recognize the Risen Christ in the “breaking of bread”. The way we are invited to travel today is not different.