Third Sunday of Easter: 19 April 2026
Readings: Acts 2:14, 22–28; Psalm 16:1–2, 5, 7–11; 1 Peter 1:17–21; Luke 24:13–35
| Disciples on the Way to Emmaus |
1. Easter: God meets in our narrations of fears and frustrations
The Gospel of Luke 24:13–35, the journey to Emmaus, is a deeply human and profoundly consoling resurrection narrative. It speaks not only of encountering the risen Lord, but of how He meets us in the ordinary paths of our lives—especially when we are confused, threatened, feared, disappointed, destroyed, discouraged, or lost.
Two disciples walk away from Jerusalem. They are leaving the place of hope because their expectations have been shattered. “We had hoped…”—that quiet sentence carries the weight of disappointment. How often our own faith echoes this: we had hoped for healing, a seat in a prestigious school or college, a fine job, promotion, good returns, a suitable partner, good crops, fantastic weather, happy endings, clarity, success, reconciliation. And yet life unfolds differently. The road to Emmaus is, in many ways, the road of our own disillusionment.
2. Easter: God walks in our utter failures
In moments of such unfocused, unattentive circumstances, God meets us. It is precisely on this road that Jesus comes near. Not in glory, not in overwhelming power, but as a companion who walks beside them. He listens. He asks questions. He allows them to pour out their confusion. The risen Lord does not impose Himself; He accompanies. There is something deeply pastoral here: God respects our pace, our process, even our inability to recognize Him.
The eyes of the disciples “kept from recognizing Him.” This is not merely a physical blindness—it is a spiritual one. When we are overwhelmed by grief, fear, or unmet expectations, we often fail to perceive God’s presence. Yet Jesus does not abandon them to their blindness. He begins to interpret their story through Scripture. He helps them see that suffering and glory are not opposites, but part of the same divine mystery.
3. Easter: Change happens when someone accompanies us
Change happens when we are at the mercy of God. It knows how to envelop a person and transform him or her. The disciples do agree: “Were not our hearts burning within us?” This is the quiet transformation of faith—not dramatic, but interior. The Word of God rekindles hope, even before clarity comes. Often, our hearts begin to recognize God before our minds do. For even when we do not recognize Him, He is already walking with us.
The turning point comes at the table. In the breaking of the bread, their eyes are opened. Their perspectives change radically. What Scripture began, the Eucharist completes. The same Jesus who walked with them is now revealed in a gesture so familiar, so simple. And yet, in that simplicity, everything becomes clear: He is alive. The disappearance of Jesus when they recognized him teaches us something profound: faith is not about clinging to physical sight, but about recognizing His presence in new ways—through Word, Sacrament, and community.
Questions for self-reflections
- Where are we on our own Emmaus journey?
- What prevents us from recognizing Jesus in our daily lives—fear, doubt, busyness, or unmet expectations?
- Are we unable to recognize Christ in our present situation?
- What step can we take today to walk more consciously with Jesus on our journey?
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