
The story of the disciples of Emmaus (Luke 24) is one of the most beautiful and human pages in the Gospel: two disillusioned men, their hope shattered, walking away from Jerusalem. And yet, it is on that very dark path that they meet the Risen Lord without recognising him. Through three movements – the limitation of human reason alone, the patient pedagogy of Jesus as a travelling companion, and the recognition in the breaking of the bread – this text offers us a profound and timely reflection on how faith is renewed: not through immediate certainty, but through listening, hospitality, and communion.
Hope
lost, faith found through charity
The story of the two
disciples can be described as an experience of transformation from
spiritual blindness to the recognition of the Risen One. I will
comment on three movements that in some way have something important
to say to us today.
Human
understanding alone leaves us stranded
The disciples on the
road to Emmaus represent the limits of purely human interpretation.
They knew the events – the crucifixion, the rumours of the
empty tomb – but only as information. These facts represented only
a “tomb”, a “failure”, a “dead end”. ‘We had hoped that
he would be the one to redeem Israel’ (Luke 24:21). Everything
reduced to things belonging to the past. Hope was already dead.
This
sentiment speaks powerfully to our own time. We live surrounded by
information, but often stranded in meaninglessness. The news cycles,
the traumas, the contradictions of our time – when read only
through human analysis, they lead to despair. The disciples’
conversation mirrors our own: meaningless facts become a burden
rather than a light. Their thinking was locked in the box of their
own human categories, and these alone cannot embrace the frontier of
the resurrection.
How often do we too try to “solve” faith
only with reason, with social analysis, with the resolution of
institutional problems? It is an effort that lacks the breath of the
divine, an effort that loses spiritual oxygen.
Jesus as
companion: prophetic enlargement
What is striking is that
Jesus, setting out on the road with them, does not reveal himself
immediately. Instead, he first listens (‘Why are you
talking about all this?’), then teaches. He does not underestimate
their pain, but addresses it with patient pedagogy: ‘Beginning with
Moses and all the prophets, he explained to them what was said about
himself in all the Scriptures’ (Luke 24:27).
Jesus does not
impose understanding, even though it is what they need. Jesus invites
them to broaden their understanding. He gently invites them out of
their labyrinth. The disciples’ reasoning, the Messiah they
imagined, all of this is broadened and deepened through the
Scriptures. The message of the prophets is a living text, not a dead
one.
The most beautiful detail is that while they listened
attentively, they did not recognise him while he taught.
Recognition comes later. With their hope still wavering, they offer
their dear companion their hospitality (the breaking of bread).
Here
we have a beautiful lesson for us today. It is not just a matter of
transmitting doctrine, noble and urgent as it is. People need to be
helped calmly and patiently to see their own lives, their own
questions, their own hopes within the broader understanding
of Jesus’ message. This listening requires community; it feeds on
communion. It is a step towards true understanding, that is the
moment when the ‘eyes of the heart’ are opened.
Encountering
him in the breaking of bread: eyes open without seeing
The
paradox is exquisite: ‘Their eyes were opened and they recognised
him, but he vanished from their sight’ (Luke 24:31). They encounter
him precisely by not seeing him, but by recognising him in
the action of hospitality and communion.
This is the
most profound point. The Eucharist is not just a ritual remembrance,
but the ongoing reality of Christ’s presence through the gift and
sharing of himself. The two disciples ‘now’ do not need constant
visual proof. They have experienced something deeper: participation
in his gift.
I would like to share some insights for our journey
based on these three small steps.
a.
Leaving behind a faith that is enslaved to the immediate and to
appearances.
Even today, we risk living our faith in Jesus
with the same dominant mentality of calculation: I want to see, to be
certain. I accept, yes, but with certain conditions. Instead, Jesus,
the companion of Emmaus, invites us to a different way that begins
with closeness, enriched by listening, and leads to communion. This
path is marked by patience and charity. Gradually, Jesus asks us to
dismantle those structures of fear and defence that keep us prisoners
of ourselves.
The Jesus we discover through teaching invites us
to go further: entering into and taking on his model of
self-giving. He asks us to renounce false images, to escape from
traps of dependency of every kind, offering himself as an example:
offering himself to the point of the cross. Fixing our eyes on him,
dead and risen, we recognise our “prisons” without fear, and we
overcome them with courage.
b. The
authentic experience of faith is recognised through hospitality.
The
two disciples could have resisted Jesus’ words. Instead, they did
not! They allowed themselves to be challenged. Let us not forget that
they had lost all hope, perhaps even their faith. However, they had
not lost their capacity for welcome and hospitality: they were still
disciples capable of living charity!
Here, at this point, and
only at this moment, there is a turning point: they recognised him by
giving him hospitality. By welcoming Jesus, Jesus gave them
everything, all of himself. They asked Jesus to stay “with them”.
Instead, Jesus rewarded them by remaining “in them”!
c. The
Eucharist as the culmination and beginning.
The breaking of
bread is not the end of the story; rather, it is the beginning of
their authentic story. Although evening was falling, the two
disciples immediately returned to Jerusalem, to the community, to
bear witness. Now the darkness outside no longer has power over the
light that fills the heart of the believer. The true power of the
Eucharist is that which pushes us outward, toward others,
upward.
This is the beauty of faith in Christ, sustained by hope
and lived with charity!