THE ROAD TO EMMAUS
Luke 24:13-34
Prayer
It was the first Easter
Sunday.
Three days had passed since
the death and burial of Jesus (Verse 21).
Several women went to the
tomb to anoint His body.
But the stone had been rolled
away.
And His body was gone.
Luke said the women “were
much perplexed.”
Suddenly, “two men stood by
them in shining garments:”
“And as they were afraid, and
bowed down their faces to the earth, they said unto
them, Why seek ye the living among the dead?”
“He is not here, but is risen:”
“Remember how he spake unto you when he was yet in Galilee,”
“Saying, The Son of man must
be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and be
crucified, and the third day rise again” (Luke 24:4-7).
The women rushed to tell the
disciples.
Peter and John ran to the
tomb.
It was empty.
Word spread like wildfire.
Two men who had been
following Jesus heard it.
But they needed to leave
Jerusalem
“And, behold, two of them went
that same day to a village called Emmaus, which
was from Jerusalem about threescore furlongs” (Verse 13).
One man was named Cleopas.
The other is not identified.
They were going to a village
called Emmaus which was about seven miles from
Jerusalem.
They were sad.
Not much that had happened in
the last three days made sense to them.
“And they talked together of
all these things which had happened” (Verse 14).
I can almost hear them.
“Why did Jesus go to
Jerusalem?
“Why didn’t He run when the
soldiers came to arrest Him?
“Why didn’t the disciples
defend Him?”
“Why did Peter deny Him?”
“Did Pilate crucify Him
because He was afraid of the Jews?”
So these men were talking
about what had gone on over the last three days.
“And it came to pass, that,
while they communed together and reasoned, Jesus
himself drew near, and went with them” (Verse 15).
They were analyzing the
situation when Jesus appeared.
He walked along with them.
“But their eyes were holden that they should not know him” (Verse 16)
They didn’t recognize Him.
Mark said, He appeared unto
them “in another form” (Mark 16:12).
We can’t recognize Jesus
unless He allows it.
Many think they can get saved
anytime they want.
But it won’t happen unless
Jesus allows it.
Hosea predicted that Judah
would get in trouble and seek the Lord.
But Judah wouldn’t find Him.
Why?
Because Judah dealt treacherously with the Lord when they had an
opportunity to
repent (Hos. 5:6, 7).
Isaiah said, “Seek ye the
LORD while he may be found, call ye upon him while he
is near” (Isa. 55:6).
He implied a time when God’s
offer of salvation will be withdrawn.
And how do we explain the
blinding of the Jews;
That many Jews cannot
recognize Jesus as long as the Church is in the world?
Anyway, Jesus had a question
for these two men:
“What manner of
communications are these that ye have one to another, as ye walk,
and are sad” (Verse 17)?
He already knew the answer.
He’s God.
But He was teaching them to
focus on the Scriptures in times of sadness.
It’s difficult to do.
But we should count our
blessings not our problems.
The value of our life is not
determined by whether we have problems or not.
It’s determined by who we
belong to.
If we belong to God, things
may not work out the way we want.
But things will work out for
the best.
And when we lose a loved one,
we should focus on what the Scriptures say.
Anyway, Jesus asked these men
a question.
“And the one of them, whose
name was Cleopas, answering said unto him, Art thou
only a stranger in Jerusalem, and hast not known the things which are come to
pass there in these days” (Verse 18)?
He was implying that Jesus
was out of it or He would know what had been going on
in Jerusalem,
during the last three days.
The crucifixion of Jesus had
impacted the whole city.
Three million people were
talking about it.
“And he [Jesus] said unto
them, What things?”
“And they said unto him,
Concerning Jesus of Nazareth, which was a prophet
mighty in deed and word before God and all the people”
(Verse 19).
Notice,
four things.
First, Cleopas
said, Jesus “was a prophet.”
“Was” (past
tense).
He believed Jesus was still
dead.
Second, Cleopas
said, Jesus was “mighty in deed.”
Jesus performed great
miracles.
He raised the dead on several
occasions.
Cleopas should’ve believed in the resurrection of the dead.
We sometimes claim to believe
things in the Scriptures.
But we don’t act like it.
We’re inconsistent.
We need to practice what we
believe.
The Bible is clear about the
resurrection of the dead.
Jesus was raised.
Our loved ones will be
raised.
And we will be raised.
That’s shouting ground folks.
Our new heavenly bodies will
be wonderful bodies.
Heaven’s a better place than
this place.
I visited a friend in the
hospital yesterday.
His heart was acting up.
One of his children asked,
“Has this been going on very long?”
He said, “I’ve been hurting
some for a few days.”
His child asked, “Why didn’t
you tell us?”
He said, “I’m not trying to
commit suicide.”
But I know to be absent from
the body is to be present with the Lord.
Third, Cleopas
said Jesus was “mighty in word.”
No one ever spoke like Jesus.
He taught as One having
authority.
And fourth, Cleopas said Jesus did these things “before God and all the
people.”
His miracles and teachings
were public events.
Multitudes saw Him raise the
dead.
They heard His incredible
teachings.
When Paul stood before King
Agrippa he was persuaded that none of these things
were hidden from him.
He said, “these
things were not done in a corner” (Acts 26:26).
They were public events.
And everybody knew about it.
Next, Cleopas
said, “the chief priests and our rulers delivered him to be condemned
to death, and have crucified him” (Verse 20).
Some of you have seen Mel
Gibson’s movie The Passion of the Christ.
You’re aware of the
controversy about who killed Jesus.
Cleopas said the chief priests;
And rulers of Israel
condemned Him to death.
And
crucified Him.
But we know that in a greater
sense all of us are all responsible for the death of
Jesus
because all of us are all sinners.
He died for our sins.
Ralph Earle calls the death
of Jesus the world’s blackest hour.
And the world’s brightest
hour;
The world’s blackest hour
because an innocent man suffered for our sin;
The world’s
brightest hour because our loving God used it to redeem sinful people.
Cleopas said, “we trusted that it had been he which should
have redeemed Israel:
and beside all this, to day is the third day since these
things were done” (Verse 21).
His hopes were shattered.
His hope that Jesus was Israel’s redeemer;
That Jesus would break the
Roman yoke;
And establish the kingdom of God
here on earth.
Jesus had been dead for three
days.
And Cleopas
didn’t see any evidence that Jesus was in control.
He said, “Yea, and certain
women also of our company made us astonished, which
were early at the sepulchre”
(Verse 22).
“And when they found not his
body, they came, saying, that they had also seen a
vision of angels, which said that he was alive” (Verse 23).
“And certain of them which
were with us went to the sepulchre, and found it even
so as the women had said: but him they saw not” (Verse
24).
Cleopas didn’t believe what the women said about an empty tomb;
Seeing angels;
Jesus being
alive.
Peter and John verified that
the tomb was empty.
But they didn’t see a living
Jesus.
So Cleopas
didn’t believe that Jesus was raised from the dead.
How many of us have hoped that
Jesus would fix something in our lives, and failed to
believe that anything was being done?
How many of us have prayed
for something, and when we didn’t get it, we were
sad?
That’s what Cleopas was going through.
He was hoping that Jesus was Israel’s redeemer.
But Jesus had died.
So Cleopas
didn’t believe Jesus was getting the job done.
Anyway, Jesus didn’t let
these false assumptions stand.
“He said unto them, O fools,
and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have
spoken” (Verse 25).
He could’ve opened their eyes
so they would know who He was;
Showed them the nail prints;
Performed a miracle;
But He chastised them for not
believing the Scriptures.
Abraham Lincoln said,
“Without the Bible we would not know the difference
between right and wrong.”
That’s exactly what happened
here.
These men ignored the
Scriptures.
And they didn’t understand
the situation.
We lose loved ones.
We have to deal with it.
Jesus was saying, “Don’t
ignore the Scriptures.”
Jesus asked, “Ought not
Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his
glory” (Verse 26)?
The Scriptures predicted the
death and burial of Jesus.
If the prophets were speaking
for God, shouldn’t we believe that would happen?
Dr. J. Vernon McGee said we
live in an age of doubt;
An age when many people
believe they will not be considered intelligent if they
believe the Bible.
He said, it’s a Satanic trap.
Jesus said a man is a fool
not to believe it.
We need to believe the Bible.
It tells us what God says
about the resurrection of the dead, eternal life, and all
those things.
Next, Jesus focused on what
the Scriptures say.
“And beginning at Moses and all
the prophets, he expounded unto them in all the
scriptures the things concerning himself” (Verse 27).
Jesus started with the
writings of Moses.
He went through the writings
of the prophets.
He explained what the Old
Testament says about Him.
Rev. Ron Richie
summarizes His teachings like this:
Jesus is:
The Passover Lamb in Exodus.
The Atonement in Leviticus.
The Smitten Rock in Numbers.
The Prophet to come in Deuteronomy.
The Sheep that was led to the slaughter in Isaiah.
The Branch of Righteousness in Jeremiah.
The Plant of Renown in Ezekiel.
The Stone that smote Nebuchadnezzar’s image in Daniel.
The Ideal Israel in Hosea.
The Hope of the people in Joel.
The Heavenly Husbandman in Amos.
The Saviour in Obadiah.
The Resurrection and Life in Jonah.
The Restorer in Micah.
The Publisher of Peace in Nahum.
The Anointed One in Habakkuk.
The Mighty One in Zephaniah.
The Desired One of all nations in Haggai.
The Headstone of the House of God in Zechariah.
The Son of Righteousness with healing in His wings in Malachi.
The Old Testament says a lot
about Jesus.
It says He would die for the
sins of the world;
And be raised from the dead
on the third day.
After His resurrection, Jesus
appeared unto His disciples.
He said, “These are the words
which I spake unto you, while I was yet with you,”
“That all things must be
fulfilled, which were written in the law of Moses, and
in the
prophets, and in the psalms, concerning me” (Luke 24:44).
Everything in the Old
Testament must be fulfilled.
But let’s get back to the men
on the road to Emmaus.
“And they drew nigh unto the
village, whither they went:”
“And he made as though he
would have gone further.”
“But they constrained him,
saying, Abide with us: for it is toward evening, and the
day is far spent.”
“And he went in to tarry with
them” (Verses 28-29).
As they approached Emmaus
Jesus pretended that He was going to continue on
down the road.
I honestly think He was
fishing for an invitation to spend more time with them.
He won’t force anyone to
spend time with Him.
But it was getting late.
The men urged Him to stay
with them.
He went into their house.
“And it came to pass, as he
sat at meat with them, he took bread, and blessed it, and
brake, and gave to them.”
“And their eyes were opened,
and they knew him; and he vanished out of their
sight” (Verses 30-31).
They took communion.
What do we say when we take
communion?
“This is my body which is
broken for you.”
“This is my blood which is
shed for you.”
When Jesus did this, their
eyes were opened.
They recognized Him.
Then, He disappeared.
Before we go to the next
verse, let’s notice something else.
He was in His resurrected
body.
But He could eat and drink.
Some day we will have a
resurrected body.
And we will be able to eat
and drink.
Also, I’m sometimes asked how
old will I look when I’m in my resurrected body?
Notice,
that Jesus could appear in a different form (Mk. 16:12).
I don’t know.
But I tend to believe we will
be able to appear in different forms;
As a
teenager, mid-twenties, or whatever.
“And they said one to
another, Did not our heart burn within us, while he
talked
with us by the way, and while he opened to us the
scriptures?”
“And they rose up the same hour,
and returned to Jerusalem, and found the eleven
gathered together, and them that were with them,”
“Saying, The Lord is risen indeed, and hath appeared to Simon” (Verses 32-34).
They were full of hope again.
Jesus was alive.
They saw Him;
Talked to Him;
Ate with
Him.
They would never forget their
first Easter Sunday.
They had walked about seven
miles from Jerusalem.
And by now it was probably
dark outside.
But they walked back to
Jerusalem in the dark;
Found the eleven disciples;
And they heard the disciples
say, “The Lord is risen indeed, Peter saw Him.”
What a difference a day
makes!
These two men began the first
Easter Sunday believing Jesus had died, that
someone stole His body, and the reports of His resurrection
were false.
They were sad and without
hope.
They ended the first Easter
Sunday with a seven mile walk in the dark knowing
that Jesus had been raised from the dead and declaring
that the reports of His
resurrection were true.
There’s very little connection
to what I’m going to say next.
But we now have a lottery in
Tennessee called the Tennessee Millionaire.
A person’s chances of winning
the Tennessee Millionaire are several million to one
against it.
Some would say “Winning the
Tennessee Millionaire is hopeless.”
But according to the Bible,
the chance of us being raised from the dead is one to
one.
Some would say, “The chance
of us being raised from the dead is one hundred
percent.”
If we believe the Scriptures
when they say we will be raised from the dead, it should
do three things:
1) Give us hope,
2) Cause us to stop being sad, and
3) Cause us to live right.
The disciples were firmly
convinced that the resurrection of Jesus was true.
They immediately went out and
preached it.
They suffered persecution and
horrible deaths defending it.
Let us believe it.
And declare it with our whole
heart.