Here are some thoughts that I shared with those who came to pray with us this weekend, inspired by the gospel account of the return of the disciples from Emmaus, and by the encounter the disciples had with the risen Jesus.
Can you believe
it?
My maternal grandfather died when I was still a
teenager. After his funeral had been
celebrated, my grandmother would sometimes tell us that grandpa would appear at the foot of the bed during the
night. He wouldn’t speak to her, but he
would stand there, as if to reassure her that there is indeed life after
death. Since that time, others who have
experienced the death of a loved one have spoken on occasion about similar
experiences. Although you might think
that the natural human reaction to such occurrences might be fear, in reality
it’s often a very peaceful encounter.
Today’s gospel passage continues the story of a series of
such encounters that the disciples had after the death of Jesus. The two disciples had found the eleven and their companions and were
telling them what had happened on the
road to Emmaus (Lk 24:35). Can you
imagine what that conversation was like?
These two would have been excited to tell the others about how their
hearts had burned within them as their travelling companion had spoken to
them. Others in the group would also
have had their own stories to tell about an encounter at the tomb early that
morning, and since excitement would still have been mixed with incredulity on
the part of some of those who heard these words, Jesus himself stood among them and said: Peace be with you! (Lk
24:36). Of course they were startled and terrified; who among us wouldn’t be? … but
Jesus’ words to them immediately put them at ease: Why are you frightened, and why do doubts arise in your hearts? (Lk
24:38). Encounters with Jesus are never terrifying; instead he has a very
calming influence and time spent with him is never wasted. He’s endlessly concerned about putting our
preoccupations to rest so that our hearts can be at peace, like the silent but
peaceful encounters that the dying often have with angels who have come to
accompany them on the final steps of their journey home.
Human beings are not always quick to believe in the
supernatural, or to accept the stories that are told about moments when the
veil that separates earth from heaven is so thin that we can see through
it. Jesus knew that even if this were
true, his disciples wouldn’t immediately believe, so he showed them his hands and his feet (Lk 24:40) and he asked them for
something to eat (cf Lk 24:41) so that he could prove to them that he was not a
ghost.
These weeks of the Easter season allow us the precious
opportunity to re-tell the story of those first days following the
Resurrection. Like the disciples, we too
need concrete proof at times in order to believe that what we have heard can
really be true, and only when we believe for ourselves that Jesus is risen,
will we be concerned about living as he has told us (cf 1 Jn 2:1-5), but once
we ourselves have come to believe, we will also be able to share the joyful
news that we have come to know about Jesus, about his love for us, about the
fact that he was willing to die for us and about the fact that God raised him
to life again. This is what Peter and the
other disciples did when they went out from the Upper Room and began to speak
with others in Jerusalem and in other places about all they had seen and come
to believe.
I like to think of Peter standing there at the gate of
the temple, not accusing but rather explaining: The God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob, the God of
our fathers has glorified his servant Jesus (Acts 3:13). In fact Jesus had to suffer and die for us,
so that we would be convinced about the lengths he is willing to go to in order
to show us how much we are loved. In this way, God fulfilled what he had
foretold through all the Prophets, that his Anointed One would suffer (Acts
3:18), but that wasn’t the end of the story.
Like the first disciples, once we have come to believe
that Christ suffered and died because of his love for us, we too discover the
folly of our ways, and want to repent for our unbelief. When we believe that Jesus is truly risen,
stories about wordless encounters with loved ones who have returned home will
not scare us; they will fill us with hope.
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