Don’t Run Away | Friar Reflections | Third Sunday of Easter

Saints of God…

…the Lord be with you!

“They (the disciples) stopped, looking downcast.” We find these words in today’s Gospel according to Luke (24:13-35). As we are in the midst of the Easter Season, it might do us well to recall times and circumstances in our own lives that “pulled the rug out from under us”, made us stop, and caused our hearts and spirits to be downcast. What most of us can, or will at some point experience, is the death of a loved one. And this is what the two disciples are experiencing on their journey away from Jerusalem towards Emmaus.

Jerusalem, the place where Jesus the Nazarene was handed over to death by the chief priests and rulers of the people. Jesus the Nazarene, “a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people.” Jerusalem the place they now associate with pain, grief, suffering, cruelty, their own cowardness, and death. No wonder they wanted to get out! To be honest, I would have too.

Yet through an encounter with the Christ they do not recognize, through their offer of hospitality, and the sharing of a meal in which “he took bread, said the blessing, broke it and gave it to them.” Their eyes were opened; Christ is no sooner recognized that He vanishes. Their “hearts burn within them”, their fear is gone replaced with courage and conviction. Grief dies to joy and the two “set out at once and return to Jerusalem” where they hear “the Lord has truly been raised and has appeared to Simon!”

To be honest, we live in uncertain times (but isn’t every time filled with uncertainty). Sometimes I am worried and afraid. But I don’t try to run away (for there is nowhere to run). Instead, I am reminded of the words of St. Peter in our first reading, “God raised Him (Jesus) up, releasing Him from the throes of death, because it was impossible for Him to be held by it.”

We may not be able to control the events around us. But we do have control over how we respond. When in the grip of fear, guilt, pain, depression, or distress, let us turn to our God in faith and recall that because death could not hold Jesus, fear, guilt, pain, depression, or distress does not have the final and ultimate hold on us. Christ does! Christ is Risen! He is Risen indeed!

– Fr. Steve