Sermon for Monday in Easter Week

“Be it unto me according to thy word”

The word for Easter is Resurrection. But how do we know about the Resurrection? How do we begin to understand what is meant by the Resurrection? Few Gospel stories illumine our understanding better than Luke’s famous story of Christ on the Road to Emmaus. “He was known of them in the breaking of the bread.”

“Him God raised up the third day, and showed him openly, Luke tells in the Lesson from Acts, rehearsing features of the life of Christ and especially the events of the Passion and then the Resurrection, or rather the making known of his Resurrection. The Risen Christ is made known “unto witnesses chosen before of God, even to us,”Luke suggests, “who did eat and drink with him after he rose from the dead,”the very things which his Gospel account, too, will emphasize. The Resurrection, it seems, can only be known by way of testimony, by way of witnesses, by way of a reflection on extraordinary things. Thus Luke’s Gospel shows the Risen Christ running out after us, as it were, and inserting himself into our conversation about our perplexities and confusions, drawing out of us, in good Socratic fashion the nature of our own uncertainties and, then, providing a way to make sense of it all. So in the story of the Road to Emmaus, we have two disciples fleeing Jerusalem in fear because of the events of the crucifixion, “talk[ing] together of all these things that had happened.”Jesus joins them but is not recognized by them; after all, they aren’t expecting him given the events of the crucifixion and its aftermath.

He gets them to explain their perplexities about the crucifixion itself and then the report of the women and the other disciples, and even the vision of angels about the empty tomb. “Foolish one, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken,” Jesus says to them, “ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory?”Note, once again, that conjunction of suffering and glory. With that compelling introduction, “he expounded unto them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself.”It becomes a repeated trope by Luke, namely, the idea of Christ “opening to us the Scriptures”and “opening their understanding”to provide us a way of thinking the radical nature of the Resurrection.

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Monday In Easter Week

The collect for today, Monday in Easter Week, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

ALMIGHTY God, who through thine only begotten Son Jesus Christ hast overcome death, and opened unto us the gate of everlasting life: We humbly beseech thee, that as by thy special grace thou dost put into our minds good desires, so by thy continual help we may bring the same to good effect; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen.

The Lesson: Acts 10:34-43
The Gospel: St. Luke 24:13-35

Franz Ittenbach, Road to EmmausArtwork: Franz Ittenbach, Road to Emmaus, 1835. Oil on canvas, Kolumba, Art Museum of the Archdiocese of Cologne.

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