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Emmaus

On the Road to Emmaus

April 20, 2026 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

Two of the disciples of Jesus were on the road that leads to Emmaus. They were low because their Master had been crucified like a common thief. But now they’d heard reports that their Master was not dead at all. Reliable sources have told them that he had appeared to some of their most trusted friends. Was he really alive? Should they believe the good news or the bad? And that’s our dilemma, isn’t it? DO WE BELIEVE THE GOOD NEWS OR THE BAD? The good news is that Christ is alive. The bad news is how little impact that event is having in our world.

The Jewish custom required that the two disciples invite Jesus to a meal. Hence, they invited Him for a night’s rest in their house–and Jesus accepted the invitation. During the meal, when Jesus broke the bread, the disciples realized that this stranger was not a stranger after all – this was Jesus, the Risen Christ. Later they said to each other, “Did not our hearts burn within us when he opened up the Scriptures to us?”  Hidden for a time, Jesus took delight in revealing himself in the breaking of the bread.  Mangiare! Eat up! It’s good for you!

You will recall on Easter morning, Jesus told the disciples to “go home” – this time they “go back” -walking 7 miles to Jerusalem to share their story.   They were probably pondering all along the way how they, like Mary Magdalene, did not recognize Jesus.  For Mary the revelation (Jesus’ delight) came when she heard Jesus’ voice.  For the Emmaus disciples it was the breaking of the bread.    That continues to this day, Jesus meets us on our way to Emmaus, in the ordinary experiences of our lives, and in the places to which we retreat when life is too much for us. The story warns us, however, that the risen Lord will take delight in coming to us when we least expect him.

In the story of Winnie-the-Pooh, Pooh and Piglet are taking their evening walk. For a long time they walk in the kind of silence good friends can share.  Finally, Piglet asks, “When you wake up in the morning, Pooh, what’s the first thing you say to yourself?” “What’s for breakfast?” answers Pooh and then asks. “And what do you say, Piglet?” Piglet says, “I say, I wonder what exciting thing is going to happen today?”   You and I can’t really plan to meet the Risen Christ because we never really know when or where He’s going to show up. But you can be sure of this: He will show up.  Take delight in his revelation!

Have you heard about the little boy who told his mother, “I’m going out to play ball with God.”  When his mother asked him just how he could do this, the little boy answered: “Oh, I throw the ball up to His sky, and He throws it back to me.”  Jesus will not disappoint you – You can depend on Him – throw the ball up – He will toss it back – be careful it does not land on your head because you failed to recognize him in the unexpected moment.  Consider when an idea comes to you “from out of the blue”.  Might it be God throwing it back to you with the prayer you tossed in his lap?  Might it be God’s way of saying: “Catch!  You can handle this one?”

How about the tale of the young boy walking home through the park after attending a Sunday school class? Somehow, he couldn’t stop thinking about the Bible lesson for that day. What impressed him most was when the teacher said, “You will find the risen Jesus in everyone you meet.” As he continued through the park, he noticed an old woman sitting on a bench. She looked lonely and hungry. So he sat down next to her, took out the chocolate bar he had saved and offered some to her. She accepted it with a beautiful smile.  They sat together in silence, just smiling at each other.  When the boy was leaving, he had gone short distance when he ran back to the bench, and gave the woman a big hug. When he arrived home, his mother asked, “What’s making you so happy today?” He said, “I shared my chocolate bar with Jesus.” Before his mother could ask more questions, he added, “You know, she has the most beautiful smile in the world.”  Meanwhile, the old woman returned to her little apartment where she lived with her sister who remarked, “You seem really happy today.  “I am,” she replied, “I was sitting in the park, eating a chocolate bar with Jesus. And, you know, he looks a lot younger than I expected.”   Isn’t that the lesson in today’s gospel?  We will meet and experience the risen Jesus in unexpected places and persons.  Make someone smile and take care to notice God’s delight in the smiles returned to you.

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB

 

 

 

Next issue of TIDE is in the mail …  if you are not on our mailing list you can find it on line at www.benedictinesistersoffl.org

  God bless you and your family.

 

 

 

First Reading:   Acts 2:14         Second Reading:  1 Peter 1:17-21
Gospel:   Luke 24:13-35
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: bread, Christ, disciples, Easter, Emmaus, Jesus, Master, On the Road to Emmaus

Active Contemplation

April 19, 2021 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

On this third Sunday of Easter, we continue to hear accounts of Jesus’ appearances following his Resurrection.  The first lines of this Gospel refer to the Emmaus story.  Two disciples were taking a Sunday stroll – well, a seven-mile walk – chatting about the events of the last several days.  Suddenly a stranger unceremoniously slipped into their company.  In today’s account, the two disciples hurry back to Jerusalem to report the glad news of how they recognized Jesus in the breaking of bread.  To their surprise, they discovered that the apostles, still hiding in the Upper Room, were already convinced of the resurrection of Jesus.  Mary of Magdala had told them and Simon also had seen Him.

Consistent with all the reports of Jesus’ post-Resurrection appearances, He greets the assembled disciples with the words, “Peace be with you.”  They have witnessed the death of someone they loved, and they fear for their own lives.  Peace is what they need more than anything else.  But, at Jesus’ sudden appearance they are startled and terrified.  They are uncertain about what to make of the figure before them.  Quite understandably, they mistake Jesus for a ghost.  Yet the figure before them is not a ghost; Jesus invites them to experience his resurrected body with their senses, to look and to touch.  They can’t forget his sufferings but peace begins to take root in their hearts, as their fears turn to joy and amazement.

This is Jesus: real and alive as he had been over the past three years.  He asks for something to eat – a sign they recognize and cannot deny.  It convinces them that they are not dreaming or having a mere vision or hallucination.  He goes on to explain to them how the prophecies are being fulfilled in him.  The evangelist says Jesus “opened their minds to understand the Scriptures.”  A lectio experience – one we ask for as we enter into a period of lectio or centering prayer or active contemplation.  Sounds like a contradiction: active contemplation?  But often it takes concerted effort to “quiet down” to let the Spirit come into our presence.  We actively say NO to all the distractions that may tempt us to do almost anything: read, do an act of charity, visit the sick, talk to the lonely, do a puzzle, clean a room, catch up on the news, – the devil calls us to do anything rather than center ourselves to give Jesus prime space and allow the Spirit to “open our minds, our ears, our hearts.”  As one author puts it: “contemplation is the gift given simply because we showed up.”  Like the disciples, we gather in mutual support.  We pray, we eat and Jesus steps into our midst saying: “Peace! See, it is I.”

This gospel, and all the appearances of the resurrected Jesus, show us not only how Jesus convinced his disciples of his resurrection, but this same Jesus prepares us to come together to listen to God’s words and offer ourselves along with our gifts of bread and wine.  And don’t minimize the parting message at Mass: “Go forth to share the message you have received.”  We can’t share what we do not have – so listen up, attune your mind and your heart, read the Scriptures ahead of time, let the message begin to steep like tea in the warmness of your heart.

The philosopher Soren Kierkegaard once told a story about a circus that caught fire.  The flames spread to the fields surrounding the circus grounds and began to burn toward the village below.  The circus master, convinced that the village would be destroyed and the people killed unless they were warned, asked if there was anybody who could go to the village and warn the people.  The clown, dressed in full costume, jumped on a bicycle and sped down the hill to the village below.  “Run for your lives!  Run for your lives!  “A fire is coming and the village is going to burn!” he shouted as he rode up and down the streets.  Curious, the villagers came out of their houses and shops and stood along the sidewalks.  They shouted back to the clown, laughing and applauding his performance.  The more desperately the clown shouted, the more the villagers cheered.  The village burned to the ground and the loss of life was great because no one took the clown seriously.  After all, he was just a clown.

When Jesus comes in our door, do we recognize Him?  Maybe he’s not dressed as a clown or shouting and waving.  How will we recognize Him?  Have we met Him often enough in our everyday lives that we immediately recognize Him?  Have we met Him in the wounds of the poor?  Or in the broken hearts of the bereaved?  In the victims of violence?  In people who live in dire poverty – maybe with ragged, smelly clothing because they have no place to wash up?  Maybe there are times when it is easier to see Jesus in the face of the stranger or the guest than it is in the face of the Sister (spouse, person) across from us at the dinner table or the chapel aisle or walking the hallways.  Jesus says: “Look at my hands and my feet (we can add: look at my face); see that it is I, your Lord.”

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB, Prioress

First Reading:   Acts 3:13-15,17-19   Second Reading:  1 John 2:1-5a
Gospel:  Luke 24:35-48
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: 3rd Easter Sunday, active contemplation, centering prayer, Emmaus, Jesus, Jesus' resurrection, lectio, Peace, post-resurrection, resurrection, See it is I

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