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The
Path of Life
April 6, 2008
Readings
for the Third Sunday
of Easter
| Reading
1: Acts 2:14, 22–33 |
| Responsorial
Psalm: Ps. 16:1–2, 5, 7–8, 9–10, 11 |
| Reading
2: 1 Pet. 1:17–21 |
| Gospel:
Lk. 24:13–35 |
| Link
to Readings |
By
Father Paul Hrezo
Jesus the Messiah
changed their lives. The Messiah, the all-powerful anointed
One, helped them to understand His suffering, death, and Resurrection.
He made His presence known to them in ways that both set their
hearts on fire and showed them the path of life.
As two of Jesus’
disciples traveled the road away from Jerusalem, they discussed
all that had happened in recent days. Their hopes had been
both confused and deflated. They had hoped that Jesus was
the one to redeem Israel. But, He had been betrayed and humiliated,
then crucified.
Now some women
who went to the tomb that morning said they had seen angels
who told them that Jesus was alive; what’s more, they
could not find His body there. This confusion was like the
road they were traveling on, descending from Jerusalem, with
its winding turns and its steep downhills. Though it was a
journey home, they felt a dread about were they were going.
They were still trying to sort things out. They would probably
conclude that it was best just to try to forget about it.
It would be best to get back to the daily routine and face
reality under Roman oppression, as it had been both throughout
their lives and throughout the Empire.
An
Unexpected Companion
Then a curious
and surprisingly enthusiastic traveler approaches them. He
indicates that he would like to join their debate. Why would
this stranger want to join such a downcast conversation? How
could they discuss with him something so confusing to them?
And who coming from Jerusalem would not have known about the
events of these past three days? As Cleopas describes the
events, the traveler seems to nod his head and shrug his shoulder
as if to say, “Of course.”
“But
isn’t it clear? This is how it was supposed to happen.
This is what was supposed to happen to the Messiah.”
They frown at each other then to him and say, “Betrayal,
humiliation, crucifixion, a missing body, and fantasies of
angels; this in fulfillment of God’s plan for
the all-powerful anointed One—where is that
in the prophets?” What kind of stranger breaks into
a conversation in order to confuse it more? Travelers and
visitors usually engage in polite talk about the weather,
then mind their own business.
But this
traveler begins to explain passages in the Scriptures which
do refer to the suffering and surrendering that the
Messiah, the all-powerful anointed One, would ironically endure.
He quotes from Isaiah 52:13, beginning with, “See, my
servant shall prosper, he shall be raised high and greatly
exalted,” through 53:4 and, “yet it was our infirmities
that he bore, our sufferings he endured, while we thought
of him as stricken, as one smitten by God and afflicted. But
he was pierced for our offenses, crushed for our sins; upon
him was the chastisement that makes us whole, by his stripes
we were healed.” He gives them further hope from this
same chapter of Isaiah with verse 11, “Because of his
affliction he shall see the light in fullness of days.”
He concludes with the rest of that chapter, “Through
his suffering my servant shall justify many and their guilt
he shall bear . . . he shall take away the sins of many and
win pardon for their offenses.”
He further enlightens
them by quoting Psalm 22 and showing it to be words of hope
and confidence beyond the despair expressed by “My God,
my God, why have you abandoned me.” They remember that
eyewitnesses at the Cross had heard those words from Jesus
just before His death. That psalm includes, “Yet, in
you our fathers trusted . . . and you delivered them.”
It concludes with, “All the ends of the earth shall
remember and turn to the Lord; All the families of nations
shall bow down before him.” The Messiah would break
the oppression of sin and death, be vindicated by “seeing
the light in fullness of days,” and so bring forgiveness
and salvation to peoples of all nations.
The traveler quotes
more and more passages that show the power of the Messiah’s
entrusting his sufferings to God and the offering of His life
for the forgiveness of sins.
The
Breaking of the Bread
As they arrive
near Emmaus, they invite this illuminating traveler to stay
with them, since the night around them is settling in more
deeply. As they share food with him, they ask him to offer
the blessing, since he is so versed in and so trusting of
the ways of God’s blessings.
The traveler had
explained that the Messiah’s body had been raised and
broken on the cross; they see it again as the traveler breaks
open this loaf of unleavened bread of Passover-tide. And,
they see the wound marks on his hands! Their eyes are opened!
And the Messiah vanishes from their eyesight.
Now, no longer
downcast, they sprint along the road back uphill to Jerusalem.
Though it is now night they see a light shining through the
window of where the Eleven are gathered. To them they proclaim,
“We have seen him! He set our hearts on fire and opened
our eyes. The breaking of bread, the offering of his life
for the forgiveness of sins—this is the path of life!
The Messiah is alive and with us.” The others rejoiced,
too, from having encountered the Messiah in their midst. He
had calmed their fears, had supped with them too, and had
focused the path of their lives on “doing this in memory
of me”: preaching a message of repentance for the forgiveness
of sins.
Jesus had changed
their lives today. Today, both on the road and in their gatherings
in Emmaus and in Jerusalem, He had set their hearts on fire
and had shown them the path of life!
Fr.
Paul Hrezo, a priest of the Diocese of Steubenville, is currently
serving as Spiritual Director for the college seminarians
at the Pontifical College Josephinum in Columbus, Ohio. He
is also the current State Chaplain for the Knights of Columbus.
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