19 April 2026 Saint Athanasius Lutheran Church
Easter 3 Vienna, VA
“Restoring Hope through the
Word”
Text: Luke
24:13-35; 1 Peter 1:17-25
Alleluia! Christ is risen! [He is risen indeed!
Alleluia!] Alleluia!
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Father,
and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
We had hoped.
We had hope.
Now we do not. It’s gone. It died on a cross.
So it was for those two men walking, trudging, back
to Emmaus. Maybe the longest seven miles of their lives. Two of them,
Luke says. Two disciples of Jesus. Two who knew Him . . . or thought they did.
We had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel.
We had hoped.
We had hope.
Now we do not.
Their hopes are dashed. No, shattered. No,
obliterated. The kind of obliteration there’s no coming back from. Crushing.
Death does that.
You probably know something of that. If it hasn’t
happened to you, you’ve probably seen it happen to someone else.
When I was in Seminary, my second year, a fourth
year student, Ray, just a couple of months from receiving his call, graduating,
and becoming a pastor was killed in a car crash right at the front gate of the
Seminary. His fiancée in the car with him survived, but was critically injured.
We had hoped . . .
Marriages start with great hope and joy and
celebration. Til death us do part. The hope of children. A future and
life together. But how many end too soon? From death, from sin, from
selfishness. We had hoped . . .
And we could say the same thing about many careers,
friendships, churches, dreams . . . The detritus of shattered lives all around
us. Bits and pieces of hopes and dreams. No one wants to be the man on the
median begging for money. No one wants to be a single mom. No one thinks it
will happen to them. We had hoped . . .
And we wonder why? Why do these things
happen? Sometimes there’s an answer. Fault. Blame. Sometimes not. Either way,
we think, we just have to make the best of it.
But is that the life God wants for you? A life
where you just have to make the best of it? Trudging, slogging along.
For those two men, trudging back to Emmaus, there
was no best of it to be had! There was no picking of these pieces. They
had to figure out LIFE again. They thought, they hoped . . . Now, they need NEW
thoughts and NEW hopes. But what can compare to this one? What could
replace this one? That the Messiah had come! Nothing else will measure up. Or
even come close.
Or so they thought . . .
There was a lot of confusion, too. Compounding
things in their rattled brains. The report of the women . . . an empty tomb, a
vision of angels . . . But that’s what often happens with tragedies or major
events. Lots of rumors, stories, reports, many of which later turn out not to
be true. We have to wait for the dust to settle. The investigation to take
place. Then the truth will come out.
They weren’t there yet. Still too much dust in the
air. Too much confusion. Too much pain.
We had hoped.
We had hope.
Now we do not.
So Jesus cuts through it all - all the hopelessness
and confusion. But not just by appearing to them and giving them a glimpse
of Him alive - the time for that would come. But first giving
them something more steadfast and reliable than that. Something OLD that wasn’t
like the many and varied reports coming in that may or may not be true.
Something that wouldn’t change because it couldn’t change. Jesus
gives them the Word of God. The Word written long before this that not only
said all this was going to happen, but that it HAD to happen this way.
That it was necessary that the Christ should suffer these things
and enter into his glory. That He HAD to die and rise from the dead.
This was known, as we heard Peter write in his Epistle, from before the
foundation of the world. And then revealed by God through the prophets.
Now it has happened. God did it! Why are you surprised? Why are you dismayed?
Why are you not rejoicing?
Well, you know why. It’s hard! They’re conflicted.
They want to believe, they want to hear more. But once your hopes get
shattered, its hard to hope again. Don’t get fooled
again! Once bitten, twice shy. So stay with us, stranger. Teach us more. Renew
our hope.
And Jesus does. But just for a moment. For now that
He has revealed Himself to them in the words of the prophets, now He
reveals Himself to them in the breaking of the bread. Not
as proof, but as confirmation that the Word of God was true and right all
along. So that their faith and hope are firmly anchored not in what they
see, but in the Word of God. The Word of God that will last. For the
word of the Lord endures forever.
This we must learn as well. For us, if we see the
detritus of shattered lives all around us; bits and pieces of hopes and dreams
- even our own! - why are we surprised? If we are hurt, if there is
pain, if we are sinned against . . . If there is persecution, opposition, evil
in the world . . . If we are betrayed, used, shoved aside . . . Did not the
Word of God say this would happen? Jesus Himself also said so. If they hate
me, they will hate you. If they persecuted me, they will persecute you. The
evil one will try to deceive you and mislead you. He will attack and harass
you. He will give you no peace. Jesus himself said so . . . so why are we
surprised when he does?
Well, maybe it’s not so much the what as the
who. When those we thought we could trust, we could rely on, are the
ones doing the hurting and betraying. And then realize, I’ve done it, too! I’ve
hurt, I’ve betrayed, I’ve failed, I’ve sinned against my loved ones, I’ve done
the shattering, too . . .
There’s only one who never did. The one who saw the
detritus of this world, all the
shattered lives, all the broken pieces, who looked around and saw a world harassed
and helpless, wounded people like sheep without a shepherd (Matthew 9:36), and so came to be that
shepherd, to pick all up all the shattered pieces, all the dry bones, and renew
our hope. So that for all the shattering you’ve done, to say to you I
forgive you. For your wounded souls, to say to you I love you. For
the betrayal you’ve suffered, to say to you I will never leave you or
forsake you. To take your shame away from you and make it His. To wash away
your uncleanness. And to feed your hungering and thirsting soul with His own
Body and Blood. To restore hope . . . not just to a broken and fallen
world, but to broken and fallen you.
Hope even while we are walking through this world.
Or slogging, or trudging. Like those disciples. Jesus didn’t immediately reveal
Himself to them and make their aching hearts magically go away, and He doesn’t
make all our troubles magically go away - though that’s what we want. But He
walked with them and stayed with them and gave them what they needed, though
they didn’t realize it at the time.
And He does for us, too. We know what we want,
but He knows what we need. The day will come when Jesus will reveal Himself
to our eyes, and we will arrive and feast at His eternal table. That day
will come, but is not yet. We’re still on the journey. And there will be days
of pain, and days of joy. There will be days we are strong and days we are
weak. Days of happiness and days when the challenges seem too much for us. Don’t
be surprised. It was that way for the patriarch, prophets, and apostles,
too. But through it all, they were never alone.
And as a baptized child of God, baptized into
Jesus, you are not and will not be either. You cannot
be, for Jesus is risen from the dead and has given you His Spirit. Maybe your
sin will make you doubt, maybe like those two disciples on the road, Jesus will
hide Himself from you for a moment. But He was there all along.
So as Jesus taught those two disciples, don’t
believe what you see or feel, or the reports coming out of the world that God
is irrelevant, or a myth, or dead. You have the Word and truth of the one who
said He would die and rise and did so - for you. So that we never
have to say . . .
We had hoped.
We had hope.
Now we do not.
But instead say: Alleluia! Christ is risen! [He
is risen indeed! Alleluia!]
And rejoice! Rejoice that we are children of
God. Even when its hard. For in the midst of an evil
and constantly changing and shifting and uncertain world, and people who let us
down, and when we let ourselves down, our hope is not here, in this. Our faith
and hope and life are in God, the empty tomb, and all His words and promises
fulfilled for us by that stranger - but a stranger no more! - walking on
the road to Emmaus.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and
of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.