Sunday, April 26, 2020

The Masked Christ


A screen-grab from All Saints' Livestream from April 26, 2020

© Seth Olson 2020
April 26, 2020—Third Sunday of Easter


View video of today’s sermon by following this link: https://vimeo.com/412085929 (sermon begins at 16:22).

Today’s Gospel lesson features the familiar story of the walk to Emmaus. In it, two disciples head out of Jerusalem on Easter night seemingly unaware of or unable to comprehend the magnitude of the empty tomb. While Mark’s Gospel account gives a brief outline of this story, the full depiction is unique to Luke. What is not unique within Luke is the setting of a journey.

Journeys are everywhere in the Third Gospel. Mary and Joseph had to take a trip to get to Bethlehem. The Parable of the Good Samaritan occurred on a road. Where did the father embrace the prodigal son in that famous parable? Out on a road! For a huge chunk of this gospel account Jesus was on the road to Jerusalem—and that was where so many of his greatest teachings happened. Even in the “sequel” to Luke, the Book of Acts, the apostle formerly known as Saul was blinded on the road to Damascus, before God changed his life for good and his name to Paul.[1] Embarking on a journey was not only important in Luke though, journeys are vital to us too.

How often do we describe our lives as a journey? We tell each other to take the high road when someone is dragging us down. Some people advise taking the road less traveled. And, what graduate has not received the journey-focused children’s classic Oh The Places You’ll Go, which compares life to one big, challenging adventure. And, our life in Christ is no different. Do we not often ask one another, “How is your faith journey going?”

And, all of our journeys (faith and otherwise) took a weird turn a few weeks back. Maybe some people projected the challenges of this virus, but I do not think anyone could see the full extent of how the COVID-19 pandemic would upend or turn around our traveling down our paths. As we all still struggle with what to do and what the next steps of our journeys will be, we would be wise to consult today’s story of the walk to Emmaus for guidance. What does this Easter evening trek teach us about our individual and collective journeys? Let’s look at three lessons because y’all know how much preachers like to talk about examples in groups of three.

First, it’s good to travel together. The Bible does not tell us why these two disciples decided to leave Jerusalem just hours after their fellow female disciples had seen the empty tomb, but they did. While this might seem crazy, what was not crazy was going together. There’s a wonderful African proverb, which reads: “If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.” Cleopas and the other disciple may have only been traveling to Emmaus, seven miles down the road, but they still understood the importance of traveling together. Likewise, on our journeys we yearn to travel together.

It’s in our very nature to walk the road together. I think one of the most challenging aspects of our current situation comes in that we are not able to have the normal interactions with those in our support networks. A basic belief we have as Christians is that we believe in a Triune God, as in God is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—three-in-one. To me this means that God’s most elemental nature is communal. We come from God, so we come from community. Thus, we want to have fellow pilgrims on the way. This is challenging to do in this moment, so we have to use creativity—phone calls, Facetime, Zoom calls, letters, emails, Facebook messages, and countless other ways can connect us. And, there’s another way that involves the third traveler who came alongside the disciples, but we’ll get to that in a moment.

Our life journeys right now are challenging enough and even with a fellow pilgrim on the way, we may not know exactly where we are going, and this gets us to a second lesson we can learn from today’s Gospel story.

Sometimes on our journey, it is appropriate to wander. Now, maybe this is a stretch because the way Luke tells this story Cleopas and the other disciple knew where they were going. They were traveling to Emmaus, which according to the text was seven miles outside of Jerusalem. However, if you look on almost any historical map and consult most any Biblical scholar they will tell you there is some confusion as to where Emmaus is. Now, just last year archaeologists uncovered a massive Hellenistic wall that some believe identifies the location of the ancient city of Emmaus.[2]

Still, I wonder if the disciples’ journey that Easter night was more of a wandering walk into the grief of losing their Lord than a Point A to Point B excursion. When the disguised Jesus asked the disciples what they were talking about on their way, they stood still looking sad. They were heartbroken.

Right now, we can see stress, loss, grief, depression, anxiety, illness, and death are all looming large during this part of our collective journey, as we experience the ramifications of this pandemic. And up until a few weeks ago, we may have thought we knew where we were going until the world turned upside-down and caused us to stand still and feeling sadness, like those disciples on the road to Emmaus.

Sometimes we are told not to experience, express, or process our emotions—we should just keep going on our journey—but Christ Jesus and these disciples model something different. In them, we see that it is appropriate to stop, feel our emotions, and even get lost in them. For Christ found these disciples when they were lost in their own sadness.

This brings us to the last lesson I want to bring up from this Gospel text: Christ always walks with us, but we don’t always know it. The disciples walked with Jesus for long enough to have a killer Bible study in which the Risen Lord revealed throughout all of Scripture all that pertained to his being the Messiah. In that moment, the disciples did not see the true identity of their fellow pilgrim. What dropped the scales that had obscured their vision? Breaking bread together with Christ Jesus!

During this pandemic when we are not able to have communion together, when we cannot break bread at God’s table or even in each other’s homes, this detail makes me stand still in sadness. Even here though on this daunting leg of the journey, Christ is with us. We may just have overlooked Christ in his many disguises. It’s almost as though Christ sometimes wears a mask.

Speaking of masks, a few weeks ago there was a National Public Radio story about how to politely greet one another while wearing a facemask. The reporter suggested using a friendly wave, giving a thumbs up, or smiling with your eyes, Tyra Banks calls that “smize.”[3] Me personally, I like the peace sign, touching my heart, or saying “Love” in sign language. However, this whole report got things backwards. People are looking for ways to portray themselves as friendly, which is good. But, I think it’s more important for us to truly see the one beneath the mask.

During this difficult time it has been amazing seeing all the doctors, nurses, chaplains, and medical technicians; the bus drivers, train engineers, pilots, ship captains, and flight attendants; the delivery drivers, food delivery drivers, and mail delivery drivers; the grocery baggers, clerks, and managers; the police officers, firefighters, and EMTs, and the many, many, many other people who are risking their safety and their lives to keep essential services going. And, most of them we don’t actually get to see and even when we do see them we often don’t get to see their faces because their faces are covered by masks.

Underneath those masks though, we might just see the face of Christ. Many of the people wearing those masks are loving each other, sacrificing for each other, healing one another, just like Jesus did. And, we, just like Cleopas and the other disciple, might not have been able to see that Christ Jesus has been walking beside us on this road the whole time. Those disciples could not see Christ Jesus because of their grief, and we might have missed seeing God’s face because of all our emotions and of course the masks. So I urge you to look again and see who is walking next to you.

We are definitely traveling on a strange leg of the journey. But, we do not walk alone. You’ll never walk alone. Even if we are socially distant, we are spiritually united. And, it is okay to wander or even get lost. Because it is when we feel most lost that Our Risen Lord shows up in the most profound and unexpected ways. This week, as you continue on this path that is life, I pray that you see Christ’s face, even if it is hidden by a mask. Amen.




[1] Eric Barreto, “Commentary on Luke 24:13-35” WorkingPreacher.org [published April 23, 2017, accessed April 26, 2020]  
[2] Ariel David, “Israeli Archaeologists May Have Found Emmaus, Where Jesus Appeared After Crucifixion” [written September 03, 2019, accessed April 26, 2020] https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium.MAGAZINE-israeli-archaeologists-may-have-found-emmaus-where-jesus-appeared-after-crucifixion-1.7774167.
[3] Sharon McNary, “In L.A., It's Now Mandatory For Everyone To Wear Face Coverings” NPR.org [published April 10, 2020; accessed April 26, 2020]. https://www.npr.org/2020/04/10/831480486/in-l-a-its-now-mandatory-for-everyone-to-wear-face-coverings

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