Last Sunday when I came home after attending the cathedral Polka
Mass, my wife Sue could barely walk. She had severe pain in her right knee. On
Monday, she called the doctor and in an hour she was being examined by Dr.
Steve. I was praying up a storm that nothing was broken., He diagnosed that it
appeared to be a severe strain of the ligaments but he ordered an Xray to be
sure nothing was broken. During this past week, Sue iced her knee, took her
pain meds. On the way to the airport, she texted her litter mate, she
volunteers at the animal shelter and spoke this message: “I am feeling much
better.” When she looked at her phone to see what it recorded, it read: “I am
feeling smashed”:
Stupid cell phone, she’s not drunk, but feeling better. Sometimes
things happen that don’t meet our expectation. That’s what happening in our
gospel story about two disciples who are walking away from Jerusalem and
heading back to their home in Emmaus. We find them having a conversation about
what happened at the crucifixion and they are sadly disappointed and afraid
that they might be next.
Then this stranger joins them on the road, and they invite him to
travel along. They get a little sarcastic because when the stranger asks them
“what’s up” their response is a little rude when they say: “Where have you
been?”
The key words in their conversation was the phrase: “They had
hoped.”
They had put their trust in Jesus being a great prophet and
teacher that he would liberate the Jews from slavery, from the Roman
oppression. Instead, Jesus was crucified and laid in a tomb. Perhaps, they
feared for their own lives and wanted to get out of town become they would be
killed for being followers of Jesus.
Then, this stranger explains the Scriptures, how the Messiah had
to suffer and die and rise again. They are impressed by his words and invite
him to their home that includes dinner and when he breaks the bread, somehow
their eyes are open and they recognize Jesus, He is truly alive. And what do we
hear, he disappears.
So what does the road to Emmaus have to teach us? On the journey
of life, there are many ups and downs. Our emotions range from elation one day
to despair the next. For example, our lives are full of expectations, the
same expectations - mistaken as they may be - which the two disciples had.
"They had hoped" that Jesus would be the one who would restore the
rule to Israel. They were disappointed to realize that this was not to be. We
too have many expectations for our own lives. As our lives progress, many of
the expectations which we originally had remain unfulfilled. Our lives move on
in directions which we would never have guessed, almost as if they were being
guided by something that is beyond us. We can respond to this unexpected
direction in either of two ways: the way that the disciples did,
i.e., with disillusionment because our expectations have not been
met, or with contentment, because we know that there is a greater force at
work, a force in whose hands we will always be safe.
On Thursday, I was asked to provide support to employees whose
coworker died over the weekend. Tersea came to share that she had worked with
Laura for three years as her assistant. Laura was a case worker who worked with
disabled adults. She was a compassionate worker, but over the weekend something
happened and on Monday the supervisor pulls in her team and shares that Laura
suddenly died. How, when, why, no one knows. Teresa is in shock and crying and
very sad. Teresa is a caregiver of her 90 year-old dad. She is exhausted providing meals, cleaning
the house, taking him to doctor appointments. So I help her make a plan to get
some relief, to help clean the house and suggest take time for herself to rest.
She has a brother who she could call to stay with her dad while she gets away
with some girlfriends. She always wanted to go to Branson , Kansas for the music
festival.
So when our expectations are not met, our health goes sour, our
jobs are exhausting, our anxiety is out of control because of the war in
Ukraine and Iraq, or we fear deportation, or the high price of gas and food and
we can’t pay our rent.
So how do we achieve this contentment, this
feeling of safety in the midst of all the adversity which life throws at us? We
can achieve this contentment by realizing that Christ has stayed with us,
just as he did with the two disciples. When we feel overwhelmed by life, when
we feel that we just can't go on, when we feel all alone, we need to realize
that we are not alone, that Christ is still with us. In
the depths of our despair, we need to realize that Christ has been there before
us.
How does Christ come to you? Where have you found Jesus? Where do you expect to find
Jesus? You may not recognize the Lord at first but keep looking all the same.
Consider the following story. On Friday, I
started my day at 6:30am EST, I met the bishop at 1pm to catch our plane from
Buffalo to Chicago. At 4pm we are sitting at the airport waiting for next plane
connection to Vegas, and Bishop John pulls out a doggie bag in which he made
beef sandwiches and chips. I get us some water and soda and we are munching our
snacks. This is where I see God. We land in Vegas at 9pm and Bishop John is standing
in line for half an hour at the Budget car rental counter, this is where I see
God again. We arrive at the Santa Fe Hotel and Monica meets us with our room
key with a big welcome hug. This is where I see God. Finally in our room, it’s 2:30
in the morning our time. I have been up for the past 18 hours and we are both hungry
so we check our room and head back on the elevator to find some grub, We spot a
sub shop in the hotel and I order a beef cheese sandwich for both of us to share
and chips and take back to our room. It’s 3am and these sandwiches taste
delicious since we were starving. This is where I see God.
Lord, I pray for all my Sonshine Friends that
when our expectations lead us to despair we do not give up hope. For God walks with
us in because we know that there is a greater force at work, a force that
is God’s love in whose hands we will always be safe.