Of course there was communion between the disciples and the Saviour over
bread and wine many times, perhaps daily, during the years of His ministry on
earth. But the cross makes a greater break in history than His birth ever did.
These verses make a wonderful story in
themselves—imagine being in a seminar about the Messiah, taught by Christ
Himself! And not just an academic discussion, but to realize that this is the
God AND this is the Man who experienced all this—all these scriptures were
about Himself.
We can bring this story into our own day as a pattern for worship, or
the “breaking of bread”, as we call it. First of all, we know that a church
gathering can be as small as “two or three”, brought together by the Lord, and
He will join them (Matt.18:20). Cleopas and his friend were joined by Jesus
that Sunday morning on the road to Emmaus. They came with all their sadness,
disappointment and defeat; they came without hope. Even the rumour of His
resurrection didn’t cheer them. They even rebuked Him for not knowing how they
felt.
Then Jesus took control of the conversation: “And beginning with Moses
and all the Prophets, he explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures
concerning himself.” From these few verses we judge that there are at least
three things that make valid content for communion with Jesus and for worship:
1) “All the Scriptures concerning Himself”, that is, the entire Old Testament,
2) all that these two disciples knew about His life, that is, all the gospels
and by extension the entire New Testament, and 3) His resurrected Self, right
there in front of them.
After taking them through all these details, he pretended to be leaving
but now “their hearts were burning within them”—they couldn’t let him go,
whoever he was!
At this high point of love for this stranger, the bread was broken and
they knew Him—those hands that broke the bread still had the scars of Calvary!
They recognized Him at last and were content when He left (as we should be at
the end of our worship time), but their very next thought was to tell others
that they had seen Him. If only we loved Him as much!
No comments:
Post a Comment