The road to Emmaus account in Luke 24 shows us two disciples who saw the physical facts clearly but missed the spiritual reality entirely. They knew Jesus had been crucified. They had heard reports about the empty tomb. They even knew it was the third day. But despite having the facts, they did not understand what God was doing through Christ's death and resurrection.
These two disciples were not enemies of Jesus. They were not Pharisees mocking Him. They were not Roman soldiers who had crucified Him. They were followers of Jesus who had loved Him, listened to Him, and hoped in Him. Yet they were discouraged because they interpreted their circumstances physically instead of spiritually.
That makes this passage deeply pastoral. Every Christian knows what it is like to look at difficult circumstances and struggle to understand what God is doing. We expected one thing, but God ordained another. We expected relief, but the burden became heavier. We expected clarity, but everything seemed more confusing. We expected joy, but sorrow remained.
Luke 24 reminds us that discouraged believers do not merely need better circumstances. They need Christ to open the Scriptures.
https://youtu.be/s6F0mJI_WmY
Table of contentsWe Can See the Physical Clearly While Missing the Spiritual RealityEven Great Men Can Struggle to See SpirituallyJesus Was Nearer Than They RealizedWe Know Christ Through Scripture, Not SightJesus Draws Out Their DiscouragementThey Understood Some Truth About Jesus, But Not EnoughWe Must Not Misunderstand the Redemption Jesus Came to ProvideLooking at Life Physically Instead of Spiritually Leads to DiscouragementConclusion: Christ Opens Our Eyes Through His Word
We Can See the Physical Clearly While Missing the Spiritual Reality
In the previous sermon, we considered spiritual blindness, and that lays the foundation for this passage. The two disciples on the road to Emmaus were spiritually blind in a very real sense. They were not blind to the facts. They knew Jesus had been crucified. They knew reports had come about the empty tomb. They knew extraordinary things had happened. But even with all of that, they still did not understand what God was doing.
This is one of the great lessons of Scripture: we can see the physical clearly while completely missing the spiritual reality. This problem appears throughout the Bible. People hear spiritual truth, but they interpret it physically. People see God’s work, but they interpret it outwardly. People expect visible, earthly, temporal fulfillment, while God is accomplishing something deeper, greater, and spiritual.
We see this even in the ministry of John the Baptist. Luke 3 says John came to prepare the way for the Messiah. The valleys would be lifted up, the mountains and hills brought low, and the crooked places made straight. That sounds physical, but John was not moving dirt or changing the landscape of Judea. He was preparing hearts through repentance. John was not doing anything physical, but he was doing a great deal spiritually.
We see the same pattern in Jesus’ ministry. In Matthew 16, when Jesus warned the disciples about the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees, they thought He was speaking about literal bread. He was speaking about corrupt teaching. In John 2, when Jesus said, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up,” people thought He meant the physical temple. He was speaking about the temple of His body. In John 3, Nicodemus thought Jesus meant physical birth when Jesus told him he must be born again. Jesus meant spiritual rebirth. In John 4, the Samaritan woman thought Jesus meant literal water, but He was speaking of spiritual satisfaction. Again and again, people interpreted Jesus physically when He was speaking spiritually.
Even Great Men Can Struggle to See Spiritually
We might think this only happens to immature people or unbelievers, but Scripture shows that even great men can struggle to see spiritually. John the Baptist himself struggled at one point. Matthew 11:3 says he sent messengers to Jesus asking, “Are you the one who is to come, or shall we look for another?”
That is remarkable. If anyone knew Jesus was the Messiah, it was John. He leaped in Elizabeth’s womb when Mary approached. He baptized Jesus. He saw the Spirit descend like a dove. He heard the Father’s voice from heaven. He declared, “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”
So why would John later ask whether Jesus was the Coming One? John was in prison. He knew the prophecies about the Messiah bringing liberty to captives, and he may have wondered, “If Jesus is the Messiah, why am I still here?” He was wrestling with the difference between physical expectation and spiritual fulfillment.
Jesus had not come primarily to deliver people from physical prisons. He came to deliver people from a far worse bondage: slavery to sin, death, and condemnation.
Samuel made a similar mistake when he saw Eliab, Jesse’s impressive son, and thought, “Surely the Lord’s anointed is before him.” But the Lord said in 1 Samuel 16:7, “Do not look on his appearance or on the height of his stature… For the Lord sees not as man sees: man looks on the outward appearance, but the Lord looks on the heart.” Samuel looked physically. God looked spiritually.
Elisha’s servant also struggled with this. When he saw the Syrian army surrounding them, he panicked. Elisha prayed, “O Lord, please open his eyes that he may see.” Then the Lord opened the servant’s eyes, and he saw the mountain full of horses and chariots of fire. The servant could see the visible danger. He could not see the invisible reality until the Lord opened his eyes. That is what we need too. We need the Lord to open our eyes so we can see beyond the physical to the spiritual.
Jesus Was Nearer Than They Realized
Luke 24:13 says, “That very day two of them were going to a village named Emmaus, about seven miles from Jerusalem.”
This happened on the very first Resurrection Sunday. The women had come to the tomb. The stone had been rolled away. The angels had announced the resurrection. Peter had run to the tomb. The greatest event in history had already taken place.
But these two disciples were not rejoicing. They were walking away from Jerusalem, discouraged.
Luke 24:14-16 says, “And they were talking with each other about all these things that had happened. While they were talking and discussing together, Jesus himself drew near and went with them. But their eyes were kept from recognizing him.”
Jesus was walking with them, but they did not know it. That is a tremendous comfort, because one of the great temptations in discouragement is to think the Lord is absent. Discouraged believers often feel abandoned. They may wonder, “Where is the Lord in this? Why does He seem so distant?” But this passage reminds us that Christ may be nearer than we realize.
These disciples were walking in sorrow, and Jesus was with them. They did not recognize Him, but the risen Christ had already drawn near.
We Know Christ Through Scripture, Not Sight
Luke does not merely say they failed to recognize Jesus. He says, “their eyes were kept from recognizing him.” This was supernatural. God withheld recognition for a time.
That raises a question: Why would Jesus disguise Himself at first if He intended to reveal Himself later? Perhaps before they could recognize Jesus physically, they needed to recognize Him spiritually. Before they could identify Him with their eyes, they needed to understand Him through the Scriptures. In other words, before their sight was corrected, their hearts had to be corrected.
This is important for us too. We do not know Christ rightly by physical sight. We do not know Christ rightly by feelings. We do not know Christ rightly by reading our circumstances apart from the Word. We know Christ through Scripture. That is where He reveals Himself truly and savingly.
The disciples had facts, but they did not yet have understanding. They needed Jesus to open the Scriptures.
Jesus Draws Out Their Discouragement
Luke 24:17 says, “And he said to them, ‘What is this conversation that you are holding with each other as you walk?’ And they stood still, looking sad.”
Jesus knew what they were discussing, but He asked anyway. He often did this in the Gospels. He asked questions not because He lacked information, but because He was drawing out what was in people’s hearts. He wanted these disciples to verbalize their grief before He corrected them. He wanted them to express their sorrow before He comforted them. He wanted them to speak their confusion before He helped them understand.
This is similar to prayer. We do not tell God anything He does not already know, but He still invites us to open our hearts before Him.
Cleopas responds:
Luke 24:18, “Are you the only visitor to Jerusalem who does not know the things that have happened there in these days?”
There is irony here. Cleopas thinks Jesus is the only one who does not understand what has happened. In reality, Jesus is the only one who fully understands what has happened. Cleopas thinks Jesus is uninformed. But Cleopas is the one who is confused.
They Understood Some Truth About Jesus, But Not Enough
Jesus asks, “What things?” They answer:
Luke 24:19, “Concerning Jesus of Nazareth, a man who was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people.”
There is truth in what they say, but it is incomplete. Jesus is a man. Jesus is a prophet. Jesus is mighty in deed and word. But He is far more than that. He is the Christ, the Son of God, the crucified and risen Lord.
This resembles the blind man in John 9. At first, he called Jesus “the man called Jesus.” Then he recognized Him as a prophet. Then he understood that Jesus had been sent from God. Finally, when Jesus revealed Himself more fully,...