2023-12-24Mark Dever

To Enlighten Us

Passage: Luke 24:13-35Series: Why Did Jesus Come?

Remembering the resurrection and the desire to “have been there”

Some people say they could believe in Jesus if only they had been there to see Him risen. Thomas Jefferson tried to keep the parts of Jesus he liked by literally cutting the Gospels and ending His story with a sealed tomb in Matthew 27:60. For a couple of days, that is exactly where the disciples themselves thought the story ended. Luke 24 shows us what happens when two of those early disciples get what my college friend said he needed: they meet the risen Jesus face to face. The question is not simply whether they saw, but whether they understood and believed.

Jesus drew near to two slow believing disciples (Luke 24:13–24)

On that first Easter Sunday, two disciples walked from Jerusalem to Emmaus, speaking sadly about all that had happened to Jesus (Luke 24:13–14). The One at the center of those events quietly came alongside them, yet Luke tells us their eyes were kept from recognizing Him (Luke 24:16), reminding us that God is sovereign even over spiritual sight. They accurately recounted the facts: Jesus of Nazareth, mighty in word and deed, condemned and crucified by their own leaders (Luke 24:19–20). They admitted, “We had hoped” He would redeem Israel, by which they meant political liberation from Rome, and they could not fit a rejected, cursed Messiah into their expectations, especially with Deuteronomy 21:23 in mind.

They even mentioned the women’s report of the empty tomb and the angels’ message that He was alive, confirmed by others who went and saw the tomb empty but did not see Jesus (Luke 24:22–24). The data were in place, but the meaning was not. Jesus’ verdict on them was that they were foolish and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets had spoken (Luke 24:25). Their problem was not lack of information but a reluctance to receive the full testimony of Scripture. That same danger faces us whenever we pick and choose from God’s Word instead of embracing all that He has said.

Jesus opened the Scriptures to them (Luke 24:25–30; Luke 18:31–33; various Old Testament texts)

Jesus then gave them a walking Bible study. He taught that it was necessary for the Messiah to suffer and then enter His glory (Luke 24:26). Beginning with Moses and all the prophets, He interpreted the Scriptures concerning Himself (Luke 24:27). The Old Testament is not mainly a set of detached stories; it is a unified testimony to Christ. Passages like Deuteronomy 18 promise a prophet like Moses who will speak all God’s words, 2 Samuel 7 promises a Son of David whose kingdom will never end, and Isaiah 61 speaks of an anointed One bringing good news to the poor. Psalms such as Psalm 110 present a Lord greater than David, and Daniel 7 presents a Son of Man given everlasting dominion.

Most stumbling for these disciples was the priestly, sacrificial aspect. Isaiah 53 presents the servant of the Lord bearing the iniquity of others; he suffers not for His own sins but for theirs. When Deuteronomy 21:23 says that one hanged on a tree is cursed, that is exactly what Jesus bore—for His people, not for His own guilt. The Messiah came first, not to overthrow Rome, but to deal with our deeper slavery to sin and with God’s just wrath. As Jesus had already told the Twelve in Luke 18:31–33, everything written about the Son of Man would be fulfilled: rejection, death, and resurrection on the third day. Suffering then glory is the pattern for Christ, and by union with Him it becomes the pattern for us as well (Acts 17:2–3; 1 Peter 5:6–10).

Jesus opened their eyes (Luke 24:31–32; Genesis 3:7)

When they reached the village, they urged Him to stay. At table, as He took bread, blessed it, and gave it to them, their eyes were opened and they recognized Him, and He disappeared from their sight (Luke 24:30–31). The point was clear: they did not need to keep seeing Him with physical eyes in order to know and trust Him. They later testified that their hearts had burned within them while He opened the Scriptures on the road (Luke 24:32). The fire came not from the meal itself, but from the Word explained.

This language of opened eyes appears first in Genesis 3:7, where Adam and Eve’s eyes were opened by disobedience, bringing shame and an urge to hide from God. On the road to Emmaus, eyes are opened by divine mercy, bringing fellowship and joy. The Bible is necessary for this, but not enough by itself; many have read and heard the gospel and remained unchanged. God must open the eyes of the heart. So we should ask honestly: are our spiritual eyes open or closed? If we long for sight, we should keep our Bibles open and ask God to do for us what He did for these two disciples.

Jesus appeared to Peter, Cleopas, and others (Luke 24:33–35; Acts 17:2–3; 1 Peter 5:6–10)

So moved were these two that, though it was evening and they had just walked seven miles downhill, they immediately turned around and hurried back uphill to Jerusalem, despite the danger of night travel (Luke 24:33). There they found the Eleven and others gathered, already saying, “The Lord has risen indeed, and has appeared to Simon” (Luke 24:34). Then Cleopas and his companion added their own report of what had happened on the road and at the table (Luke 24:35). Already on that first day, multiple independent witnesses were testifying to the same risen Lord.

The empty tomb, the transformed disciples, and the central place of Jesus’ death and resurrection in their message are not explained by wishful thinking. No one ever produced a body. These accounts were circulated and written within the lifetime of those who had seen these things. From that first Sunday, the church began to gather on the first day of the week in honor of the Lord’s resurrection, which is why we meet on Sunday still. If Jesus is alive, as these witnesses insist, then He is not a mere moral teacher to admire at a distance; He is the Lord around whom we must reorder our lives.

Living in light of the risen Lord today

The resurrection is why Christmas matters. On the day He was born, He lay quietly in a manger; on the day He rose, He walked out of a tomb, opened Scriptures, opened eyes, and began reshaping history. If Jefferson were right and the story ended with a stone rolled in front of a grave, there would be no church in Jerusalem, no churches in England or Virginia, no missionary sent from there to China, and no little woman named Charlotte “Lottie” Moon, who spent nearly forty years of her life making the risen Christ known in a place called Pingtu. The monument in that village that bears her Chinese name and the words “How she loved us” is really a testimony to how Jesus, the living Lord, loved them through her.

Every Christmas many churches take a missions offering that bears her name, and in recent years alone enormous sums have been given so that others can hear about the risen Lord. That whole chain—from the empty tomb, to opened Scriptures and opened eyes, to a small woman boarding a ship for China—hangs on the simple sentence the disciples shared that first night: the Lord has risen indeed. Because He lives, your sins can be forgiven, you can be reconciled to God, and your life—however ordinary—can be caught up into His worldwide purpose. The only fitting response is what we are about to do: lift our voices and sing, “Joy to the world, the Lord is come,” and then live as if that were really true, because it is.

  1. "Friends, God is sovereign even over our understanding of what we see and hear."

  2. "However sad they were, their emotions don't determine reality. No, Jesus was in fact risen from the dead."

  3. "The disciples then go on to show a kind of ignorance that we're all too familiar with, where events are recounted accurately, but people have no idea of their true significance. They see even while they don't see."

  4. "Oh, friend, don't let that be you today. Don't be slow of heart to believe. Pay attention to what the prophets have spoken. Learn it better than these two disciples did. The fuller picture will give you hope like you've never had before."

  5. "In some ways, this is a little synopsis of his whole ministry the last three years. What was he doing with his disciples? He was walking along with them on the road, teaching them, and sitting and eating with them, teaching them."

  6. "Actually, the Old Testament is all about Jesus. That's what Jesus himself was teaching the disciples here throughout his ministry. Jesus was teaching the disciples to pick up the promises that they knew and to understand how he was the fulfillment of them."

  7. "Only by means of a substitute, one who would voluntarily place himself in our place. The eternal Son of God was born as a man to take upon him our nature, yet without sin, to live a life of perfect trust in his heavenly Father. He would fulfill all the structure of sacrifices that were prescribed in the Old Testament, carried out in the temple in Jesus' day. His own offering of himself was what all those sacrifices pointed to."

  8. "He would take my place. He would bear the wrath that I've deserved, and yours too, if you only repent of your sins and trust in Christ. Oh friend, do that today. What better Christmas gift could you get than forgiveness for your sins and a new relationship with God as your Heavenly Father."

  9. "That order of suffering and then glory there in verse 26 in our passage, was by Jesus resurrection that day suddenly revealed as the order of Jesus life. Crucifixion first and then resurrection. Suffering and then glory. Friend, part of what that means is however painful the holiday season may be for you, all the suffering that you undergo, if you're a Christian, is not the end of the story. The story isn't concluded there. Suffering and then glory."

  10. "Friends, the tomb was empty. The disciples were changed. The message of Jesus death and resurrection became central. Because Jesus rose from the dead on that Sunday morning, no other plausible explanation for the empty tomb has ever been given. Jesus died and rose from the dead. And like those first disciples, we now need to rearrange our lives around this reality and its implications."

Observation Questions

  1. Read Luke 24:13–16. On what day are these events taking place, where are the two disciples going, what are they doing as they travel, and what does the text say about why they do not recognize Jesus when He joins them?
  2. In Luke 24:17–21, how are the two disciples feeling, how do they describe Jesus and His ministry, and what specific hope do they say they had about Him “redeeming Israel”?
  3. Look at Luke 24:22–24. What reports from the women and the other disciples do these two recount, and what did those reports include about the empty tomb, the angels, and whether anyone had actually seen Jesus?
  4. In Luke 24:25–27, what does Jesus call these disciples, what “necessity” does He insist on regarding the Christ, and how does He begin to address their confusion using “Moses and all the Prophets”?
  5. Read Luke 24:28–30. As they near the village, what does Jesus do, how do the disciples respond, and what actions does Jesus take at the table with the bread?
  6. In Luke 24:31–35, what happens to the disciples’ eyes, what immediately happens to Jesus, how do the disciples describe their experience on the road, and what do they do at once in response?

Interpretation Questions

  1. Comparing Luke 24:16 and 24:31, what do we learn about God’s role in people recognizing or failing to recognize Jesus, and how does this help explain why “seeing” Jesus in person is not enough by itself to produce faith?
  2. Why does Jesus rebuke the disciples in Luke 24:25 as “foolish” and “slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken,” and how does this show that their problem was not lack of information but a misunderstanding of Scripture?
  3. What does Jesus mean in Luke 24:26 when He says it was “necessary that the Christ should suffer these things and enter into his glory,” and how does this connect with Old Testament passages about the suffering servant and the promised King?
  4. How does Luke 24:27 support the sermon’s claim that the whole Old Testament (Moses, the Prophets, and the Psalms) ultimately points to Christ, and why is this important for how we read our Bibles today?
  5. In Luke 24:32, why do the disciples emphasize that their hearts burned “while he opened to us the Scriptures” rather than while they recognized Him at the table, and what does that suggest about how Jesus normally reveals Himself to His people now?

Application Questions

  1. Jesus describes these disciples as “slow of heart to believe” Scripture (Luke 24:25). In what specific areas of your life do you see a similar slowness to trust what God has clearly said—perhaps about suffering, forgiveness, prayer, or mission?
  2. The disciples’ hearts burned as Jesus opened the Scriptures to them (Luke 24:32). What concrete steps could you take this week (time, place, plan, people to read with) to let Christ “open the Scriptures” to you so that your own heart might be warmed by His Word?
  3. Jesus teaches that the path for the Christ—and for His people—is suffering first, then glory (Luke 24:26; cf. 1 Peter 5:6–10). How might this pattern reframe the way you think and talk about a current hardship, disappointment, or holiday sorrow?
  4. After recognizing the risen Jesus, the two disciples immediately change their plans and hurry back to Jerusalem to tell others (Luke 24:33–35). What might it look like for you to rearrange your schedule, priorities, or conversations this week because Jesus is truly risen and Lord?
  5. The sermon ended with Lottie Moon’s example of a small, ordinary person whose belief in the risen Christ led to decades of sacrificial service. In the coming month, how could your belief in the resurrection shape one specific decision about your time, your money, or your comfort for the spiritual good of others?

Additional Bible Reading

  1. Luke 24:1–12 — The account of the women at the tomb and the angels’ message provides the immediate context for the Emmaus story and highlights the call to “remember” Jesus’ own words about His death and resurrection.
  2. Luke 18:31–34 — Jesus predicts in detail His suffering, death, and resurrection, showing that what happened in Jerusalem was the fulfillment of what “was written about the Son of Man by the prophets.”
  3. Isaiah 52:13–53:12 — This prophecy of the suffering servant explains why it was “necessary” for the Christ to suffer, bearing the iniquity of others as a substitute before entering into glory.
  4. Acts 17:1–9 — Paul models the same pattern as Jesus by reasoning from the Scriptures that the Christ had to suffer and rise from the dead, and by proclaiming that “this Jesus” is that Christ.
  5. 1 Peter 5:6–11 — Peter applies the pattern of suffering then glory to believers, encouraging Christians to humble themselves, endure a “little while” of suffering, and trust God to restore and establish them.

Sermon Main Topics

I. Remembering the resurrection and the desire to “have been there”

II. Jesus drew near to two slow believing disciples (Luke 24:13–24)

III. Jesus opened the Scriptures to them (Luke 24:25–30; Luke 18:31–33; various Old Testament texts)

IV. Jesus opened their eyes (Luke 24:31–32; Genesis 3:7)

V. Jesus appeared to Peter, Cleopas, and others (Luke 24:33–35; Acts 17:2–3; 1 Peter 5:6–10)

VI. Living in light of the risen Lord today

Detailed Sermon Outline

I. Remembering the resurrection and the desire to “have been there”
A. Setting the scene of the church and connecting to the past
1. The partial use of the building is meant to evoke what the church looked like around 1999–2000.
2. This “time travel” feel prepares hearers to reflect on past events that still shape the present.
B. Thomas Jefferson’s edited “Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth”
1. Jefferson purchased multiple-language copies of the Gospels and cut out the portions he liked.
2. His book ends at Matthew 27:60, with Jesus laid in the tomb and the stone rolled in place.
3. Jefferson’s ending reflects what the disciples themselves thought for a time—that the story ended at the sealed tomb.
C. The shock of resurrection morning in Luke 24
1. Women followed Joseph of Arimathea to the tomb and then encountered the empty tomb and angels (Luke 24:1–12).
2. The women reported to the apostles, who largely responded with skepticism.
3. This sets the stage for adding two more confused disciples on the road to Emmaus.
D. The modern desire to “have been there” to believe
1. The preacher recalls a college friend who said he could believe if only he had seen the risen Jesus.
2. Many people today feel that seeing a miracle firsthand would make faith easy.
3. The question is raised: Would seeing actually guarantee believing?
E. Purpose and outline of the sermon
1. The passage: Luke 24:13–35 (p. 885 in the provided Bibles).
2. The four movements of the story:
a. Jesus drew near to two slow believing disciples (vv. 13–24).
b. Jesus opened the Scriptures to them (vv. 25–30).
c. Jesus opened their eyes (vv. 31–32).
d. Jesus appeared to Peter, Cleopas, and others (vv. 33–35).
3. The pastoral aim: that hearers would believe in Jesus and deepen their trust in Him.
II. Jesus drew near to two slow believing disciples (Luke 24:13–24)
A. The journey to Emmaus (Luke 24:13–16)
1. It is still resurrection day (“that very day”) when two disciples travel to Emmaus, about seven miles from Jerusalem.
2. They are discussing the events of Jesus’ death and the reports of the empty tomb.
3. Jesus Himself draws near and walks with them, but their eyes are kept from recognizing Him (v. 16).
4. God is sovereign even over spiritual perception; we cannot see Christ truly until He opens our eyes.
B. Their sad confusion and ironic dialogue with Jesus (Luke 24:17–20)
1. Jesus asks what they are discussing, and they stand still, looking sad (v. 17).
2. Cleopas expresses astonishment that anyone in Jerusalem could be ignorant of recent events (v. 18).
3. This ironic question is posed to the very One at the center of those events.
4. They recount Jesus as a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and the people (v. 19).
5. They note that their own chief priests and rulers delivered Him up to be condemned and crucified (v. 20).
C. Misplaced hopes and incomplete expectations (Luke 24:21)
1. They confess, “We had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel” (v. 21).
2. For them, “redeem” primarily meant political liberation from Roman rule, echoing expectations like those in Zechariah’s prophecy (Luke 1:71–74).
3. Their focus had been on a national, political Messiah, not on a suffering, atoning Savior.
4. They interpret Jesus’ rejection by the leaders as evidence that He failed in His mission.
D. The disturbing implications of the cross in their minds
1. Deuteronomy 21:23 taught that a man hanged on a tree is cursed by God.
2. Therefore, they reason that Jesus must be cursed and thus could not be the promised Redeemer.
3. They had no category in which the Messiah could be both cursed and still God’s chosen one.
E. The reports of the empty tomb and angelic message (Luke 24:22–24)
1. They mention that some women of their company amazed them with news from the tomb (vv. 22–23).
2. The women had seen a vision of angels who said Jesus was alive (v. 23).
3. Some of the male disciples went to the tomb and found it as the women had said, but they did not see Jesus (v. 24).
4. These facts are recounted accurately, but the two disciples still fail to grasp their true significance.
F. The rebuke and warning against being slow to believe (Luke 24:25)
1. Jesus calls them “foolish ones, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken.”
2. Their problem is not lack of data but slowness to believe the fullness of Scripture’s testimony.
3. The preacher urges modern hearers: Do not be slow of heart; pay careful attention to what the prophets have spoken.
4. A fuller understanding of Scripture would have given them—and will give us—greater hope.
III. Jesus opened the Scriptures to them (Luke 24:25–30; Luke 18:31–33; various Old Testament texts)
A. The necessity of the Messiah’s suffering and glory (Luke 24:26)
1. Jesus asks, “Was it not necessary that the Christ should suffer these things and enter into his glory?”
2. Suffering followed by glory is not an accident but the divine pattern foretold in Scripture.
3. This pattern will also mark the path of Christ’s followers.
B. Jesus’ method: a Bible study in motion (Luke 24:27)
1. Beginning with Moses and all the prophets, Jesus interprets to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning Himself.
2. “Moses” refers to the first five books (Pentateuch), and “the prophets” to the major and minor prophetic books.
3. He likely also includes the Psalms, as He explicitly does later (Luke 24:44–45).
4. This walk-and-talk followed by table fellowship summarizes how Jesus had discipled them for three years.
C. The Old Testament is fundamentally about Christ
1. Many assume the Old Testament is about Moses and David while the New Testament is about Jesus.
2. Jesus teaches that all of Scripture ultimately finds its fulfillment in Him.
3. The disciples needed to reinterpret familiar promises in light of Jesus as their fulfillment.
D. Six key Old Testament passages that point to Christ
1. Deuteronomy 18:18 – The prophet like Moses
a. God promises to raise up a prophet like Moses from among Israel’s brothers.
b. This prophet would speak all that God commands.
c. Jesus is identified as this prophet; Peter applies this directly to Jesus in Acts 3.
d. Jesus also claims that Moses wrote about Him (John 5:39, 45–47).
e. Jesus is not only a prophet; He is the very Word of God incarnate (John 1:1, 14).
2. 2 Samuel 7:12–13 – The Son of David and eternal King
a. God promises David an offspring whose throne and kingdom will be established forever.
b. When Jesus is called “Son of David,” this covenantal promise lies in the background (Luke 18:38–39).
c. Psalm 118:26, quoted at the triumphal entry, anticipates the one who comes in the name of the Lord as David’s heir.
d. Jesus is the Messiah-King who fulfills God’s promise of an everlasting kingdom.
3. Isaiah 61:1–2 – The anointed proclaimer of good news
a. The Spirit of the Lord anoints one to proclaim good news, liberty, and the year of the Lord’s favor.
b. Jesus reads this passage in the Nazareth synagogue and declares, “Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing” (Luke 4:16–21).
c. By doing so, He openly claims to be the promised Messiah, anointed to bring salvation.
4. Psalm 110:1 – David’s Lord and exalted Messiah
a. “The Lord says to my Lord: Sit at my right hand, until I make your enemies your footstool.”
b. Jesus uses this psalm to question how the Messiah can be both David’s son and David’s Lord (Luke 20:41–44).
c. The implied answer is that the Messiah is more than a merely human king.
d. This points to the divine nature and exaltation of Christ.
5. Daniel 7:13–14 – The Son of Man with everlasting dominion
a. Daniel sees “one like a son of man” coming with the clouds of heaven to the Ancient of Days.
b. This figure is given dominion, glory, and an everlasting kingdom that all nations serve.
c. Jesus alludes to this in Luke 21:27 in predicting the Son of Man coming in a cloud with power and great glory.
d. The Son of Man receives divine worship and an indestructible kingdom, pointing to the God-Man, Emmanuel.
6. Isaiah 53 (esp. v. 6) – The suffering servant and substitute
a. The servant of the Lord is wise yet is crushed by the will of the Lord.
b. His suffering is not for His own sins but for the sins of others: “the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all” (Isaiah 53:6).
c. He is both priest and sacrifice, bearing our guilt as our substitute.
d. This explains how Deuteronomy 21:23 can be true—He is cursed by God—yet still be the true Messiah.
E. Reframing the curse and the cross
1. Being hanged on a tree did mean that Jesus was under God’s curse (Deuteronomy 21:23).
2. But far from disqualifying Him, this curse is central to His saving work as Messiah.
3. He bears the curse we deserve as our substitute, reconciling us to God.
F. The deeper problem: sin, not merely political oppression
1. The Messiah came first to free us from spiritual bondage—our sin and God’s just wrath.
2. Temporal, political deliverance is secondary to the fundamental need for forgiveness.
3. God had revealed Himself as forgiving yet not clearing the guilty (Exodus 34:6–7), which demands a substitute.
G. The person and work of Christ as our substitute
1. The eternal Son of God takes on human flesh, yet without sin.
2. He lives a life of perfect trust and obedience to His Father.
3. He fulfills the Old Testament sacrificial system as both priest and final sacrifice.
4. On the cross He bears the wrath we deserve, in our place.
5. His resurrection is the capstone that validates His promises and His atoning work.
H. Jesus’ own predictions of His suffering and resurrection (Luke 18:31–33)
1. Shortly before the triumphal entry, Jesus told the Twelve that everything written about the Son of Man would be fulfilled.
2. He predicted His betrayal, mocking, shameful treatment, flogging, death, and resurrection on the third day.
3. The disciples did not grasp or spread this teaching, leaving others like the Emmaus pair confused.
I. Suffering then glory as the pattern for Christ and Christians
1. Paul reasons from Scripture in Acts 17:2–3 that it was necessary for the Christ to suffer and rise from the dead.
2. This same pattern—humbling then exaltation—is applied to believers (1 Peter 5:6–10).
a. We humble ourselves under God’s mighty hand, awaiting His timing to exalt us.
b. After we have suffered a little while, God will restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish us.
3. For Christians, present suffering, including painful holidays, is not the end of the story.
J. The carols and Christmas themes illuminated by the cross and resurrection
1. “Mild He lays His glory by” speaks of the Son’s humble incarnation in Bethlehem.
2. He “was born that man no more may die,” pointing to His death and resurrection breaking death’s tyranny.
3. He was “born to raise the sons of earth” and “give them second birth,” pointing to spiritual new birth in Christ (John 3).
4. We are summoned by the angels’ song to give glory to the newborn King, whose mission was always cross and resurrection.
K. A pastoral call to repentance and faith
1. The whole Old Testament points to how we can be forgiven and made right with God through the substitute Son.
2. Believers are urged to rest their faith and trust steadily in Christ, the center of all Scripture.
3. Hearers are exhorted to repent and trust in Christ today, receiving forgiveness and adoption by God.
IV. Jesus opened their eyes (Luke 24:31–32; Genesis 3:7)
A. The moment of recognition (Luke 24:31)
1. As Jesus breaks bread and gives it to them, their eyes are opened and they recognize Him.
2. Immediately He vanishes from their sight, underscoring that seeing Him physically is not necessary for true understanding or faith.
3. This anticipates the normal Christian experience of knowing Christ by His Word rather than by physical sight.
B. Their reflection on burning hearts (Luke 24:32)
1. They recall how their hearts burned within them while He talked on the road.
2. The burning came as He opened the Scriptures, not primarily from the act of breaking bread.
3. This highlights the central role of the Word in igniting spiritual life and passion.
C. Contrast with the first “opened eyes” in Eden (Genesis 3:7)
1. Adam and Eve’s eyes were opened when they disobeyed God and ate the forbidden fruit.
2. Their new sight brought shame, guilt, and a desire to hide from God, not fellowship.
3. In Emmaus, eyes are opened through Christ’s gracious self-revelation, leading to restored fellowship.
4. The Son of God came in sympathy for us in our guilt, laying His glory by to rescue us.
D. The necessity of divine illumination
1. The truths of Scripture are essential but not sufficient in themselves; God must open our eyes.
2. Many can read the Bible and hear the gospel without coming to true faith.
3. Luke’s passive verbs (“their eyes were opened”) point to God’s work in granting understanding.
4. The preacher asks hearers to consider whether their spiritual eyes are open or closed.
5. Congregants are exhorted to ask God to open their eyes even as they hear the sermon.
E. The priority of the Word over sacramental signs
1. Scholars debate whether the breaking of bread here alludes to the Lord’s Supper.
2. Even if there is an echo, these two likely were not present at the Last Supper with the Twelve.
3. The disciples themselves emphasize the Scriptures: “while he opened to us the Scriptures,” not “while he broke the bread.”
4. The sacraments are mute without the message of the Word that explains them.
5. Those who desire open eyes are urged to spend time with an open Bible.
F. Application to children and families
1. Praise Factory Kids are specifically addressed and welcomed in the service.
2. Children are encouraged to ask their parents whether God has ever opened their eyes.
3. Parents are invited to share their testimonies of spiritual awakening at home.
G. The wider impact of ignited hearts
1. The “burning hearts” of these two disciples foreshadow the fiery work of the Spirit at Pentecost.
2. From Pentecost, the gospel would spread through the world and down the ages.
3. The congregation itself is part of the ongoing story that began with opened eyes and burning hearts.
V. Jesus appeared to Peter, Cleopas, and others (Luke 24:33–35; Acts 17:2–3; 1 Peter 5:6–10)
A. The urgent return to Jerusalem (Luke 24:33)
1. Cleopas and his companion rise that very hour and return to Jerusalem.
2. They had just walked seven miles downhill to Emmaus; now they hike back uphill in the evening.
3. Night travel was dangerous, underscoring their excitement and urgency to share the news.
B. The gathered disciples and shared testimonies (Luke 24:33–35)
1. They find the Eleven and others gathered together in Jerusalem.
2. The group already shares the testimony: “The Lord has risen indeed, and has appeared to Simon” (v. 34).
3. Cleopas and his friend then recount what happened on the road and at the breaking of bread.
4. Mutual testimony strengthens the community’s faith in the risen Christ.
C. The significance of calling Jesus “the Lord” (Luke 24:34)
1. The resurrection vindicates Jesus’ divine identity and lordship.
2. Referring to Him simply as “the Lord” reflects early Christian worship and confession.
D. The birth of Sunday worship
1. Jesus’ resurrection on Sunday (the first day of the week) shapes the church’s worship rhythm.
2. The church is said to be “born” on Sunday, and Sunday becomes the chief day for Christian gathering.
3. This explains why Christians are gathered on Sunday morning rather than Saturday.
E. Eyewitness testimony and the reliability of the accounts
1. Luke gathers testimonies from people who saw the risen Jesus on the very first day.
2. These accounts circulated orally and were written down during the lifetime of the eyewitnesses.
3. Before the New Testament was compiled, such stories were already being retold in gatherings like this one.
4. Cleopas, his companion, and Simon Peter are explicitly named or referenced as witnesses.
F. The empty tomb and transformed disciples as evidence
1. The tomb was verifiably empty; opponents never produced a body.
2. The disciples were transformed from fearful, disappointed followers into bold witnesses.
3. Jesus’ death and resurrection became the very center of their message.
4. No alternative explanation for the empty tomb and changed lives has proved plausible.
G. The call to rearrange our lives around the risen Christ
1. Because Jesus is alive, we cannot treat Him as a mere historical figure or moral teacher.
2. Like the first disciples, we must reorder our priorities and decisions around His lordship.
3. The preacher moves from exposition to application, preparing to connect the resurrection to Christmas and mission.
VI. Living in light of the risen Lord today
A. The resurrection as the reason Christmas truly matters
1. Jesus may have simply “lain there” on Christmas Day in Bethlehem, but He was active and victorious on Easter.
2. His resurrection explains why His birth has such enduring significance around the world.
3. Without the resurrection, Christmas would be sentimental but spiritually empty.
B. Jesus as more than a Jewish rabbi or national king
1. His life, teaching, death, and resurrection show He is the eternal Son of God.
2. His incarnation (“took on flesh”) was for the purpose of saving people from every age and place who would be His.
C. The example of Charlotte “Lottie” Moon
1. Lottie Moon was born near Charlottesville, Virginia in 1840 and was only 4’3” tall.
2. At age 32 she was sent as a missionary to China by her church and the Southern Baptist Foreign Mission Board.
3. After initial time with other missionaries, she moved alone to the town of Pingtu.
4. As a woman, she was especially effective in evangelizing and discipling village women.
5. She started a school to train Christian women for ministry.
6. She devoted herself entirely to serving the risen Christ for nearly 40 years in China.
7. She shared her food and finances freely with those in need, as she shared the gospel.
8. Worn out and weighing only about 50 pounds, she finally agreed at age 72 to return to the States.
9. She died in Kobe, Japan harbor on Christmas Eve 1912, 111 years before the sermon’s date.
10. A monument in Pingtu bears her Chinese name and the inscription, “How she loved us.”
D. The ongoing impact of Lottie Moon’s devotion
1. Many churches now receive Christmas offerings for missions in her name (the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering).
2. She herself first suggested a Christmas offering to send more missionaries to China.
3. In just the last seven years, about $1.2 billion has been raised through such offerings.
4. These funds send Christian workers to proclaim the risen Christ where He is not yet known.
E. What would be missing if Jefferson had been right?
1. If Jesus’ story ended at the tomb with the stone in place, there would have been no Lottie Moon.
2. There would have been no Virginia churches that led her to Christ.
3. There would have been no earlier English churches that planted those Virginia churches.
4. There would have been no church in Jerusalem at all.
5. The disciples would have remained like the Emmaus pair—sad, disappointed, and eventually moving on.
6. The global, missionary movement of the church depends on the reality of the resurrection.
F. Final summons: living joyfully under the risen King
1. Because “the Lord has risen indeed,” we are called to reorder our lives and join His mission.
2. The resurrection turns our sadness and confusion into joy, courage, and sacrificial love.
3. The congregation is invited to respond in worship, embodied in singing “Joy to the World.”
4. The sermon closes by directing hearts to praise the risen King whose birth, death, and resurrection bring salvation to the world.

In case you regulars are wondering what we're doing here in one half of our space, we're trying to give you a sense of what it was like here in about 1999, the year 2000. This is what things looked like then. So welcome back to Ty and Peral. Visitors, hello, it's good to have you. In 1819 and 1820, Thomas Jefferson very carefully bought two copies of the Gospels in Greek in Latin, in French, and in English.

And he cut them up. He took the bits that he liked and he pasted them on fresh pages and then had them bound together. And he called his book the Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth. The book ends with Matthew chapter 27 verse 60. There they laid Jesus and rolled a great stone to the door of the sepulcher and departed.

Jephthah had certainly captured what Jesus' own disciples had thought for at least a couple of days. Some of the women had followed Joseph of Arimathea to the tomb in which Jesus' body was laid.

But then the events of Sunday morning happened, and that we began to think about last week as we were in the early part of chapter 24 of Luke's gospel. The characters we found last week, the women, the disciples, had thought that the end of the matter was where Thomas Jefferson had left it, at the end of his book, with a stone-sealed sepulcher and Jesus' dead body laid inside. But to these surprised women and the skeptical apostles, we now add a couple of confused disciples. Surely you've talked to people who don't believe, but who think they could believe if their circumstances were just a little different. I remember when I was in college in my freshman year talking to a senior about my newfound Christian faith.

And as I described it to him, he was very interested. And he said, well, you know, that's good for you, but I think I would need to have been there. I would need to have seen Jesus raised from the dead, and then I think I could believe.

Well, that's interesting that he says that. He's not the only person I've heard say that. I've heard other people say that over the years. There's no doubt that my friend meant what he said, but is it true? If He had seen Himself, would He really have believed?

Well, that brings us right into our passage this morning from the last chapter of Luke's gospel, chapter 24. You'll find it on page 885 in the red Bibles provided there. If you don't have a Bible, you can easily read yourself. Take this as a gift from our church to you so that you can take it home and continue to read it. Last week we considered the burial of Jesus' crucified body in the empty tomb.

And the women and Peter found empty on a Sunday morning. We consider the fact that an angel exhorted the women to remember what Christ had taught them about His own suffering and rising again, and then they said that Jesus had done just that. These women then went and shared this with the 11 remaining disciples who were largely at least skeptical. And that brings us to our passage for this morning. Where we see what happened when a couple of early disciples got what my friend back in college had wished for, to see Jesus after he had risen from the dead.

And what happened? Well, let's turn back to Luke chapter 24, verse 13. And for those of you who are committed note takers, I'll go ahead and give you my points so there won't be any anticipation there or anxiety. We'll look through the passage in order.

As we see Jesus draw near to two slow believers, there in verses 13 to 24, as we see Jesus open the Scriptures in verses 25 to 50, Jesus opened the disciples' eyes in verses 31 and 32, and then Jesus appeared to Peter, Cleopas, and others in verses 33 to 35. I pray that as we study this passage today, you may believe in Jesus and come to trust him even more than you do right now. Luke chapter 24 verse 13. First we see Jesus drew near to two slow believing disciples. Luke makes it clear that we are still talking about events that happened on the day that Jesus had risen from the dead.

Verse 13. That very day two of them were going to a village named Emmaus about seven miles from Jerusalem. 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.

And he said to them, 'What is this conversation that you're holding with each other as you walk?' and they stood still, looking sad. Then one of them named Cleopas answered him, 'Are you the only visitor to Jerusalem who does not know the things that have happened there in these days?' And he said to them, 'What things?' and they said to him, 'Concerning Jesus of Nazareth, a man who was a prophet, mighty in deed and word before God and all the people, and how our chief priests and rulers delivered him up to be condemned to death and crucified him. But we had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel.' Yes, and besides all this, it's now the third day since these things happened. Moreover, some women of our company amazed us. They were at the tomb early this morning.

And when they did not find his body, they came back saying that they had even seen a vision of angels who said that he was alive. Some of those who were with us went to the tomb and found it just as the women had said.

But him they did not see. Friends, this is the most dramatic and the longest of several accounts of resurrection appearances that we have in the Gospels.

It's somewhere in the middle of Sunday, like we see in verse 13, there are these two of them, that is these disciples, Cleopas, and we don't know who the other one is named, his name is not given to us, and it's worth zero of our time to try to speculate on who it was. They're walking and they're talking with each other. And a couple of things just to notice here at the beginning. We don't know anything else about these two. I think that they are likely folks who've been following Jesus for some time because of how sad they say they are.

If they had just started in this last week with the triumphal entry and Jesus was all popular, I don't know they'd be that sad. But they're so sad. I think they seem like long time disciples who were familiar with Jesus' ministry for months or maybe years. Maybe they were even from Galilee. They were journeying to a village called Emmaus, we see in verse 13.

But that may have just been their first stop on a longer journey home as they went to their respective homes. Perhaps even back up in Galilee where Jesus and most of his disciples were from. Anyway, their discussions may have been at points more like a debate as they laid out their understandings of what had gone on the last few days with Jesus and his followers, what Jesus had taught and what it meant by what he taught. And now, for the first time recounted in Luke's Gospel since his crucifixion, Jesus appears. Right there in verse 15, look at verse 15, while they were talking and discussing together, Jesus himself drew near.

This is that Jesus Luke had just verses earlier narrated being crucified and dying. Now he says, Jesus Himself drew near, but notice what we read in verse 16, but their eyes were kept from recognizing Him. Friends, God is sovereign even over our understanding of what we see and hear. That's a continuing theme in our chapter. We'll come on it again next week down in verse 45.

And for all of our differences from these first disciples, We like them can understand and see nothing spiritually until Jesus opens our eyes.

The two disciples here are described in verse 17 as standing still and looking sad. But praise God, that sadness wouldn't put Jesus back in the tomb. However sad they were, their emotions don't determine reality. No, Jesus was in fact risen from the dead. These two tell Jesus what they were talking about.

Apparently the crucifixion of Jesus was well known. So you understand the two people crucified on either side of Jesus, I'm thinking nobody was talking about either of them in Jerusalem. Jesus was different. There'd been the triumphal entry. They exclaim in verse 18, Are you the only visitor to Jerusalem who doesn't know the things that have happened here in these days?

What an ironic question to put to Jesus. But it's proof that something was preventing their eyes from recognizing the Teacher whom they had known and followed. And verse 16 says, Their eyes were kept from recognizing Him, and that passive implies it was kept by God.

The disciples then go on to show a kind of ignorance that we're all too familiar with, where events are recounted accurately, but people have no idea of their true significance. They see even while they don't see. So they summarize the events of recent days. They name Jesus and where he was from. They call him a mighty prophet.

That's right, so far as it goes. Remember God had told those present at the Transfiguration back in Luke 9 to listen to his Son. He was a prophet speaking his word. In chapter 13, Jesus had even predicted his own approaching execution in Jerusalem as part of the proof that he is really a prophet of God because that's what happens to God's prophets. They're killed in Jerusalem.

So he's been killed in Jerusalem. He's actually going to be part of the proof that he is a genuine prophet of God. And we know from Matthew that earlier that week when Jesus had cleansed the temple, the crowds were saying, this is the prophet Jesus from Nazareth in Galilee. It's interesting that when they summarize Jesus' ministry there in verse 19, they simply say that Jesus was a man who was a prophet mighty in deed and word. They should have no expectation of a future resurrection.

It's like that it's not in their thoughts. They were speaking of Jesus only in the past. And then in verse 20 we see that it was the leaders of their own nation who were responsible for Jesus' death. And this confuses them because they had not thought that their Redeemer would be rejected by their leaders. Now the whole purpose of this Redeemer was to become their leader, was to lead the nation.

They see clearly in verse 21 they say what their hopes were, that Jesus would deliver or liberate from Roman rule. That's what they mean here in verse 21. It's what Zechariah prophesied back in Luke chapter 1 about they're being delivered from the hand of our enemies. But brothers and sisters, when we read that word redeem in verse 21, we think religiously. Immediately, it's a word we use in church, redeem.

And it's a good word. But they would have meant it to bring about a political freedom. That's what they were looking forward to. That's what it looked like was happening just a week early. His entry into Jerusalem a week earlier had been a long time in coming, and it looked something like a ticker tape parade.

Now, when I read this last night to some friends and I mentioned Ticker Tape Parade, everybody my age understood exactly what I meant. Oh, that's a good image of the triumphal entry. The younger people had never heard of a Ticker Tape Parade. So, you know, Ticker Tape Parade is a happy thing. It's like stock ticker, it's thin little tape.

It's pushed out of windows of skyscrapers, people going underneath in a parade, it's some kind of celebration. It's like confetti, all right? So all I'm doing is using this image and now I've shared it between generations so we can now use this image again. But that's what the triumphal entry would have been like. Jesus was a hero.

He was coming with great anticipation, with great expectation, just a week earlier he had been received like that. Jesus' triumphal entry. Remember in chapter 19, verse 37, the whole multitude of his disciples began to rejoice and praise God with a loud voice for all the mighty works they had seen. But then look what happened. There's a week wore on.

And this is what so shocked and disappointed them about Jesus. They had hoped for this redemption, this liberation. But now they knew they were wrong because Jesus had been rejected and even executed. And therefore not only failed in his mission, but they knew from Deuteronomy 2123 that a man hanged on a tree is cursed by God. They know that Jesus was divinely cursed.

They had been wrong about Jesus. These disciples seemed to have no space in their expectations for the Redeemer to be rejected. They had hoped for immediate worldly success, not the kind of spiritual deliverance that only Christ's atonement could bring. And this news that they should recount to Jesus in verse 23 of the angels telling the women just that morning that Jesus was alive should have been what the 12 disciples had been teaching the other disciples like these two. Because Jesus had repeatedly taught on this himself.

He had taught that he would be crucified and that he would rise even just before the triumphal entry, the previous week. If you look back in Luke 18. Verse 31, He had taught this. 18:31, Taking the Twelve, He said to them, 'See, we are going up to Jerusalem, and everything that is written about the Son of Man by the prophets will be accomplished. For He will be delivered over to the Gentiles and will be mocked and shamefully treated and spit upon.

And after flogging Him, they will kill Him. And on the third day He will rise. ' But not understanding the disciples didn't gossip about Jesus' coming rejection, they didn't make it known, and they didn't teach about his coming resurrection. And so disciples like these two were left disappointed with their hopes crushed, as Jesus calls them in verse 25, foolish, slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken. Oh friend, don't let that be you today.

Don't be slow of heart to believe. Pay attention to what the prophets have spoken. Learn it better than these two disciples did. The fuller picture will give you hope like you've never had before. So Jesus drew near to these two slow to believe disciples.

It's the first thing we see Jesus doing. Second thing we see Jesus doing with these two disciples He educates them. He opened the Scriptures to them. That's what we see in verses 25 to 30. Look again, verses 25 to 30.

And he said to them, O foolish ones and slow of heart to believe. And then he doesn't just reject them for these negative attributes. No, he says, Foolish and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken. And then he teaches. Was it not necessary that the Christ should suffer these things and enter into his glory.

And beginning with Moses and all the prophets, he interpreted to them in all the scriptures the things concerning himself. So they drew near to the village to which they were going. He acted as if he were going farther, but they urged him strongly saying, stay with us for it's forward, it's toward evening and the day is now far spent. So he went in to stay with them. When they, it was a table with them.

He took the bread and blessed and broke it. And gave it to them. In some ways this is a little synopsis of his whole ministry the last three years. What was he doing with his disciples? He was walking along with them on the road, teaching them and then sitting and eating with them and teaching them.

That's what he was doing for three years. That's what he did this one afternoon with these two disciples. Jesus reteaches these disciples about their own scriptures, about the Old Testament. And he seems to understand that what he's teaching them right now is so central to understanding the Bible and its message that he can express it in verse 25 as all that the prophets have spoken. Did you notice that?

All that the prophets have spoken. And not only that, but when Luke explains what Jesus then did, he says there in verse 27, beginning with Moses and all the prophets. So Moses, that's the first five books of the Bible, Genesis and then the four that have Moses ministry up to the time of going to the promised land. And then it also includes all the prophets. That would be Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Daniel, and then the 12 minor or shorter prophets.

And beginning with them may imply that he also did a little bit of teaching like he does later on down in verse 45 that included going through the Psalms as well. And what is Jesus teaching them throughout all the prophets pointing out? That the prophets have spoken. What's that phrase in verse 27? He interpreted to them in all the scriptures the things concerning himself.

Now if you're not very familiar with Christianity, you may have thought that the New Testament is about Jesus and the Old Testament is about Moses and David. Actually the Old Testament is all about Jesus. That's what Jesus himself was teaching the disciples here. Throughout his ministry, Jesus was teaching the disciples to pick up the promises that they knew and to understand that he was the fulfillment of them. So because this is such an unusually crucial verse for the way we put our whole Bible together, here on Christmas Eve, with half our congregation missing, and tons of you only here right now, I still am gonna teach you biblical theology in a summarized way that I think Jesus probably did that day by mentioning six specific passages that I'm pretty sure he would have mentioned.

You can take these down as a list. I think Jesus probably at least taught them about these six passages. I'll just tell you where they are first and I'll comment on each one of them briefly. Deuteronomy 18, 2 Samuel 7, Isaiah 61, Psalm 110, Daniel 7, and Isaiah 53. Let's do this right now, just like we're there that afternoon.

1 Deuteronomy 18:18, I will raise up for them a prophet like you from among their brothers, and I will put my words in his mouth, and he shall speak to them all that I command him. Jesus was called a prophet and understood himself to be a prophet like Moses had said and like the Lord had told Moses he would raise up like him. Peter himself would soon quote that verse in Acts 3 saying that it was fulfilled in Jesus. And I think Peter got that from understanding what Jesus himself taught. Jesus taught in John 5 that Moses explicitly wrote of him.

But Jesus doesn't just announce his prophetic mission bringing God's word. He personally fulfilled that mission. He is the Word of God. Friends, if you come back tonight, I'm going to be preaching a 10-minute sermon, Lord willing, from John chapter 1. Number 2, 2 Samuel 7:12-13.

There, God promised David that he would raise up one of David's offspring to establish everlasting rule among his people. So when Jesus in the Gospels is hailed as Son of David, like the blind man does that he heals right before the triumphal entry in Luke 18. This is the scripture that's back there. It's his promise in second Samuel seven to David that he would have a, an everlasting throne. That promise would have been at the headwaters of the way he was called son of David.

So in Psalm 118, verse 26, which the people shout out at the triumphal entry to in Jerusalem. The idea is that the one who's coming in the name of the Lord is David's son, the anointed one. That's where we we get the word Messiah. He is the Messiah King. So he would have taught them, I think, Deuteronomy 18, prophet like Moses, 2 Samuel 7, son of David, King.

And then clearly a third one would be Isaiah 61, verses 1 and 2. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he's anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and the recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor. And we know this was central because when Jesus preaches his first recorded sermon in the synagogue at Nazareth, this is the text. And after it's read, do you know what Jesus says?

He says, Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing. He was saying openly that he was the one who'd been specially anointed. That is that he is the Messiah. And then number four, one of the ones most frequently cited by Jesus, is Psalm 110:1, Psalm 110:1. The Lord says to my Lord, sit at my right hand until I make your enemies your footstool.

The question Jesus posed to people from this verse, citing this Psalm of David, was like back in Luke 20 when he says, How can they say that the Christ, the Messiah, is David's son?

David thus calls him Lord. So how is he a son? Jesus doesn't answer that. He leaves that as a question to show them that to merely understand the Messiah as a human king will not do. There is more going on with this Messiah than just that.

Then if you add to that a fifth one, Daniel chapter 7 verses 13 and 14, Daniel chapter 7, verses 13 and 14.

I saw in the night visions, and behold, with the clouds of heaven there came one like a Son of Man, and He came to the Ancient of Days and was presented before Him. And to Him was given dominion and glory and and a kingdom that all peoples, nations, and languages should serve Him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and His kingdom, one that shall not be destroyed. I'm not saying you can find the Trinity in the Old Testament, but I think here we find the Trinity in the Old Testament. He's giving divine worship to this Son of Man.

Who is this one? Jesus had alluded to this in Luke 21 in his description of the Son of Man coming in power and a cloud with great glory at the end of the age. Well here again the Messiah is presented as someone more than merely a human king. He is someone with power and glory so great that his rule will be indestructible and unending, as David's successor was promised to be. Of whom could this be said?

Other than God himself. God, man, God with us, Emmanuel.

So we've had prophet and we've had king.

But I think what Jesus' ministry especially brought forward that the disciples seemed to have a hard time grasping was the priestly component. And the last one of these six passages I'll mention Isaiah 53. Isaiah 53. And friends, if you want to read it later, it's that whole chapter even beginning at the end of 52. But I'm just going to read one verse from it.

Isaiah 53, where the servant of the Lord is praised as one acting wisely, and yet, friends, this is the key thing, we read that it was the will of the Lord to crush him. Why? It wasn't because of anything he had done wrong. No, it's because of things that we have done wrong. Isaiah 53:6, All we like sheep have gone astray.

We have turned everyone to his own way, and the Lord has laid on Him the iniquity of us all. Him is the suffering servant, the servant of the Lord. He is the one who has had our iniquities laid on Him. He has become the sacrifice. He is the priest and He is the offering.

Putting all this together, we see that the very fact that Jesus was killed by hanging Him on a tree did mean as these two disciples were assuming that he was in fact cursed by God, just like Deuteronomy 21 taught. But unlike what these two disciples had concluded, that didn't mean that Jesus was disqualified from being the Messiah. In fact, it was just the opposite. This was an essential part of his work as the Messiah. The Messiah had not come simply to bring physical liberation from physical oppressors and even death, though he would bring that too.

But initially and most fundamentally, the Messiah came to bring us spiritual liberation from our rebellion against God and God's right and good and just and holy wrath against us because of our sins. For centuries, the Jews had concentrated on this hope of a son of David to protect and to deliver them nationally. But at the heart of God's promises in the Old Testament was God's promise to show himself, as he said to Moses, as a God forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, but who will by no means clear the guilty. How could he both be forgiving and yet not clear the guilty?

Only by means of a substitute, one who would voluntarily place himself in our place, the eternal Son of God born as a man to take upon him our nature yet without sin, to live a life of perfect trust in his heavenly Father. He would fulfill all the structure of sacrifices that they were prescribed in the Old Testament, carried out in the temple in Jesus' day. His own offering of himself was what all those sacrifices pointed to. He would take my place. He would bear the wrath that I've deserved and yours too, if you only repent of your sins and trust in Christ.

Oh friend, do that today. What better Christmas gift could you get than forgiveness for your sins and a new relationship with God as your heavenly Father? In that sense, the whole Old Testament is about how you can be forgiven for your sins and made right with God through the substitution of his sinless son in your place. And it was Jesus' resurrection from the dead that was the capstone of the fulfillment of all the promises that Jesus himself had made during his earthly ministry. Again and again he'd said those very things that we read in Luke 18.

You know, when he had promised them just days earlier, we are going up to Jerusalem. And everything that is written about the Son of Man by the prophets will be accomplished. For he will be delivered over to the Gentiles and will be mocked and shamefully treated and spit upon. And after flogging him, they will kill him. And on the third day he will rise.

And now that very day was finally happening. And Jesus was there educating these disciples, as he would do later that day with his other disciples, teaching them what his coming had always been about. This is what it means when we sing, Mild He laid His glory by. Mild means humble, humbly, He laid His glory by. Mild in that the Son of God was humble.

In Bethlehem stable, He took on human flesh. He was born that man no more may die. Not in the sense that physical death would immediately end at his birth, but that at his death and resurrection he would end death's tyranny over the human race, trapped in sin and death. So on that first Christmas day, Jesus was born to raise the sons of earth. His resurrection was simply the beginning of the resurrection of that final day when all the dead are brought to and before God, they stand.

He was born to give them second birth, the new birth that Jesus had told Nicodemus about, being spiritually born again and by believing in Jesus Christ and his claims. This is why in our carols we call each other to listen to the angels singing glory to the newborn king, because this is what he had come to do. That order of suffering and then glory there in verse 26 in our passage was by Jesus' resurrection that day suddenly revealed as the order of Jesus' life. Crucifixion first, and then resurrection. Suffering and then glory.

Friend, part of what that means is, however painful the holiday season may be for you, all the suffering that you undergo, if you're a Christian, is not the end of the story. The story isn't concluded there. Suffering and then glory. That would be the pattern of the Messiah and His ministry. Paul argued it in the Thessalonian synagogue on three Sabbath days in Acts 17, reasoned with them in the synagogue of the Jews from the Scriptures, explaining and proving that it was necessary for the Christ to suffer and to rise from the dead.

Suffering then glory would be the pattern for His people too, His followers. That day and for us here today. Suffering, then glory. As Peter writes in 1 Peter 5, Humble yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of God, so that at the proper time he may exalt you, and after you have suffered a little while, the God of all grace, who has called you to his eternal glory in Christ, will himself restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish you. So friends, Jesus is the sum and substance of all the Bible.

Old Testament and New. And He is teaching them that they should listen to Him and trust Him as He leads them and us to a steady resting repose of our faith and trust in Him. He is the one the whole Bible is about. So this would be something of how Jesus had interpreted to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning Himself. This is the education that Jesus was providing for those disciples as they walked from Jerusalem to that village of Emmaus.

That Sunday afternoon. This is how Jesus opened the Scriptures to them. We should go on. What happened after that education on the road and at the table? Jesus also opened their eyes.

Look again at verses 31 and 32. And their eyes were opened, and they recognized him. And he vanished from their sight. They said to each other, Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked to us on the road, while he opened to us the Scriptures. That vanishing happens so quickly.

It's as if he's saying, you, don't have to see me in order to understand me. He was giving a foretaste of the experience of the Christian today. Of course, man's eyes had been spiritually opened before by a meal, the first meal in the Garden of Eden that we read of in the Bible in Genesis 3, when the two took not food offered by God, but food he had forbidden.

And when they ate it, it says in Genesis 3:7, their eyes were opened. And they knew that they were naked. They were now not only physically without clothes, they were without any excuse before God against his charges of disobedience and sin. And they had some sense of it. They fled from God.

They attempted to hide from him. That new sensation they had of shame evidenced the presence of a new spiritual reality, their guilt before God.

And it is sympathy for us in that state of guilt that drew the Son of God to lay His glory by, to be born in the manger, because He cared for us in our guilt. And now here at this table in Emmaus, a new vision began of a new world given us by Christ's giving of Himself for us, for fellowship with God to be restored. The truths in the Bible are essential to opening our eyes to the truth, but they are not sufficient. Many an unbeliever has read the Bible and heard the gospel of Jesus Christ, but there is something more that happens when we hear this story and understand. We have to believe.

And this is what Luke means here when he testifies that their eyes were opened. And again, that passive verb is suggesting it's an indirect reference, meaning reverently to imply that God is the one who supernaturally opened their eyes. He lights the mind. He lights the heart with the truth of God's Word. I wonder how your spiritual eyes are this morning.

Would you say they're open? Or would you say they're closed? Are you able to see what God says spiritual reality is?

Can you see your need? Can you see what God has done for you in Christ?

I pray that God will open your eyes, even while you hear this message. If you're visiting and you're wondering what this is like, maybe over lunch you can ask the person you came with to explain to you their own experience of having their eyes fiercely opened. Praise Factory kids, we don't normally have you in here. We're delighted to have you in here today. Ask your parents when you get home if God has ever opened their eyes.

Let them tell you what that means. Scholars are divided over verse 30 here whether this breaking of bread is meant to bring to their minds the Last Supper. Several of you asked me that, it could be. But then these two almost certainly wouldn't have been at the Last Supper. That was just with the 12.

The point here, I think, was not to encourage Luke's readers to take the supper, but to open their Bibles. They say as much in verse 32, don't they? They don't say, Did not our hearts burn within us while we sat at table and he broke bread and gave thanks to it? No, he said, they say, Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked to us on the road, while he opened to us the Scriptures? Friends, the signs of the sacraments are mute apart from the message of the Word.

If you want your spiritual eyes to be opened, spend time with your Bible open. I pray that listening to this message now will cause your heart to burn within you as the truth comes out of these old pages and sets your heart on fire for him. That kindling of such a fire in the hearts of these believers would soon set a great company aflame at Pentecost, which would spread the gospel around the world and down the ages till it's reached us here this morning. That all began with the Lord opening their eyes.

Fourth thing Jesus did, he appeared to Peter, to Cleopas, to others. That's what the disciples recount here to each other. As they gather and share their testimonies. Look at verse 33. And they, that's Cleopas and the other guy, rose that same hour and returned to Jerusalem.

Hold on, look back up in verse 13. They had just walked seven miles from Jerusalem. It's in the evening now and they've been going downhill because Jerusalem is up high. They are so excited about whatever has happened that now in the evening, after just walking seven miles downhill, they are about to, in the night, when it's dangerous back then to travel by road, go seven miles uphill in their excitement to tell the other disciples what's just happened. So they rose that same hour and returned to Jerusalem, and they found the eleven, and those who were with the eleven gathered together, saying, this is what the eleven were saying, the Lord has risen indeed and has appeared to Simon.

Then they, Cleopas and his friend, told what had happened on the road and how he was known to them in the breaking of the bread. The momentous fact that Jesus rose from the dead is part of why he could just refer here in verse 34 to the 11th as to Jesus as the Lord, the Lord. The fact that he rose on a Sunday morning was the reason why the church could be said to be born on Sunday. And why Sunday became and has continued to be the chief day of Christian worship. Why we're gathered here together even this morning and not yesterday morning.

Isn't it amazing that Luke was able to collect testimonies here of people who on the very first day of Jesus' resurrection saw him risen from the tomb. And these accounts were circulated and set down in writing during the lifetime of those who quoted them. Before there was ever a New Testament, These stories were circulating and were being told in gathering of Christians like this very one mentioned here in verses 33 and 34 and 35. We're dealing with eyewitness accounts here given that Cleopas and his friend and they allude to Simon Peter there in verse 34, having seen the risen Jesus. Friends, the tomb was empty, the disciples were changed, the message of Jesus' death and resurrection became central because Jesus rose from the dead on that Sunday morning.

No other plausible explanation for the empty tomb has ever been given. Jesus died and rose from the dead. And like those first disciples, we now need to rearrange our lives around this reality and its implications, because Jesus is alive. We should conclude. And I'm probably just going to go right in this pretty brief conclusion right into Joy to the World.

So if you all even want to walk up here during this conclusion, you feel free to do that.

Jesus may have just laid there on Christmas, but He was busy on Easter Day, wasn't He? Rising from the dead, drawing near to these disciples, opening the Scriptures to them, opening their eyes to understand them and Him, and also appearing to others the same day. Jesus rising from the dead is the only is an explanation for why Christmas is so central to the traditions of so many parts of the world today. Jesus' life showed that he wasn't merely a Jewish rabbi or even a king of Israel. He was the eternal Son of God, and he was incarnated.

He took on flesh to come to the aid of, to save all of those in any age or place who would be his. Conclude with a final story about Charlotte. Charlotte was one such person. She was born near Charlottesville, Virginia in 1840. She was only four feet three inches tall.

But she gave all that she had to follow the risen Christ. In 1873 at 32 years of age, she was sent by her church and the Foreign Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention to China. After staying around some other missionaries for a time, she decided to pack her things and move by herself out to the town of Pingtu. She herself was a faithful and fearless personal evangelist, and as a woman she could share freely with the village woman. She started a school to train Christian women to do Christian work in China.

Charlotte intended to give herself entirely to serve the risen Christ, and so she did, spending herself decade after decade, leading hundreds of people to know the Lord Jesus. She was in China for nearly 40 years. She regularly shared her food and finances with those in need around her, even as she shared the gospel with them. At 72, she seemed tired and worn out. So her friends finally persuaded her to go take a rest back in the States.

So she got on a boat. She weighed barely 50 pounds. But she headed home first over to Kobe, Japan, and in the harbor there she died. 111 years ago today, on Christmas Eve, 1912, in the town of Pingtu, there's a monument erected in her memory with her Chinese name and underneath it the simple inscription, How She Loved Us.

Since then, many churches in America have taken up Christmas season offerings for missions in her name, Lottie Moon. That offering that she first suggested to send more missionaries to China so they could be told about the risen Christ has been taken up by more and more and more churches since that day. In the last seven years alone, around $1.2 billion has been raised. To send Christian workers to tell people who do not know the truth about Jesus, about the risen Lord. Friends, if Thomas Jefferson were right and Jesus' story ended with there, they laid Jesus and rolled a great stone at the door of the sepulcher and departed.

I don't think you'd ever had Lottie Moon. You wouldn't have had the churches in Virginia that saw her converted. You wouldn't have had the churches in England that started those churches in Virginia. You wouldn't have had the church in Jerusalem in the first place. All the disciples would have been like these two on the road to Emmaus.

They would have been sad and disappointed. They would have wandered home and they would have just gone on with their lives. Disappointed, but ultimately moved on to other things. But that's not what happened. Because the Lord has risen indeed.

Joy to the world. Turn to page 15. Let's stand and sing.