
And so these disciples were walking in spiritual twilight. Jesus, they thought, was dead. Things looked different now. Things were not quite so clear and bright as they had been just a few days earlier. But the irony of this story is that Jesus was just a few steps away. The power of this story is that these disciples eventually recognized Jesus and all of a sudden the lights came on in their lives. And these two disciples were so moved that they rushed back to Jerusalem to tell the others that Jesus had risen from the dead—He was alive and well—doing just fine. And Jesus is near, just a step away. And today, just like then, Jesus wishes us Peace and Jesus reminds us that everything had to be fulfilled.
This is such a beautiful story because sadness meets joy as the travelers discover that this Jesus of Nazareth is alive—not dead. And this is a powerful and beautiful story because it is a metaphor for how we often go through life: confounded in the present but remembering certainties of the past. How often do we go through the motions of life seeking and searching, convinced that the things we once believed in are gone forever? How often we as a church remember the days when God was alive and well in the lives of the congregation, but not sure where he is today? How often do we as a society we go through life sad because we are unsure of the things that we once believed in (this story is a great metaphor for the times we live in—for our post-modern society today: as a culture we are traveling between places, not knowing what’s ahead, not sure of where we are going or what we will believe in or how it all matters in the end)?
If you are wondering why I think this is so beautiful, it is because there is a powerful truth at every level: historical account, the story of our lives, this metaphor for our culture today….Jesus is just a step away is right here if we just had the eyes to see him. (Doug Watson & Wade Arp)



























