The news can be overwhelming.
There seems to be a constant
barrage of information
coming at us from all sides.
We get the news by email.
We get the news from TV.
We get the news from social media.
We get the news from the internet.
Some of us still read the paper.
Our phones wake us up with Amber Alerts
and weather warnings.
Our friends and loved ones call and text us,
“Can you believe what just happened?!”
And the majority of this news
is bad.
Real bad.
Existential-crisis bad.
End-of-democracy bad.
Not-safe-to-go-outside bad.
To feel safe,
or at least sane,
we gravitate toward news sources
that confirm our worst fears
and suspicions.
We like to watch some pundit
blame all the same people we do.
We want conspiracy theories
that make it seem like
there is some nefarious other
behind it all.
We lock ourselves
into spheres of influence
that echo back all the grief and trauma,
fear and rage
we feel.
And when we encounter someone
who doesn’t seem to be as mad
about our grievance du jour,
we are shocked.
“What rock have you been hiding under?
How could you not have known about this?
And now that you do,
why aren’t you as scared and mad
as I am?”
I think this is one way
to look at Cleopas and his friend
on the journey from Jerusalem
to Emmaus.
They are discussing current events,
the bad news about what all had happened
during this Passover week in Jerusalem.
They are lamenting
that Jesus wasn’t the messiah
they thought he was.
He hadn’t overthrown Rome
and their local collaborators.
He hadn’t established
a new Davidic throne in Israel.
He hadn’t ignited a Maccabean style rebellion.
He hadn’t called legions of angels
to destroy their oppressors
and free them from occupation.
Jesus had been killed,
publicly humiliated and murdered
by the Romans,
and all Cleopas’ and his friend’s hopes and dreams
had gone to the grave with him.
And so here comes this stranger,
traveling along the road from Jerusalem
to Emmaus.
He butts into their conversation
and asks,
“What are you talking about?”
This question stops them in their tracks.
“What rock have you been hiding under?
You really don’t know?
You are also coming from Jerusalem
and you honestly have no idea
why we are upset?
They killed Jesus,
mocked and murdered him,
and we had hoped he was the Messiah.
Now some women went to see the body,
but it was gone.”
But this stranger knows another story.
“Don’t be fooled,”
he says,
“I see things very differently.”
and begins to tell them
a different story.
When was the last time
you entertained
a different story?
When was the last time
you got your news
from a different source?
When was the last time
you let someone else’s story
challenge the way you see your own?
Cleopas and his companion
are accosted by a stranger
and rather than telling him off,
rather than arguing about what all they had seen,
rather than drawing a weapon
and killing him on the spot,
they entertained his perspective.
They listened
as this stranger calls their fears and frustrations
foolish
because they don’t know the whole story.
In our day,
of guns fired
at teenagers at the wrong house,
or cars in the wrong driveway,
or a six-year-old and her parents
chasing a wayward ball into the wrong yard,
entertaining the alternate narrative of a stranger
seems like a bigger miracle
than the resurrection.
But this divine stranger
doesn’t just give them another story,
he gives them the whole story.
And when they listen,
when they are more curious than cautious,
when they are more hopeful than hateful,
when they are more hospitable than hostile,
they discover the depth of reality,
a reality big enough to hold
both bad news
and the Good News.
Then somehow,
in the retelling of this Good News
and the taking, blessing, breaking, and sharing of bread
Cleopas and his friend
recognize
that it was Jesus the whole time.
It was Jesus
who went through all the bad news with them
and yet was present to them
in the retelling of the Good News,
in the taking, blessing, breaking, and sharing
of bread made body.
This word and this meal
became for them
a tether to this newly recognized reality.
This new grounding
did not undo any of the bad news,
but it robbed the bad news of its power.
Rooted in this new deeper reality,
this experience of the resurrection
with their own eyes and heart,
they couldn’t be swayed by the bad news.
Too often we are swayed by the bad news,
manipulated and isolated,
making us strangers to each other.
And when these familiar strangers
seem to be leaving,
we bid them good riddance,
grateful we will no longer be challenged
by their presence
and their alternate stories.
But our Gospel lesson today
challenges us to be curious instead of cautious,
hopeful instead of hateful,
hospitable instead of hostile.
We are given this hour on Sunday mornings
to hear the whole story
and to break bread.
We are given this tether
to a reality big enough to hold
the bad news
and the Good News.
We are given this table
where we take, bless, break, and share
the bread made body.
We are given these things
that we might come to recognize the risen Christ
in each other,
that our hearts might burn within us,
not with peptic rage,
but with divine love for one another.
We are given this whole story
so we can hear the bad news
without being manipulated or isolated.
If you want to see Jesus,
if you want to experience
the miracle of resurrection,
you’re going to have to change your relationship
to the news.
Change the channel,
read a different paper or site,
check the story against other sources.
If you’re always finding yourself
agreeing with and affirmed by the news,
you aren’t watching the news,
you’re watching propaganda.
If your always finding yourself
scared and angry at the news,
you’re probably being manipulated.
Bad news is not the whole story.
Repentance is possible.
Redemption is possible.
Resurrection is possible.
Reconciliation is possible.
God has given us the Word
and the Sacraments
to soothe our conscience,
to wash and nourish our bodies,
and to transform our hearts and minds.
Bad news
is never the whole story.
So, go,
be the blessed and broken body,
shared with the world.
Be bread for the hungry.
Be grace for the ashamed.
Be life for the dead.
Be healing for the hurting.
Be love.
Be brave strangers
ready to share the whole story
with those willing to hear it.
Amen.