On Father Simon Says, Fr. Richard Simon reflected on the Road to Emmaus and offered a striking insight into why the disciples did not recognize the risen Jesus right away. It was not because He was a stranger. It was because they were learning to see Him anew.
Fr. Simon pointed to Cleopas as more than a passing name in the Gospel account. Drawing on early Christian tradition, he explained that Cleopas may have been a relative of Jesus. And still, even someone so close to Our Lord did not recognize Him at first. Fr. Simon compared it to seeing a loved one after a long absence and realizing they have changed more than expected. In the Resurrection, the disciples were not seeing Jesus as they remembered Him. They were seeing Him in the fullness of who He is.
That reflection led to the heart of the episode. The two disciples spent the day walking, talking, and sorting through their confusion. But it was in the breaking of the bread that their eyes were opened. Fr. Simon noted that in the Jewish custom surrounding a meal, there was a sacred silence between the blessing and the eating of the bread. That silence mattered. It was the first quiet moment in the whole journey, and it was there that they recognized the Lord.
It is a gentle but powerful lesson. We can fill our lives with noise, even good and religious noise, and still miss the presence of Christ. But when the soul grows quiet, when we stop talking long enough to listen, Jesus becomes easier to recognize. As Fr. Simon suggested, the Lord was made known not only in the breaking of the bread, but in the silence that surrounded it.
That is a needed reminder for all of us. Christ is truly risen. He is not distant, hidden, or gone. He is present and waiting to be recognized, especially in the Eucharist and in the quiet places of the heart.
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