This devotion is written by Dan Wilt and is entitled, “Were Not Our Hearts Burning Within Us? Two Disciples On the Road To Emmaus.” Dan Wilt is a contributing author for Seedbed.com.
CONSIDER THIS
It is the first Easter day. The stirrings, the whispered conversations, the wide-eyed looks of shock and disbelief, the to-ing and fro-ing and post-resurrection scene after scene and the Easter grapevine . . . are all just getting started.
On this bright day, Resurrection day, we meet two disciples walking on the road to Emmaus. We know that one is named Cleopas; the other’s name is left a mystery. (Some have welcomed that mystery throughout the millennia; we are given a perfect opportunity to imagine ourselves in the position of the unnamed disciple in the story).
It is a seven-mile walk, and the conversation is focused and pained. The crucifixion is fresh on their minds, and reports have begun to circulate that the battered and pierced body of Jesus was not only absent from the tomb—some of the female disciples were telling stories that angels declared he was alive!
After the last three years of miracles, and sightings of the impossible-made-real, one might think anything is possible.
But pain and suffering of the soul can lead one to doubt, and a tone of disappointment is clearly heard in the song of lament and confusion their spirits are now singing.
In v. 17, we read that their faces are downcast, shadowed by sorrow and gloom. Sadness, disappointment, confusion, seem high—faith that a miracle-of-miracles has occurred seems dreadfully low.
And it is here that Jesus companions them on their journey. It is here that Jesus companions us—when information is partial at best and hope feels like a luxury.
They don’t recognize Jesus, or, as the passage says, they were kept from recognizing Jesus. Their sight may have been limited by the Lord himself, by their ignorance of the true story behind the story of their people Israel, or even by their own grief-laden minds.
No matter the reason, we know that the disoriented spirit can often suffer from a form of inner blindness, an inability to see what is right and true and beautiful in front of us. The brain masks the obvious, and we are propelled into our worst stories, catastrophizing outcomes and beginning to believe that our worst fears are being realized.
It bears noting that all doubt is not stubborn, rigid unbelief. Sometimes, as may have been the case here, doubt is simply the soul seeking better answers than it has known before.
Jesus is patient with the seeking and unsure. He listens, without interruption. The Emmaus Road disciples share as we all should, honestly and without hiding their bewilderment. He listens as they get the story they have come to know out in the open.
Then, Jesus speaks.
Put yourself, for a moment, in the place of the unnamed disciple—what would it have been like to have the resurrected Jesus explain the whole story of the Scriptures, pointing to himself and the promises of God fulfilled in him, all the way through? The moment was wonder-filled enough for them to describe their hearts as “burning within” them.
Hope must have begun to stir their spirits as they listened. They must have never heard, truly heard, the gospel like this before—a gospel that included the suffering of the Messiah before entering his glory—told by the resurrected Messiah himself! Faith may have started to rise like the sun that morning, gradually—yet inevitably.
We know the next part of the story. For the disciples on the Emmaus Road, it took the sight and sound of bread breaking, being given to them by Jesus, for their eyes to be opened.
And opened they were.
Uncertainty is not always the opposite of faith; it is often the precursor to faith when the heart is soft and listening. Jesus knows that sometimes we need answers as we struggle with bewilderment and doubt—but sometimes we need an encounter with his presence far more.
The risen Jesus companions you—accompanies you—on the long and sometimes troubling road Home. And just like the disciples on the road to Emmaus, a long listening in his presence can open our eyes to see that he has been right there with us all along.
THE PRAYER
Risen Lord of the Burning Heart, it is your presence that leads us to true sight, true hearing, of the answers you give along the challenging journey home. We are grateful for your patience, your companionship, and the breaking of our seasons of blindness as you reveal your heart to us once again. In Jesus’s name, amen.
Resources:
Commentary Article: Luke 24:13-35 - N.T. Wright
Commentary Article: Luke 24:13-35 - John Mason

