
When Hope Walked Beside Them
When Hope Walked Beside Them
Two men walked slowly down a dusty road leading away from Jerusalem.
Just three days earlier they had watched their teacher, Jesus of Nazareth, executed on a Roman cross. They had believed he was the Messiah—the one God had promised would rescue Israel and restore His kingdom.
But now their rabbi was dead.
Or at least... that’s what they thought.
As they walked, they tried to make sense of what had happened. Everything they believed about God and the Messiah no longer seemed to fit the reality they had just witnessed.
Luke records their quiet confession:
Those three words say everything.
Their expectations had collapsed. The Messiah they believed in had been nailed to a Roman cross.
And the Messiah isn’t supposed to die like that.
Everything they believed about the promises of God suddenly seemed impossible.
A Stranger on the Road
As they walked, a stranger approached and began walking beside them.
They didn’t realize it was Jesus.
He asked what they were discussing, and the men poured out their confusion. They told him about the arrest, the crucifixion, the empty tomb, and the strange reports from women who claimed angels had said Jesus was alive.
The stranger listened.
Then he began to speak.
Starting with Moses and continuing through the prophets, he explained how the Scriptures had always pointed toward a Messiah who would suffer before entering his glory.
For miles along that dusty road, he unfolded the story of Scripture.
Something inside them was stirring.
Later they would say to each other:
But at the time they still didn’t understand.
Something in their hearts recognized truth... even while their minds struggled to believe it. Their hearts sensed something their grief would not yet allow them to accept.
Because if what this stranger was saying was true, then their rabbi could not really be gone.
And that was almost too much to hope for.
When Hope Collapses
Anyone who has lived long enough knows moments like this.
Moments when something you believed deeply suddenly falls apart.
A prayer you were certain God would answer goes unanswered.
A direction you believed God was leading suddenly collapses.
A situation you thought God would surely protect turns out very differently.
You look at what happened and quietly say the same words those men spoke:
Moments like that are not limited to the pages of Scripture.
I remember a moment in my own life when I believed I knew exactly what God would do.
A young boy lived in my home for a time—a child from a deeply abusive situation. I loved him like a son. When the day came for a judge to decide where he would live, I had no doubt about the outcome.
No just judge would send a child back into abuse.
No loving God would allow it.
But the decision came, and the boy was sent back to the very place we had hoped to rescue him from.
I fell to the ground that day and screamed at God.
For a long time I couldn’t even speak to God.
It felt as though everything I believed about Him had collapsed.
The Moment Everything Changed
Back on the road to Emmaus, the two men finally reached their village. The stranger prepared to continue down the road, but they urged him to stay for the evening.
So they sat down together at the table.
The stranger took the bread.
He blessed it.
He broke it.
It was Jesus.
The one they thought they had lost had been walking beside them the entire afternoon.
And then—just as suddenly—he vanished from their sight.
Looking back on the walk, the men said something remarkable:
Only later did they realize what had been happening.
Jesus had been with them the entire time.
Emmaus Was Not an Event
Many people today hear the word Emmaus and think of organized retreats or special gatherings meant to create a powerful spiritual experience.
But the original Emmaus story was much simpler.
Two disappointed men were just walking down a road, trying to make sense of a painful moment in their lives.
They weren’t attending a gathering.
They weren’t expecting a spiritual encounter.
They were simply talking.
And somewhere along that quiet road, Jesus joined them.
Emmaus wasn’t a planned experience.
It was the sudden realization that the risen Christ had been walking beside them long before they recognized him.
The Road We All Walk
Life eventually brings most of us to a road like that.
A place where our understanding of God feels shaken.
A place where hope feels fragile.
A place where the story we expected doesn’t unfold the way we believed it would.
Sometimes we walk that road for years.
But over time I have begun to realize something that those two men discovered that evening.
Christ is still walking beside us.
Sometimes we don’t recognize Him at first.
But He is there—listening, teaching, patiently opening our hearts to truths we cannot yet see.
My story with that boy is not finished yet.
I would love to say everything worked out the way I once believed it would. It didn’t.
But I stand on something today that I did not understand then.
That’s what the men on the Emmaus road eventually discovered.
And until that day comes, I hold on to this quiet hope:
If this article encouraged you, please consider sharing it with someone who may be wrestling with the same questions about life and death.
📢 Pass This Along
This week’s blog is for anyone who has ever felt crushed by disappointment, unanswered prayer, or a story that did not unfold the way they believed it would. When hope seems gone, Christ may be closer than you think.
If this article encouraged you, please share it with someone who may need the reminder that even on the hardest roads of life, they are not walking alone.
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