Home

                       Upcoming Walk/Flight

                                  Men’s Walk #110  is  October 3-6. 2024.                                    LD – Ed Cummings, Spiritual Director – TBD.

                                     Boy’s Flight #55 is October 4-6, 2024.                                       LD – Brian Kelley, SD – TBD.

Please be in prayer for the pilgrims, caterpillars, team, sponsors, and community as we prepare for our upcoming walk/flight.  

Studies and Fellowship - Trinity Hill United Methodist Church

 

The Walk to Emmaus gets its name from the story in Luke 24:13-35, which provides the central image for the three-day experience and follow-up.  Luke tells the story of that first Easter afternoon when the risen Christ appeared to the two disciples who were walking together along the road from Jerusalem to Emmaus.  Like Christians and churches that are blinded by preoccupation with their own immediate difficulties, these two disciples’ sadness and hopelessness seemed to prevent them from seeing God’s redemptive purpose in things that had happened.

And yet, the risen Christ “came near and went with them,” opening the disciples’ eyes to his presence and lighting the fire of God’s love in their hearts.  As they walked to Emmaus, Jesus explained to them the meaning of all the scriptures concerning him.  When they arrived in Emmaus, Jesus “took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to them,” and their eyes were opened.  They recognized him as Jesus, the risen Lord, and they remembered how their hearts had burned within them as they talked with him on the road.  Within the hour, the two disciples left Emmaus and returned immediately to their friends in Jerusalem.  As they told stories about their encounters with the risen Lord, Jesus visited them again with a fresh awareness of his living presence.

However, the story of Jesus’ resurrection does not conclude with the disciples’ personal spiritual experiences.  Jesus ascended to the Father, and the disciples became the body of the risen Christ through the empowerment of the Holy Spirit.  The disciples were sent forth by the Spirit to bear witness to the good news of God in Jesus Christ.  They learned to walk in the spirit of Jesus, to proclaim the gospel to a disbelieving world, and to persevere in grace through spiritual companionship with one another.

The Walk to Emmaus offers today’s disciples a parallel opportunity to rediscover Christ’s presence in their lives, to gain fresh understanding of God’s transforming grace, and to form friendships that foster faith and support spiritual maturity.  While Emmaus provides a pathway to the mountaintop of God’s love, it also supports pilgrims’ return to the world in the power of the Spirit to share the love they have received with a hurtful and hurting world.

The Walk to Emmaus is grounded theologically and institutionally in The Upper Room ministry unit of the General Board of Discipleship of The United Methodist Church.

However, The Walk to Emmaus is ecumenical.  The program invites and involves the participation of Christians of many denominations. Emmaus is ecumenical not only because members of many denominations participate, but also because Emmaus seeks to foster Christian unity and to reinforce the whole Christian community. This is one of the great strengths and joys of the Emmaus movement.

The fact that Emmaus is ecumenical does not mean it is theologically indifferent.  On the contrary, The Walk to Emmaus is designed to communicate with confidence and depth the essentials of the Christian life, while accentuating those features that Christians have traditionally held in common.

The Upper Room Walk to Emmaus is a tightly designed event that is conducted with discipline according to a manual that is universally standard.  Emmaus is offered only with the permission and under the guidelines of The Upper Room.  This ensures a proven format and a common experience that should be trustworthy from weekend to weekend wherever Emmaus is being offered.  Each community is administered locally through its local Board of Directors.  The program is administered globally through the International Emmaus office in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.