Friday, April 17, 2026

The One who walks beside us (Fr. Patrick van der Vorst)


   In this lithograph, Maurice Denis offers a contemporary interpretation of the Supper at Emmaus. We see Christ seated at the table, blessing the bread. Opposite him sits the artist himself, portrayed as the disciple who has just recognised the true identity of his extraordinary table companion. Denis’s wife, Marthe, enters the room carrying a dish, while a friend follows with two small jugs; one for water, the other for wine, a clear Eucharistic reference. The print, based on Denis’s original painting now housed in the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, reimagines the scene from today’s Gospel in a modern setting. Notice, too, the two candelabra on the table: their flames seem to merge into one. It is a beautiful image: our own light drawn into Christ’s, shining all the more brightly together. 

    This morning’s reading offers real help for our life of prayer. The two disciples on the road to Emmaus are clearly discouraged, weighed down by sorrow. Many of us have found ourselves in that place, living under the shadow of a cross. 

    What does Jesus do? He simply draws alongside them and gently asks why they are downcast. He invites them to speak freely, to share what is on their minds and in their hearts. This is what Jesus invites us to do each time we come to him in prayer: to pour out our hearts, to speak of our joys and our struggles, our hopes and our hurts. 

    And once the disciples have shared all that is within them, the Gospel tells us that Jesus then begins to speak. The same is true for us. After we have brought our hearts to the Lord, there comes a moment to listen, to be still, and to allow Jesus' word to speak to us. Thus prayer is not only about speaking; it is also about listening, waiting in silence for the voice of the One who walks beside us, even when we do not recognise him at first 

--Fr. Patrick van der Vorst 

Image source: Maurice Denis, The Pilgrims at Emmaus (1895), https://www.vangoghmuseum.nl/en/prints/collection/p1115V2000
Quotation source

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