A Sermon for the Third Sunday of Easter (Year A)
April 19, 2026
Text: Luke 24:13-35
Now, O Lord, take my lips, and speak through them. Take our minds, and think through them. Take our hearts, and set them on fire. In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
This has been a hard week for our family. And before I say anything else, I just want to say thank you—to all of you who have reached out over the past several days with your prayers, your kind words, and your support.
It’s meant more than I can say.
Many of you know this already, but earlier this week, my dear friend and mentor of almost twenty-three years, Father Wells Warren, died after a sudden and quick battle with cancer.
And I’ll be honest with you—my heart’s been heavy. I’ve shed many tears over the past week.
Grief has a way of doing that.
It doesn’t come all at once, like we might expect.
It comes in waves.
There are moments of deep sadness—moments when the loss feels very real and very close.
Then there are moments of something else, and the best way I know how to describe it is gratitude.
Deep, abiding gratitude for Father Wells’s life and ministry as a priest.
Gratitude for having known him for as long as I did.
Gratitude for all the many ways he touched my life and the lives of so many others.
And I’m especially thankful that I was able to visit with Father Wells and his family last Friday, just a few days before he passed.
We spent time together, talking and sharing memories.
And I had the chance to tell him a few things I needed to say.
I told him how much he meant to me and my family.
I told him how much his life and ministry had shaped and formed me through the years and how many people he had touched along the way.
And in a moment that I’ll carry with me for the rest of my life, I was able to celebrate the Eucharist with Father Wells and his family right there in his living room.
It was truly a full-circle moment for me, being able to celebrate the Eucharist with Wells one last time.
He was the one who first welcomed me to the table, the one who helped me come to know Christ in the breaking of the bread.
I’ve been thinking about that moment all week and all the other wonderful memories I have of Father Wells.
And, for me, it feels especially timely that today’s Gospel reading is the story of two disciples on the road to Emmaus.
It’s one of my favorite Easter stories, and it’s all about how Christ is made known to us—not in the ways we might expect, but in the simple, ordinary moments of life.
In conversations and companionship and most especially in the sharing of a meal.
There are two disciples walking along the road from Jerusalem to Emmaus, trying to make sense of everything that’s just happened.
They’ve heard the news of Jesus being raised from the dead, but they haven’t seen it for themselves.
So they’re still in this confused state of grief and disappointment.
Because the one they had put their trust in—the one they had hoped would bring redemption to Israel—had been taken from them and crucified.
You can almost hear it in their voices:
“What do we do now?”
“Where do we go from here?”
And as they walk, Jesus quietly comes up beside them.
At first, they don’t recognize him.
They talk with him.
They listen.
They walk with him for miles.
And still—they don’t know who he is.
Perhaps, his identity was hidden from them in some mysterious way.
Or perhaps, in their grief over the loss of their friend and teacher, they weren’t able to see him as clearly as they once did.
But then something happens.
When they arrive at their destination, they invite Jesus to stay with them.
They sit down at the table for supper.
And Jesus takes bread…
blesses it…
breaks it…
and gives it to them.
And in that moment—their eyes are finally opened.
They recognize Jesus.
They see him in the breaking of the bread.
There’s something about the table.
Something about sharing a meal that opens us up in ways that other moments don’t.
I think that’s why so many of the stories we have of Jesus’ ministry take place around a table.
At the table, we have the opportunity to slow down.
To be present.
To enjoy the company and fellowship of others.
To make room for one another.
And it’s often there—in that simple, ordinary act of breaking bread—that Christ is made known.
When I think about my life and the special relationship I had with Father Wells, I can see how true that is.
Wells and his family were the first ones to welcome me and Chelsea into the Episcopal Church at St. Dunstan’s in Auburn.
And so much of that experience—so much of what made us feel like we belonged—happened around a table.
Every year, after the Great Vigil of Easter, we would gather in the kitchen at church for a big potluck brunch.
Every year, at the annual Beach Retreat in Fort Morgan, we would have a big Agape meal, with simple foods and fellowship.
On Tuesday evenings each week, we had a Folk Mass in the chapel, followed by a catered dinner.
And every week, after Sunday evening worship, we would stay for what Father Wells called $2 supper.
Week after week.
People sitting together.
Talking, laughing and sharing life.
And looking back on that now, I can see that those weren’t just meals.
They were moments where something deeper was happening, where I was beginning to encounter the love of God in Christ, before I even knew what it meant.
And that spirit of welcome wasn’t just something that happened around the dinner table.
It also happened in worship.
Every Sunday, before communion, Wells would stand up and say:
“All are welcome.”
And he really meant it.
It didn’t matter who you were.
It didn’t matter where you came from or what church you belonged to, or if you even went to church.
There was a place for you at the Table.
Because Wells understood that it wasn’t his Table.
It was God’s Table, and it’s a place where all who love God and who want to love God more are welcome.
And I’ll never forget the way he would invite people to stay for supper after the service.
During the announcements, he would always say, “Please stay for supper. It’s only two dollars, but if you don’t have two dollars, it’s free.”
Because for him, it was never about the money.
It was about the invitation.
It was about making sure that every person who came to church knew there was a place for them there—that they were truly welcome, no exceptions.
I carry that with me every single day.
So much of who I am as a priest—so much of how I understand this calling—has been shaped by Father Wells and the example he set.
The way I think about hospitality and welcome.
The way I think about what it means to be a pastor and priest.
I carry so much of what he taught me in the way I try to live out my own ministry.
And when I look back on all the moments in my life he was part of—
my baptism…
my confirmation…
my wedding…
the baptisms of our children…
my ordination to the priesthood…
And all the quieter moments in between—
I can see something more clearly now than I could at the time.
I can see the love of God at work in my life.
In shared meals.
In words of welcome.
In a place at the table.
That’s what today’s Gospel is all about.
That Christ is not only revealed in extraordinary moments…but in ordinary ones.
In the breaking of bread.
In the sharing of life.
In the simple act of sitting down together for a meal.
We are called to carry that radical love and hospitality forward.
We are called to create that same kind of space—to extend that same kind of invitation—to those we meet.
In many ways, we already do, right here at St. Mary’s.
Every time we gather for a meal or prepare food for one another.
Every time we serve our community.
In our parish meals.
In our Second Sunday potlucks.
In ministries like Rice and Beans and Community Dinners.
Those aren’t just nice things we do.
Those are moments where the love of God in Christ is made known—where people are seen, welcomed, and loved—maybe even for the first time.
So maybe the invitation for us today is simple.
May we continue to be a place where all are welcome at the table—at the Altar and at the dinner table.
May we continue to make space for all who seek God and a deeper knowledge of his love.
Because it may be in those very moments…
in the sharing of a meal…
in the breaking of the bread…
That someone will come to know and see Jesus more clearly.
Just as those disciples did.
And just as I did when I walked into St. Dunstan’s for the first time and met Wells Warren.
Maybe the invitation for us today is not just to remember that we are welcome…but to be that welcome for others.
To make space.
To extend the invitation.
To set the table.
And to say—clearly and without hesitation: “All are welcome.”
Amen.
