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Emmaus is a village about
seven miles from Jerusalem. It became known thanks to an episode confirming
Christ's Resurrection and described in St. Luke's Gospel (24:13-35).
After all the unhappy events of the trial, Crucifixion and Entombment of Christ,
two of the apostles were going from Jerusalem to the village of Emmaus. Christ
resurrected joined them and asked about the subject of their conversation. They
did not recognize Christ, and told him about the death of Jesus of Nazareth, who
was a prophet 'mighty in need', about their sadness, and grief, and puzzlement
after the women had found the tomb of Christ empty.
"How dull you are!' he answered. 'How slow to believe all that the prophets said!
Was not the Messiah bound to suffer in this way before entering upon his glory?'
Then, starting from Moses and all the prophets, he explained to them in the
whole of scripture the things that referred to himself." (Luke 24:25-27).
By that time they had reached the village, and the travellers asked Christ to
stay for supper with them. Christ accepted their invitation to a meal. "And when
he had sat down with them at the table, he took bread and said the blessing; he
broke the bread, and offered it to them. Then their eyes were opened, and they
recognized him; but he vanished from their sight" (Luke 24:30-31). Without a
moment's delay the two returned to Jerusalem, found and announced Christ's
Resurrection to other disciples.
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Jacopo Carucci
called Pontormo
(1525)
Florence - Galleria degli Uffizi |
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Tintoretto (1543)
Budapest - Museum of Fine Arts |
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Michelangelo Merisi
called Il Caravaggio
(1596-98)
London - National Gallery |
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Michelangelo Merisi
called Il Caravaggio
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| Diego Velázquez
Kitchen Maid with the Supper at Emmaus (c. 1618) Dublin - National
Gallery of Ireland |
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Jacob Jordaens
(c. 1645/65)
Dublin - National Gallery of Ireland |
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Rembrandt (1648)
Paris - Louvre |
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Alonso Rodriguez
(century XVII)
Messina - Museo Civico |
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