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Emotions vs Truth: How Shows Perspective Transforms Faith

  • Writer: Randy DeVaul, MA
    Randy DeVaul, MA
  • 4 days ago
  • 3 min read

The Emmaus Road is one of Scripture’s most honest portrayals of emotional struggle. Two disciples walked away from Jerusalem carrying the weight of disappointment. Their faces were downcast, their steps heavy, and their conversation filled with confusion. They had believed Jesus was the One who would redeem Israel, but His crucifixion shattered their expectations. Their grief was so overwhelming that when Jesus Himself approached them, they didn’t recognize Him.


Two people in cloaks walk toward a glowing, open tomb at sunrise. Crosses on a hill appear in the background under a cloudy sky.

When Jesus asked what they were discussing, they stopped walking. Their shock revealed how deeply their emotions had shaped their worldview. They assumed that anyone who knew about Jesus must be grieving His death. In their minds, the entire community of believers was devastated, confused, and hopeless.


But their feelings didn’t reflect reality.


Some people were celebrating Jesus’ death, believing they had eliminated a threat. Others were indifferent, seeing His crucifixion as just another execution. Some were hiding in fear.


And some, like the women who visited the tomb, were already filled with hope because they had encountered the truth that Jesus had risen, just as He had said He would. Their testimony aligned with everything Jesus had taught about His suffering and resurrection, yet the disciples dismissed it because their emotions had already decided the story was over.


This is what happens when feelings become our lens. Emotions are real, but they are not reliable. They can cloud judgment, distort perception, and convince us that our experience is universal.

When we feel hopeless, we assume everyone else is hopeless. When we feel discouraged, we assume no one sees a way forward. When we feel abandoned, we assume God is distant. When we feel overwhelmed, we assume the situation is impossible.


The disciples weren’t lying about their feelings. They were simply interpreting life through them. Their emotions had become their “truth,” even though their truth didn’t match God’s reality.


This is why Scripture emphasizes the renewing of the mind. Transformation doesn’t begin with changing how we feel. It begins with changing how we think. Paul’s instruction to renew the mind is not a call to ignore emotions but to anchor them in truth. Likewise, his command to think on what is true, noble, right, pure, lovely, and praiseworthy is not a sentimental suggestion but a spiritual strategy for emotional stability.


Jesus models this strategy on the Emmaus Road. He doesn’t start by soothing their emotions. He starts by addressing their interpretation. He listens to their disappointment, then gently challenges their assumptions. He opens the Scriptures and reframes the story they thought they understood. He shows them that the Messiah’s suffering was not a failure but a fulfillment of God’s plan. He walks them through truth until their perspective begins to shift.


What’s remarkable is that their emotional transformation begins before their eyes are opened. As Jesus explains the Scriptures, their hearts begin to burn within them. Something awakens. Something stirs. Their feelings start to change because their thinking is being renewed. Their hopelessness loosens its grip as truth takes root.


When their eyes are finally opened at the breaking of bread, everything becomes clear. The One they believed was dead is alive. The One they thought had failed has fulfilled every promise. The One they assumed was absent has been walking with them the entire time.


Their response is immediate. They return to Jerusalem — the same road they had just walked in despair now becomes the road they run with hope. Their testimony, once shaped by disappointment, is now fueled by resurrection.


This story speaks to anyone who has ever felt overwhelmed by emotion. When feelings dominate thinking, perspective shrinks. We lose sight of what God is doing. We assume our emotions reflect reality. We project our fears onto others. We dismiss hopeful voices. We forget what God has already said. And we overlook the possibility that Jesus is walking with us even when we don’t recognize Him.


But when truth renews the mind, perspective widens. When perspective widens, feelings begin to heal. And when feelings heal, testimony becomes powerful again.


The Emmaus Road teaches us that emotional transformation begins with mental renewal. Jesus restores hope not by changing circumstances but by changing perspective. He still does the same today.


© 2026 Randy DeVaul, MA. Want more content like this? Explore more articles Knowing God.



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