The text below formed the primary content for my first publication of "The Spirit Porch," a monthly publication for my congregation dedicated to a transformational conversation about the praxis of our discipling community and whether it points to or away from the Ressurected Lord Jesus. My congregational leadership and I just made the decision to move St. Mark's, Bloomfield, Nebraska, to weekly communion and the content of articles and conversations such as these were central to this rapid movement. I offer this for your edification!
A mentor friend of mine ends every table prayer with these words: “...and thank you Lord for this food. It would be a banquet anywhere.” It doesn’t matter how small or large the meal is...here in the states we don’t see much hunger even if there is a great deal of it around us. When it is around us, it tends to be hidden from our eyes. But Rick’s eyes were forever changed by a trip to
When we are surrounded by such an abundance of food, it is difficult for us to see the importance of the meal and feast imagery so prevalent in Scripture. In times and places of incredible lack and scarcity, feasts were associated with salvation; with well-being, wholeness, and divine abundance. In our scriptures, where there’s a meal and God’s involved, you can be sure that God is bringing about his salvation.
We see this in God’s deliverance of the Hebrew people from slavery at the hands of the Egyptians to freedom in God’s Promised Land; in the Passover Meal where the first born children of the Hebrew people are spared in God’s spirit plague (Exodus 12), to the Manna that God showered upon the Israelites during their long wilderness journey (Exodus 16).
We see this work of a saving feast all through the ministry of Jesus...and most of the time his feasting is scandalous. Why? Because his “table fellowship” involves tax collectors and sinners, those who have committed treason against their own people, and the spiritual losers of Jesus’ day. When Jesus eats with them, what he’s in essence saying is that it is to such as these that the
Then there are the powerful stories of the feeding of the five thousand, and the feeding of the four thousand...images of God’s abundance poured out on the hungry and weary.
And then there’s the last Passover Meal that Jesus will ever celebrate… the Last Supper. It is celebrated with the twelve central disciples, not as an exclusive meal,
All of these meal stories and feasts have at their core one thing; it is God who does the feeding, God who does the reconciling, God who does the forgiving and God who does the work of salvation. Period.
What do we do? We show up and participate and trust and thank God that he’s sufficient. That’s it. God’s in the business of bringing some beauty and harmony to this mess that so often characterizes our lives. Given all of this, the words from the prophet Isaiah
“On this mountain the LORD of hosts will make for all
I know that the word has gotten out that the new pastor is passionate about Communion. This is true; I am. But not because it’s my hobby horse. I’m passionate about it because it is how we experience God’s good news—how we participate in God’s promised reconciliation and forgiveness right now. What did we do to deserve it? Nothing. What do we need to do to participate in it? Simply come. We don’t learn faith by taking tests and reading books. We learn faith, faith in God’s good news, by participating in it. Jesus says, “Come, follow me!” Jesus says, “Take and eat...take and drink.” We learn faith by participating in God’s work.
In Christian community, this participation is most profoundly experienced at the Communion table where we participate in the future feast that will be prepared for ALL people, right now. We participate in it, and it transforms us. We participate in it, and it reconciles us—us to God and to one another. It makes of us a people who gather at God’s mountain, eating his abundance and grace.
In my ordination, I have been called to be an unleasher of the Good News in the midst of God’s people. We are experts as human beings at constructing barriers between ourselves and God and his incredible work. But in Christian community, we are required to remove them...to be a transformed people and in our transformation, witnesses to a world that desperately needs to see and experience God’s promise of reconciliation and healing.
So I thank you, ahead of time, for enduring the changes in our midst. In the end, I guarantee you that you will see that you weren’t humoring your new pastor, you were living the
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