Thursday, April 5, 2012

Maundy Thursday Reflection

Acts 2:37-42
  37Now when they heard this, they were cut to the heart and said to Peter and to the other apostles, “Brothers, what should we do?” 38Peter said to them, “Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ so that your sins may be forgiven; and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. 39For the promise is for you, for your children, and for all who are far away, everyone whom the Lord our God calls to him.” 40And he testified with many other arguments and exhorted them, saying, “Save yourselves from this corrupt generation.” 41So those who welcomed his message were baptized, and that day about three thousand persons were added. 42They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.

Have you seen those commercials for Olive Garden, where the people eating are impossibly happy and laughing way louder than anyone has ever laughed in a real Olive Garden? The ones where the people read the menu the same way a child reads a toy catalog, and they find everything the incredibly-happy waitress says to be hysterical?
The first communions weren't always like that. If we read 1 Corinthians, we discover that the rich people often arrived first, eating all the good food before the poor people showed up. They would get into fights. It was hardly the stuff of a holy community after which we'd want to model ourselves.
But there was something special about those communions—they gathered together for a feast. It was important for them to sit down at table together and share in a feast. It was one of the pillars of the community of the faithful. They devoted themselves to teaching, to fellowship, to breaking of bread and to prayers. It was vital for them to sit and eat together. Why?
Because something happens at the table. When we sit down at the table to eat a meal with someone, it's a different type of environment, and we'll talk about things that really matter, about ourselves, about life. There's a book I read recently called The Amazing Power of Family Meals. It was about how much our society has lost because families don't eat together anymore, and when they do they are often each eating a different food and engaged in a different electronic device. The book talked about how much kids learn at the dinner table, and how important it is for families to eat together.
But it's not just families that eat together. When a couple goes out on a date, what do they go do most often? They go out to dinner, or to lunch. They go sit at a table together and share a meal, and they're brought closer by the experience. When Rachel and I were dating we'd go spend hours at a restaurant, and we learned so much about each other during those meals.
At the table, we are fed, body and soul, by the food and the companionship. Community is formed. It's why so many of the stories from the Gospels revolve around meals Jesus ate with one community or another. He was constantly gathered with other people—teaching them, healing them, sharing with them, growing closer. The Pharisees were angry with some of the people Jesus ate with, believing them to be unclean or too sinful. But Jesus knew that people were changed over the course of a meal.
As a lasting gift to the church, Jesus gave us the communion meal. It's the last supper he ate with his disciples on that first Maundy Thursday, the passover meal he shared in that intimate upper room. We don't have much record of what happened, but I imagine it was a lengthy meal, filled with laughter as well as sorrow. It was there that he gave us this sacrament.
He gave us the sacrament, a meal, as a gift, so that we might continue to gather around the table—only now, we would gather around the Lord's Table. He took the ordinary, bread and wine, staples of every meal, and turned it into the extraordinary, his body and blood, food for the soul that would be to us a reminder of his incredible sacrifice, of his healing power, of his love for us. The meal would be to us a reminder of the transformation of each of us that takes place only in him. For just as we can't celebrate communion without Christ, we can't be redeemed without his blood.
This meal isn't intended to end when we say our prayer at the conclusion of communion. It's supposed to be a new beginning, a reminder, a meal that points beyond itself to the eternal truth of redemption in Christ. It's all supposed to lead us deeper into fellowship with Christ, and Christ has always intended that, as we read in the beginning of our service, to lead us deeper into fellowship with one another.
Communion isn't an individual thing. The table is meant to gather us together as a group. We're intended to be closer to one another at the conclusion of a meal. I always remember how Wayne Bledsoe would talk about eating meals when he traveled. He traveled a lot, and Wayne was one who knew how important community was. When he went into restaurants and saw other businessmen eating alone, he'd ask if they wanted company, and I don't know of anyone who ever turned down Wayne's company. They shared a meal together, and they shared fellowship in the breaking of bread. For a moment, there was community. Perhaps they never saw each other again, but I guarantee that people still remember the witness he offered in eating with them. I promise it still means something to some of them today.
This is what happens when we broaden our view of what Christ does in communion. When we view gathering at the table as a chance to celebrate God's grace, we begin to see our own humble dinner tables a little differently, because we recognize that through them, Christ has changed those meals, too. Christ has changed everything about us because of the sacrifice he offers on the cross, because of his love, and therefore the meals we eat at home and on the road are opportunities to rejoice in the fellowship and love of Christ. We begin to see the breaking of bread as a chance to reach out in love to one another.

So I'd like to invite you to something. At the beginning of Lent, this season of preparation, we invite you to the discipline of Lent, to preparing yourself for Easter. I'd like to invite you to a season of communion. Who can you share a meal with? Who do you know in your life who could use a companion for a meal? Who might love some company? Whom would you like to grow closer with, to know better? How can you break bread with someone over the coming weeks, and recognize that meal as something more than just an opportunity to eat food together, but rather as a sharing in fellowship, just as the early church did—not something perfect, but something human, something that God might transform into something extraordinary?

Let us pray.

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