So much in our life revolves around meals.
This past Tuesday I went to Claver
House for my morning coffee.
We talked about the awful terrorism in
Belgium.
John was back, after a bout in the hospital,
and we were all glad
to see him again.
We did a bit of prognosticating on the NCAA brackets.
We
prayed the Lord's Prayer
and broke bread together;
everyone was
welcome.
Then I drove down to the Cathedral for the annual Chrism
Mass,
where I stood in the back of the nave
in the shadow of a
pillar
and renewed my priestly promises
along with my brother
priests.
I left early, though, because the message in that ritual was
clear:
it was all about who was greater than who,
who was more
important.
I was not welcome at the table
there.
_________________________________________
One of the most enduring
memories
kept alive by Jesus' first followers
was his practice of open
table fellowship:
eating and drinking with everyone,
sharing meals without
regard for social class
or the rules that divide people and set one over
another.
Our scriptures give us snapshots of those memories—
Jesus at the
Cana wedding feast;
with the crowds on the mountain and on the plain;
with
Mary and Martha and Lazarus in their home;
at the house of Levi the tax
collector and of Simon the leper;
with his disciples walking through the
standing grain.
The Gospel writers
framed those important memories of
Jesus' teaching
and passed them along
by means of the story of the
supper
he shared with them on the night before he died,
the meal we now
know as the “Last Supper.”
_________________________________________
The
synoptic Gospels
have Jesus using the bread and wine of the Shabbat
meal
to show that they must use up their lives
by letting others consume
them.
In John's Gospel,
Jesus washes the disciples' feet
and tells them
to do the same for each other.
The message of the foot-washing
is the same
message
as the sharing of bread and wine.
Both actions tell the same
truth:
that the purpose of life,
the thing that gives greatest glory to
God,
is to serve others.
_________________________________________
What
was it
that made Jesus' first followers keep on following
after he was
crucified?
In their world of poverty and oppression,
his message of love
and sharing and service
made sense.
Bit by bit they found that his
teaching was true.
It showed them a God they could trust,
a God who cared
for them.
It gave them
life.
________________________________________
Why do we—
those of us
who keep following Jesus,
even after 20 centuries—
why do we keep our
faith?
The ways of our world—
the greed, the violence, the
selfishness—
do not make sense.
The ways of our institutional
church—
the scandals and the cover-ups,
the medieval mindset,
the
exclusionary practices—
do not make sense.
But we keep the
faith
because the message of Jesus
makes sense.
It works for us
to
be grateful for the Holy Mystery
in which we live and move and have our
being.
It works for us to give our lives to others,
starting with our
parents and spouses and children
and reaching out to friends and co-workers
and strangers
and even enemies.
So we keep the
faith.
________________________________________
On this holy night once
again we remember.
Just like Jesus did,
we celebrate our gratitude for
God's goodness.
Just like Jesus did,
we give our lives in service to
others.
And like Jesus,
we understand that we are in unrelenting
communion,
a constant, perpetual Holy Communion,
a cosmic communion with
all that is—
with every person, creature, plant, animal,
and star in the
universe—
and with God.
________________________________________
Here
we are tonight,
gathered in community
in a place where all are welcome at
the table.
We are in communion.
Let us celebrate once again
by washing
each other's hands
and by sharing the bread of life and the cup of
salvation.
--
Holy Spirit Catholic Community
Saturdays at 4:30
p.m./Sundays at 5:30 p.m.
Holy Thursday, March 24, 5:30 p.m.
Holy
Saturday, March 26, 5:30 p.m.
at 3925 West Central Avenue (Washington
Church)
www.holyspirittoledo.org
Rev. Dr. Bev Bingle,
Pastor
Mailing address: 3156 Doyle Street, Toledo, OH 43608-2006
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