Also a dispute arose
among them as to which of them was considered to be greatest.
Luke 22:24
The disciples are at the table with Jesus. They drank from the cup
and ate the bread with thanks. Unknown to them at the time, they were the
original participants of the Lord’s Supper. While the taste of wine and bread
is still on their tongues they’re disputing at the table as to which of them
was considered to be greatest.
While Jesus’ mind is fixed on the suffering at hand, they’re stuck
on status. While Jesus is focused on the cross, they’re wrapped up in their own
concerns. They’ve missed the meaning of the shared supper.
Disputes around the table are not uncommon whether in the upper
room, the church, or our own kitchen tables. How different mealtimes and life
would be if we’d stop jockeying for positions of honor at the table and ask,
“Who am I? That You would love me so gently? Who am I? That You would recognize
my name? Who am I? That You would speak to me so softly? Conversation with the
love Most High . . . who am I?” (“Who am I?” words and music by Nathan and
Christy Nockels.)
At the table, Jesus teaches what it means to be truly great. He
said, “For who is greater, the one who is
at the table or the one who serves? Is it not the one who is at the table? But
I am among you as one who serves” (Luke 22:27). Christ exemplified Kingdom
service before the meal by bowing low and washing their feet. He demonstrated
true greatness after the meal when He willingly offered His life.
Opportunities abound at the table to point people to God’s
greatness:
• Begin and end each meal with thanks to God for the gift of His
daily bread.
• Invite needy and broken guests to your table who cannot repay
your favor.
• Share God Sightings. Have each person tell one way they’re
seeing God at work in their lives or in this world.
• Show genuine interest in others. Laugh until it hurts,
celebrate, share honestly, and ask thoughtful questions.
• Serve wholeheartedly in
meal preparation and clean up as if serving the Lord, not to impress your
guests.
• Have more hunger and thirst for righteousness then what’s on
your plate.
He>i: How
can you use tonight’s meal to point others to God’s greatness?
What’s becoming clearer and clearer
to me is that the most sacred moments, the ones in which I feel God’s presence
most profoundly, when I feel the goodness of the world most arrestingly, take
place at the table.
Shauna Niequist
grace and peace,
Lenae
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