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One of the
running jokes we Methodists tell about ourselves is that whenever there is a
church gathering of most any nature, there'll be food.
Pass It On - Genesis 40: 1-8; Acts 1: 6-11-- March 6, 2011- Cicero United Methodist
Church-
Everett J.
Bassett
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One of the
running jokes we Methodists tell about ourselves is that whenever there is a
church gathering of most any nature, there'll be food. That's how you know it's
Methodist. There's an old joke about show-n-tell day at the elementary school,
when each child was supposed to bring something that represented their
religious background. The Catholic child brings a Rosary; the Jewish child
brings a Menorah; the Methodist child brings - you guessed it - a casserole.
But the
fact is food isn't a terrible thing to be known for. Of course, in this society
of much obesity, we have to pay attention to good food versus bad food. And of
course, in this world where many go hungry, we have to pay attention to the
just distribution of food. But those important and very practical matters aside,
food is not an optional item in our lives. We all need it; it's the fuel that
keeps these physical machines of ours going. It is a gift; and that's why many
of us say a prayer of thanks before we eat it. It is a basic human need that is
often miraculously and graciously filled, thank God.
But there
is something more to food than just physical nourishment. Food is a sacrament
that connects people together. There is more than just physical nourishment
going on at a United Methodist covered dish dinner - it's an experience of
shared community. It's a family event. In the same way, there's a reason social
commentators despair that so many families keep such busy schedules that they
can't find a time every day to sit down and eat together; the family dinner is
a moment of connection. Just as friendship connections are often signified with
food and drink. Let's do lunch. Come on over for a cup of coffee. I'll bring
the munchies. And so on.
Jesus loved
to share food and drink with his friends. He made it a symbol of the grace and
salvation he represented with every fiber of his being. His enemies accused him
of being a glutton and a drunkard - and he didn't exactly deny it. Food and
drink were very important signs to him. He made wine; he multiplied fish and
loaves; he called himself bread of life and living water; and called his
message the new wine; he did lunch with sinners, and broke bread with
strangers; after his resurrection, he demonstrated his physical presence with
powerful meal experiences. And he appreciated the process of producing food -
planting seeds: separating wheat; pressing olives; catching fish; pruning
vines.
But most
important to us, the night before he died, he sat with his disciples for one
last meal. And there he used bread and wine to signify the most sacred gifts he
could give - his own body and blood for the forgiveness of the sins of the
world, and a tangible way that we could remember him forever.
So it's no
accident that when we gather here in this church for worship, at the center of
our worship area is a table. Because we are here for the family meal. The
earliest Christians made sure they ate every time they came together. Of
course, there are still churches who celebrate Holy Communion every service.
It's our practice to share the meal once a month, but the table is here every
time. The spirit of the meal is always present. It's perhaps the most
significant symbol of who we are as a church - - we are the people that God has
gathered around this table.
It's easy
sometimes to lose track of the value of that because what we do here is so
simple and basic - we eat a little piece of bread, dipped into a cup of common
juice. That's something we can do anywhere. Sometime later today - probably
pretty soon, for most of us - we'll eat a fancier meal, with a much bigger
menu, with heartier portions and more culinary preparation than this one. Yet
this one still has precedence in the whole scheme of things because of two
things -- the story we tell here, and the company we keep here.
As many of
you know, Jack and I have preached these last few weeks around the theme
"Claiming Your Story." We started out by sharing how the story of our
lives is a great gift, because it is God's story - God has been journeying
beside us. Then we went on to say that it is also Christ's story, because Jesus
came into this world to share our sorrow, and to deliver us from sin and death.
Then we heard how the Holy Spirit empowers our story, and continues to guide
our journey. We preached about the How of witnessing - in word and deed, and
each in our own unique way. Jack talked about the Who of witnessing - and being
mistaken for Jesus as we represent him in this world. We talked about the What
of witnessing, and three simple statements we all could say to somebody who
needs the Gospel in their lives. Last week I talked about the When of
witnessing, and how following God's timing is essential. And today, as we
conclude this series, it's about the Where question. Where do we claim our
story, and where do we share it?
One of the
important answers to the first part of that question is Here, at the Lord's
table, we claim our faith-story. We claim it, first of all, in the prayer of
thanksgiving. Most of you know the drill: At the right moment, the pastors go
behind the table. We ask you to search for the insert in the bulletin that has
the prayer of thanksgiving. Some of you may have a roast in the oven, or a
twelve o'clock tee time, or a stomach growling for more food than you are going
to receive here. So you look at this paper and groan, "They're going to
read all that? Can't we just get our piece of bread and get on with it?"
And I'll be honest, sometimes I look at it and think, "I've got to read
all of this?" But the reading of this prayer is essential to us because it
is thanking God for the story of our faith. And the story of our faith is what
makes this something more than just a little piece of bread and a little dab of
juice.
Thank you,
God that you created the wheat that makes this bread, and the grape that makes
this juice, and this beautiful world, and all the beautiful people who were
made in your image. Thank you for inviting us into a loving covenant with you
that assures us that you will watch over us always. We know we sin, and stray
away from you, but that doesn't change your heart of love toward us, and you
continue to love even us. And then, unbelievably, you sent your Son into this
world, and he taught us and healed us and then he died for us. But he rose
again, and he lives with you, and he promised that the day would come when the
love represented here at this table would be like a great banquet where the
whole world is welcome. Lord, hasten that day and make us ready. That's the
story of our faith, and we need to hear it told again and again, because it's
who we are, and what holds us together.
Because of
that story, we find the power of the other great factor that makes this table
so special to us -and that is the company we keep here. As part of that prayer
of thanksgiving before the Lord's Table, we pray that we will be "one with
Christ, one with each other, and one with all the world." That puts us in
great company. First of all, we are one with Christ. Jesus promises to be here
in the sharing of these two symbols of Body and Blood. It's like Jesus knew
that even though the essence of faith is a spiritual experience, sometimes we
need something tangible - something we can feel and hold and taste to remind us
that Jesus is real, and with us. The bread and the juice are simple and common
symbols - but they point remind us tangibly of the reality of Christ.
We are also
one with each other. This table connects us in our common faith. And that is a
special communion. This week, when we meet somewhere to discuss the business of
the church, we are not just a collection of people. We are people who' have
shared around this table, and that gives us a special bond. When we study the
Bible together, when we fold bulletins, or travel on a mission trip, or
rehearse music together, or bump into each other at the S.U. game - we are
those whose lives have been intertwined together by the common loaf, the common
cup, and the common Saviour. That gives us a one-ness like nothing else we can
experience.
We are also
one with the world. We are connected with those who joyously accept the
invitation of Christ in the farthest corners of the earth. We are also
connected with those who do not accept the invitation, because Christ came for
them as well, and longs that they be included. That's why the grace we receive
here is not something we keep to ourselves. It is something we pass on to
others - sometimes in words, sometimes in deeds. And that answers the Where
question of sharing Christ -- Jesus told his disciples to be his witnesses in
Judea, Samaria,
and to the ends of the earth. In other words, start where you are, but let the
circle grow wider and wider, until the whole world is at this table.
The Old
Testament reading about Joseph is a powerful illustration of that outreaching
witness. You know the story - he was sold into slavery by his jealous brothers,
and taken away to Egypt.
In the passage we read today, he is in prison in that &foreign place - but
even there he is called upon and given the opportunity to pass on the grace of
God, when he is equipped to interpret the dreams of the king's servants. The
answer to the Where question of sharing the story of God's love is that it
begins here around the table, but we never know where it might lead - in what
strange land or strange situation we might be called to pass it on.
I have been
amazed at the way God can work in seemingly unrelated details to bring grace to
someone's life - a chance encounter in a supermarket that turns into an
introduction to someone you run into weeks later who happens to be related to
someone else you know and that leads to a phone call from someone else who is
having a problem you might help with that leads to that family coming to church
with you one Sunday and eventually the third child in that family grows up to
be a youth leader who touches dozens of lives with the love of God. You
couldn't sit down and dream up that scenario; but with God those kinds of
chains of events happen all the time. We just need to be ready, wherever we
are, to represent Jesus - because we never know what chain of events God will
initiate through one word we might speak, or one act of kindness we might do. I
have seen that kind of plot play out dozens of times. It's truly amazing what
God can do when we do our part.
That's what
Jack and I wanted to encourage in these sermons entitled Claiming Your Story.
We've seen so many examples of ill-conceived evangelism - the annoying or
infuriating kind where people carry offensive posters, or intrude at
inopportune times, or try to grab headlines by threatening to burn other
faith's religious symbols. But that's not what evangelism needs to look like.
It can also look like loving people desiring to share the grace that has
touched our lives, doing it naturally and lovingly, whether it is through acts
of kindness, through the stories of what God has done for us, or through the
words of faith that God puts on our hearts.
I read
about one family that received the news of the Emancipation Proclamation, and
the
grandfather of the writer ran out into the streets shouting, "I'm free!
I'm free!" Well, we have news that is at least as good, and while we may
not burst from the house into the streets to shout it, surely we can find some
way and some time and some place that's right for us to share the Good News
that has set us free. That's what Jesus asked us to do - to pass it on. And if
we do our part and plant a small seed, God will do the rest.
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