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Showing posts with label The Last Supper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Last Supper. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 7, 2021

Maundy Thursday 2021

 


April 1, 2021
 watch it here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCSrqJrfnSE&t=19s

School was really cool on Tuesday, January 28, 1986, because in the last class before lunch, Health and PE, we were doing neither Health, nor PE.  We were watching television, at school.  It was ‘totally awesome’ as we liked to say in the ‘80’s.  We watched the triumph of American ingenuity.  The Space Shuttle Challenger took flight, and our hope in America went with it, and we watched as it exploded 73 seconds into the flight. 

A million moments pass through our lifetimes, but one or two sit fixed, because they are possessed by meaning-making power.  The Fall of the Berlin wall, November 9, 1989; terrorists attacks on September 11, 2001; these and other moments define how we see the world.  Perhaps January 6, 2021 will achieve such dubious immortality, the assault on the U.S. capitol.

In the Bible through sign-acts, prophets speaking and acting out God’s word instigated such moments.  On this day, Jesus, in one of the many roles he filled, the prophetic role, defined his church in two sign-acts performed at last supper.

            Examples of these sign-acts are found throughout the Bible.  To show that Judah would have a future, even after exile, Jeremiah bought a field, when Jerusalem was on the verges of collapse in the face of the Babylonian onslaught.  To demonstrate the way God loved a people who in turn were unfaithful to him, God compelled the prophet Hosea to marry an unfaithful woman and then to give the children born to that union specific names that depicted the unfaithfulness of God’s chosen people.    These are but a few of the many sign-acts we encounter in the Bible.  Each memorable display called attention to the prophet’s message. 

The first of Jesus’ sign-acts is recorded in John 13:1-17. 

John 13:1-17, 34-35

13 Now before the festival of the Passover, Jesus knew that his hour had come to depart from this world and go to the Father. Having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end. The devil had already put it into the heart of Judas son of Simon Iscariot to betray him. And during supper Jesus, knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands, and that he had come from God and was going to God, got up from the table,[a] took off his outer robe, and tied a towel around himself. Then he poured water into a basin and began to wash the disciples’ feet and to wipe them with the towel that was tied around him. He came to Simon Peter, who said to him, “Lord, are you going to wash my feet?” Jesus answered, “You do not know now what I am doing, but later you will understand.” Peter said to him, “You will never wash my feet.” Jesus answered, “Unless I wash you, you have no share with me.” Simon Peter said to him, “Lord, not my feet only but also my hands and my head!” 10 Jesus said to him, “One who has bathed does not need to wash, except for the feet,[b] but is entirely clean. And you[c] are clean, though not all of you.” 11 For he knew who was to betray him; for this reason he said, “Not all of you are clean.”

12 After he had washed their feet, had put on his robe, and had returned to the table, he said to them, “Do you know what I have done to you? 13 You call me Teacher and Lord—and you are right, for that is what I am. 14 So if I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet. 15 For I have set you an example, that you also should do as I have done to you. 16 Very truly, I tell you, servants[d] are not greater than their master, nor are messengers greater than the one who sent them. 17 If you know these things, you are blessed if you do them.

34 I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. 35 By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”

 

            John’s gospel explains that when Jesus got up from the table with a towel and a basin of water, he did so “Knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands, and that he had come from God and was going to God.”   Departure was on his mind as he bent before each of the 12 disciples, face to feet level.  Their feet were as dirty as yours or mine would be if we walked everywhere only on dirt roads wearing only sandals.  Washing their feet, Jesus performed a needed service, usually performed by a household servant, not the revered rabbi.  Defying convention was intentional.

            Jesus meant to show what life in the kingdom of God is like.  Knowing he wouldn’t be with them bodily after the resurrection, he wanted them to remember.  In his kingdom, leaders serve.  Leaders meet the lowliest of people at their level and raise them up.  The disciples were to follow their teacher’s example and serve one another, and also the poor and lowly of the world, and everyone in the world. 

In Christianity Today magazine, Michael Horton writes, “Jesus enacts a performance parable about power.  … Taking off his outer garment, he wraps a towel around his waist and begins to wash his disciples’ feet.”[i]  Horton refers back to John 10 where Jesus asserted that there is no power that takes life from him.  Rather, he lays his life down (10:17-18). 

Horton then points out that the kingdom of God is founded in blood, but not the blood of the people, but rather the shed blood of the king who defined his reign with compassion and sacrifice.  Contrast this stance with that of American politicians who claim the name Jesus, but then grasp desperately for earthly power that is divisive, destructive, and temporary.  “When Christian leaders are drawn to breath-taking expression of ungodly power, it raises questions about which kingdom and which sort of king they find most appealing.”[ii]

Peter felt the weight of what Jesus was doing.  He wanted to exalt Jesus, so he at first refused to see his master kneel at his feet.  Peter was ashamed to be over Jesus.  Jesus corrected him.  Then Peter, who badly wanted everything Jesus had to give, went from rejecting Jesus’ overture to asking that Jesus wash his entire body (v.9).

Jesus told him he was clean.  Peter would go on to deny knowing Jesus, misspeak when he met the resurrected Jesus, and later have a falling-out with the Apostle Paul.  Why did Jesus tell him he was clean?  The forgiveness God gave and the atonement Jesus would achieve in his own death on the cross, were already effective for the disciples.

I had a discussion recently with someone unsure about baptism.  He said, “The reason I hesitate to be baptized is I know I will sin again.”  Jesus knew Peter would sin again.  He predicted Peter’s denials.  Yet, he declared Peter clean because forgiveness and atonement would be achieved.  The salvation Jesus won for Peter, and for you, and for me, could not be undone by any mistake Peter or you or I make.   

Washing the disciples’ feet was a sign-act that defined the kingdom of Jesus, the church.  In the church, we show our love for God and each other through humble service.  In verse 15, Jesus says is plainly.  “For I have set you an example, that you also should do as I have done to you.”

The foot-washing is only recorded in John, and Jesus’ sharing of the bread and the cup is only in Matthew, Mark, and Luke.  Taken together, as different accounts of the same meal, we see Jesus perform two sign-acts.  Foot-washing established that the church will be a community that loves through humble service, a community in which everyone is called to serve everyone else. 

The serving of the bread and cup, calling to mind Jesus’ broken body and shed blood, establishes the church of Jesus as a community of sacrifice.  Jesus took something familiar to the disciples, the elements of the Passover meal, as his canvas.  They knew of the blood of the Passover lamb that atoned for sins once.  The Passover meal and sacrifice would need to be repeated again each year. That ritual was now changed.  He told them, when you take the bread and drink the cup, remember that I was the Passover Lamb who died for the sins of all people. 

That eating the bread and drinking the wine is a normal, regular part of our worship is a reminder of what Jesus did for us.  It is also a defining act.  The Kingdom of Jesus, the church, which is a Kingdom in which love is expressed through service, is also a kingdom of sacrifice.  We are forgiven and made new because our Lord died in our place.

Every time we eat and drink, we remember.  We remember our sins are forgiven.  We remember we are children of God.  We remember that Jesus is Lord.  We cannot go back to being who we were before we began to follow Jesus.  There will be moments when we stumble in our following after him, and we don’t look very much like disciples at all.  In those moments of failure, we repent, again come to the table, and again eat and drink, and thus step back onto the path Jesus lays before us.  Eating and drinking, we remember who he is and we remember that because of God’s grace, we are his. 

Washing the disciples’ feet and instituting the bread and cup as His, the Lord’s, supper, Jesus established the values of his kingdom and the way we are to relate to each other if we want to be part of his kingdom. 

In ending Our Maundy Thursday worship by consuming the bread and cup, we receive the gift of forgiveness and the new life God gives.  And, we step into the world of meaning Jesus creates.  This world of meaning, where love is seen in service and sacrifice, is what makes sense of our lives. 

AMEN

 



[i] M. Horton (2016) - http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2016/march-web-only/theology-of-donald-trump.html?start=2

[ii] Ibid.



Thursday, April 18, 2019

The Last Supper Commandment - Matthew 26:26-29


Image result for maundy thursday




            ‘Mandatum’ is a Latin word that means ‘commandment.’  The Anglo-French rendering is ‘Maundy.’  We call this day, the Thursday before Easter, the day we commemorate the Passover meal Jesus had with his disciples before he was arrested a crucified, Maundy Thursday.  English words ‘mandatory,’ and ‘mandate’ come from this Latin word.  Jesus sits at the table with his closest followers, gives them bread, and says, “Take this,” and “Do this in remembrance of me.  It’s not a suggestion.  It’s a commandment.  Gathering for the Lord’s Supper is mandatory for his followers. 
            What exactly is the commandment?  What does it mean?  And when does it take effect?
            What exactly does Jesus command his disciples and us to do when he tells us to take the bread and drink the wine?  From the writings of Paul and the practice of the very first Christians, we know all in the church were invited to the table for the bread and wine.  The Lord’s Supper was not reserved for elites within the Christian community.  There were not to be elites.  Regardless of one’s social status, rich or poor, powerful or unimportant, all were welcomed as one family at Jesus’ table.
            The assumption is that anyone who desired to follow Christ or claimed to be a follower of Christ would join with the church for communal worship. There was no such thing as a solitary, individual Christian.  In the earliest Christian Communities, the Lord’s Supper happened within worship.  When Jesus commands, “Take this bread, drink this cup, do this to remember me,” he’s commanding us to worship with one another in the gathering of the church.
In the tradition of the practice of the first century Church, when we gather for worship and come around Jesus’ table, we are to welcome all as equals.  Here, there are no rich or poor.  People of all racial and ethnic backgrounds are welcomed in love.  Jesus commands it to be so.  Come to worship.  Remember him by eating the bread and drinking from the cup.  And tell of the salvation he gives by inviting people you know outside the church to come with you.  This was recorded in the gospels.  All four gospels were written with the intention that they be read publicly and repeatedly for the purpose of telling Jesus’ story and drawing lost people to him.  
It’s Maundy, mandatory: gather with the church family; worship; eat and drink; remember; and, bring others with you.
What does it all mean?
Jesus says, “Take, eat; this is my body.”  It sounds bizarrely cannibalistic.  In some worship traditions, believers are certain the bread literally becomes his body as we eat it, and the wine literally becomes his blood as we drink it.  Such thoughts would not have occurred to the disciples at Jesus’ table or to the earliest Christians.  They were eating the Passover and as they did, Jesus transformed it.
The unleavened bread hearkened back to the meal the Jews ate when they were slaves in Egypt and the angel of death killed the firstborn in each Egyptian family.  Moses instructed the people to kill the lamb and spread the blood of the lamb on the doorposts of their houses.  The angel saw the blood and passed over the homes of God’s chosen.  The lamb each family sacrifice died in their place.
Jesus is the final sacrifice covering not only Israel’s sins, but the sins of the world.  Remember, we’re commanded to take this supper.  It means we are all sinners, every last one of us. We are cut off from God because of the sins we have committed and there is nothing we can do to atone for our mistakes.  Sin has stained our souls.   Without Jesus, we’re eternally lost.
But, we’re not “without Jesus.”  He has come, died on the cross, and rose.  When he says, “Take, eat, this is my body,” he means he is going to suffer violence on our behalf.  In Paul’s rendering of this passage, 1 Corinthians 11, Jesus says, “This is my body that is for you.”  Jesus is for us.  He - God in the flesh - came for our good, our benefit.  However hard life might be, and life can be pretty trying, God loves us.  Jesus gives himself for us.  We’re not alone.
Nor are we trapped in our sins.  “He took a cup ... saying, ‘Drink from it, all of you; for this is my blood of the covenant which poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins” (Matthew 26:28).  In Jesus blood shed on the cross, sin loses its hold on us.  All are invited to drink, but Jesus knew not all would.  Even though this is a command, Jesus knew not all who heard it would obey it.  Many people meet God, receive his invitation to relationship through the forgiveness of sins, and reject that invitation.  God honors that response and those who meet Him and choose to turn away from Him, are cut off, separated from God by their own choosing.  Those who obey and turn to Jesus and take the bread and drink the cup are forgiven.  Our sins are washed away and we become new creations. 
We’ve said what Jesus commands.  We are commanded to worship with God’s church treating all people as equals, as brothers and sisters in Christ. We are to come and worship, take the bread and cup and receive forgiveness, and to tell the story of salvation to others who have not heard.
We have said what Maundy Thursday means.  God is for us because God loves us.  Thus our sins are forgiven.  That which would cut us off from God has been removed.  In Christ, we have access to God.  Nothing stops us from living in relationship with God as His sons and daughters.
When does this story take effect?  That happens when we respond to the grace of God, the Holy Spirit speaking to our hearts, and step to God in faith.  The original disciples took this step after they met Jesus in resurrection.  Shortly after this Passover meal, the last supper, Jesus would be arrested, and his disciples fled in terror.  They abandoned him and went into hiding. 
However, when he rose from death and they met him and touched his resurrected body, they were changed.  From fear to courage, they went through dramatic transformations.  Tradition tells us that the disciples became so determined to tell the world about Jesus that most of them ran afoul of the Roman Empire.  Under the governance of Rome, the law dictated that all subjects acknowledge the emperor as divine.  “Caesar is Lord,” was the decree.  The disciples could not abide by such a sentiment because they knew that Jesus is Lord.  Most of them died deaths as gruesome as Jesus because they would not recant and acknowledge the divinity of Caesar.  They didn’t care what Rome did.  They believed and insisted that Jesus and only Jesus is Lord.
We mostly likely won’t be threatened with death as our forebearers were.  It doesn’t happen that way in our culture.  So how will we know we have obeyed the command of Jesus?  Obviously we are all here in this worship service, singing songs of faith, confessing our sins and turning to Jesus as we prepare to take the bread and cup.  In that sense we are actively obeying his command.
How we will know this obedience has taken hold in our lives once Holy Week has passed and we are away from the church family?  We become self-giving, following the example Jesus set.  We look out for others and give of ourselves for their benefit.  This happens 100’s of ways, from donating blood to investing in someone else’ life to giving generous monetary donations to works that help people who need it.  The giving of ourselves happens in relationships with people we’ve know all our lives and in interactions with strangers.  We become love-banks extravagantly doling out the love of God to everyone we meet.
In addition to becoming self-giving, we also become storytellers and the story we share is the Good news of forgiveness of sins people can have in Jesus.  God is building the kingdom of God through His church.  Every time we share the story of Jesus, a brick is put in place.  Every time we invite someone to church, a brick is put in place.  Every time we help someone see what the life of a disciple of Jesus looks like, a brick is put in place.  God is building the Kingdom.  He works through the work of the church and the witness of individuals in the church; people like you and me.
Are we saying all that stems from the dinner we call the “Last Supper,” a simple remembrance in bread and wine?  Yes, that’s exactly what has been said. 
Tonight, perhaps you needed to put it all together, the connection from what the 12 went through that night to the life of faith you are currently living.  
Or, perhaps, you’re in a different place. You needed to be reminded that yes, you are a sinner, and yes, your sins cut you off from God.  However, Jesus has covered your sins and opened the way.  The pathway is clear for you to walk into God’s loving embrace.  Tonight, maybe communion is time for you receive forgiveness and begin truly living as God’s daughter or son.
Or, maybe you’re getting a sense of this entire story for the very first time.  You never knew what it all meant, but now you do, at least a bit.  Now that you know, you realize how much you need Jesus.  Tonight, for the very first time, you want to ask Jesus into your heart to be your Lord and Savior.  You can do that as you come to eat and drink.
Everyone is invited to come and meet Jesus in this bread and cup.  Take a few moments in silent preparation.  Pour out your heart to God and ask Him to reveal his love to you.
After we’ve had silent contemplation, join in as we gather at the tables to receive what Jesus has for us.
AMEN