Tag Archives: communion

Breaking Bread

Can eating with someone be a political or spiritual act?

I’ve tried to give up eating at fast food restaurants, for instance, because I’m not sure it really lines up with what I believe about our world. Eating at a fast food restaurant isn’t necessarily bad, but you make trade offs. You gain convenience and a low price for a system that can pay people very low wages and cheapen the price of food. Plus, fast food restaurants are intended for quick transactions – they are not always good locations for community and conversation.

Eating at a locally owned business isn’t necessarily good either. How do they treat their workers? What kind of values do they espouse? I’m not suggesting you interview your restaurant, like the sketch above from season one of Portlandia, but even something like eating ends up saying something about who we are and what we value. Our actions help shape the community we live in.

Jesus knew how eating was more than just an isolated bit of consumption. He used eating to make big points about who God was interested in. Sitting down and dining with tax collectors, people with skin diseases, and outcasts was a way for him to share his values. Jesus had come for the sick, not the healthy.

Jesus’ actions also permeated the movement that would follow after him. Early Christians and on throughout the centuries continue to celebrate agape feasts, the Lord’s supper, and community meals. Sure, everyone has to eat, but those meals took on different significance as they became ways to point to a new kind of community, where young and old, poor and rich, woman and man, outcasts and accepted sat as equals and tasted God’s abundant love.

My dream is that our politicians and our community leaders would sit down to meals like that more often. My hope is that churches, like the Table, might rediscover this mealtime as a way to build bridges and relationship with folks who seem different from one another. My desire is that we all see how we eat, when we eat, and what we eat as part of our spirituality, as part of who we are.

Heads up – tonight at East Dallas Christian Church, we celebrate Maundy Thursday, remembering Jesus’ last supper with his disciples through song, word, and food. Come join us. 6:30 PM in the Great Hall.


Introducing the Disciples

Nathan @ the Table

Denominations are not super popular like they used to be. I overheard a young minister speaking to a homeless couple in need at Braums the other day, and when they asked what denomination his church is, he said, “Well, we are affiliated with Southern Baptist, but we’re really non-denominational.” I thought to myself – “So, you’re Southern Baptist. Why dodge the question?”

Whereas Southern Baptist might have a negative image to some folks, the Table has an opposite problem – most folks don’t know who the Disciples of Christ are. We’re not a big denomination. We used to be bigger but have been in decline for a while now. That’s both good and bad. It’s good in that it means we are already ahead of the curve in shifting to new ideas and avenues of ministry. It’s bad because it means we don’t have the clout we might have once had in the religious landscape of the US.

I love being a Disciple, and so as a quick and dirty introduction to our denomination, here are the key things I value highly that come out of our way of being and doing church together:

  • We believe Jesus Christ is the Son of the Living God and proclaim him as Savior of the world. Beyond that central core belief, we are open to other ideas. We do our best (but are not perfect) at trying to make space around the table for folks who see Jesus, the Bible, and God differently. Granted, this will vary from church to church, but it is a gift that defines many DoC churches.
  • We practice weekly communion. We don’t claim that we own this sacred tradition or that we have defined it completely. In fact, because of my first bullet point, people in DoC churches come to the table in a variety of different ways. Some see the bread and cup as the literal body and blood of Jesus. Others see it more symbolically. Still, some of us picture it as a radical, egalitarian act that points to a taste of heaven. Either way, it’s beautiful, uniting, and nourishing.
  • We rely on our local leadership to make decisions about our future, our property, and our budget. I’m trying not to use common religious terms here, but the basics is that we are very democratic and “flat” in our structure. Our property is not owned by the denomination. An individual congregation hires its own pastor and staff. Every member has a vote and an opportunity to share their voice.
  • We are diverse. The fastest growing part of the DoC are our terrific ethnic churches, which bring vital leadership and vision to our denomination.
  • Our mission statement is awesome – “we are a movement for wholeness in a fragmented world.” Can more be said?
  • We see ourselves as part of the larger church and respect other traditions and denominations in the same way. We don’t have all the answers. Our theology isn’t better. Our way of doing church isn’t better. It’s just different, but we do use our voice to encourage unity among Christians as we work for peace, compassion, and hope in our world.

Again, I am thankful to be a part of such a denomination. We have lots of gifts to offer. Your spiritual journey may lead you to such a community as this, and I hope you find your welcome around the table as I have.

So, what’s your story? What do you look for in a faith community that will connect your spirituality and passion to make a difference in the world?


Jesus built tables?

Tonight, as we gathered around a big table, sharing pizza and conversation at our regular pub night, I wondered again how many tables Jesus built in his life. Now I know, it’s never stated explicitly in the Gospel stories that Jesus was a carpenter. We assume so because most kids followed in the footsteps of their parents when choosing a line of work. If Joseph was a carpenter, Jesus at least had some experience and skills by helping his father for a good chunk of his life.

However, even if we talk in a more metaphorical and not literal sense, we recognize that Jesus was all about tables.

Eating with sinners. Engaging in dialogue in public and private places. Celebrating the holy feasts of his tradition.

Tables were a tool for his ministry, a way to share his message, a place to connect with others and extend God’s word of love and redemption.

To be more blunt about it, borrowing the words of a genius Latino pastor who spoke at a General Assembly a few years back (as told by my friend and regional minister of the Rocky Mountain region, Jose Morales), “Our Lord didn’t build walls – our Lord built tables.”

Our little community, the Table, is all about this idea. When we gather around God’s table, we recognize Christ’s presence with us and the boundaries between us becoming a little thinner. Sure, they may remain for quite a long time – boundaries of class, race, culture, finances, and education. But it is something mysterious and beautiful when, as we share the bread and the cup, we are drawn closer together by God’s doing, not by our own. It’s healing – it’s reminding us that, even though we are different, we are one. In that moment, we know that there is a little less brokenness and fragmentation in the world.

The world needs a little more unity right now.

May we all have the courage to follow after Christ, tearing down walls and building tables, casting out fear and living into wholeness, one meal at a time.


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