On
Eating and Drinking with Jesus
Genesis
8:13-22
Luke 19:1-10
John 6:54
I: -- Time
magazine,
McLean
’s, together with most magazines that appear weekly or monthly,
are customarily divided into sections according to subject matter.
One section discusses business, another politics, another sport,
as well as medicine, education, finance, the environment and clothing
fashions. The format of the
magazine suggests that these compartments have little to do with each
other. Sport has little to
do with business, education little to do with finance, medicine little
to do with politics.
Actually, all of these subjects have been
artificially compartmentalized. Sport
has a great deal to do with business; sport has as much to do with
business as sport has to do with sport.
Education has as much to do with finance as education has to do
with the philosophy of education or with pedagogical technique.
And what has become more politicized than medicine?
It’s always possible to compartmentalize a magazine; it’s
never possible to compartmentalize life.
For this reason we should always suspect
the magazine section on religion. It’s
usually towards the back of the magazine, so that if the weary reader
puts down the magazine before she finishes reading she won’t have
missed much. What’s more,
the article on religion is as highly compartmentalized as the other
articles. We are informed
that a church in a
Vancouver
suburb has been involved in scandal; or that there’s fierce infighting
in one particular denomination; or that two religious bodies are going
to amalgamate.
The magazine left-handedly gives the
impression that religion is on the margin of human existence; it has
little if anything to do with life.
It may have something to do with leisure time or hobbies or
abstract musing for those who enjoy abstract musing, but it has little
to do with life.
People of biblical conviction, however,
think differently. We know
that faith pertains to life, not to the margins of life.
Jesus came to restore our humanness to the glory in which it was
created. He had no interest
– and has no interest – in making us more religious.
People whose lives were complicated and twisted pretzel-like
welcomed him; people preoccupied with religion couldn’t stand him. He
said himself that he came to bring life
not religion, and life richer than anything available anywhere else.
My students are startled when I tell them
that a Jewish youngster, upon learning the Hebrew language, is directed
first to read – read where in the Hebrew bible?
Psalm 23 – “The Lord is my shepherd” – wouldn’t that be
a good place to have a youngster start reading Hebrew sentences?
As a matter of fact the Jewish youngster is directed to the book
of Leviticus (a book that the church rarely reads) just because
Leviticus 17-22 describes “holiness,” holy living.
We are not to bribe judges; we are not move surveyors’ stakes;
we are not to falsify weights and measures; we are not to exploit
defenceless people. Holiness
has everything to do with life; holiness has very little to do with a
trembly feeling in one’s tummy as the sun sets over the lake and the
loon loons on.
II: -- In
our service today we are going to share the Lord’s Supper together.
What’s the connexion between the Lord’s Supper and any
supper? Between what we eat
here and the roast beef we eat in two hours?
Between this meal and any meal?
Let’s think for a minute about the matter
of eating meat – ordinary, everyday meat.
Let’s revisit the old sagas in the early chapters of Genesis.
Humans are created to live, under God, in the realm of blessing.
We are also created on the same “day”, the sixth day, as the
animals. This means that we
are related to the animals more closely than we are related to anything
else in the creation. We and
the animals are first cousins; not quite brothers and sisters, but
certainly cousins. For this
reason we were never meant to eat them.
What sort of people eat their cousins?
Since God is the God of shalom, peace; and
since he alone is Creator, the world was created to live in peace: peace
between us and God, peace between us and our neighbour, peace between us
and our environment, peace between us and the animals.
As the timeless story in Genesis unfolds we
are told that on account of our arrogant disobedience; on account of our
ingratitude and God-defiance, we are expelled from paradise.
Forfeiting God’s blessing, we now know curse.
Husband blames wife for what’s gone wrong.
Wife blames snake. Snake
has no one to blame, even though snake in turn will be despised and
loathed. Cain kills brother
Abel. Everyone is at
everyone else’s throat. Daily
work becomes frustrating and only partially productive.
Difficulty and pain attend everything we do.
Creation, cursed, is spiralling down into chaos.
The next episode in our collection of sagas
is the story of Noah’s ark. This
story informs us that as wickedness spreads throughout the creation
God’s anger is aroused and his judgement is provoked.
A flood occurs. But
as I have pointed out here relentlessly, the purpose of God’s
judgement is always his restoration.
When the flood has receded, Noah and his family have been borne
through God’s judgment; they have been spared.
In gratitude to God for his mercy they kill an animal and offer
it to God as a sacrifice; specifically, as a sacrifice of thanksgiving
to God for his life-giving goodness.
In addition to the animal offered up in thanksgiving to God,
humans begin eating animals. At
this point in the old Hebrew sagas, and only at this point, humans
become meat-eaters. Permission
to eat meat is God’s concession to the depravity of the human heart.
At the same time, as often as our Hebrew
foreparents ate eat meat at daily meals and acknowledged the depravity
of their heart (after all, they were
eating their cousins, weren’t they?); as often as they ate meat at
daily meals our Hebrew foreparents were reminded of the sacrifices that
priests offered up on their behalf in the temple.
Sacrifices were the God-appointed provision whereby defiled
people could come before a holy God and survive meeting him.
Sacrifices were the God-appointed provision whereby sinners could
repent and find pardon. Ultimately,
in
Israel
’s history, the sacrifices in the temple came to point to the
sacrifice, the sacrifice of God’s own Son that would thereafter
render animal sacrifice unnecessary.
In other words, every time an Israelite family sat down to roast
lamb at the dinner table, the family considered the lambs that were
being sacrificed, by God’s appointment, in the temple.
And every time they reflected upon the lambs being sacrificed in
the temple, they anticipated the lamb of God who would gather up all the sacrifices that had
anticipated his, crowning them with his own self-offering on behalf of
all people everywhere. When
John the Baptist saw Jesus approaching him at the
Jordan
he cried “There’s the lamb of
God who takes away the sin of the world.”
In two hours we are going to go home and eat meat.
We shall eat it because it sustains us.
It provides ever so much that we need, not the least of which is
iron for our blood, without which we would only flop around anaemically.
Because, however, as Christians we know how it is we have come to
eat meat, our eating meat will always mean more than mere bodily
nourishment. Our eating meat
will have about it the flavour of sacrifice, and the flavour of
sacrifice in turn will direct us immediately to the
lamb who has been offered up for us all.
Specifically, the dead animal we eat will point us to someone
else whose death has brought us life.
We have been given life through the death of a fellow-creature
who was slain on our behalf. Any
occasion of meat-eating – even a burger at McDonald’s – sears upon
us the truth that we are the beneficiaries of God’s mercy on account
of another creature whose blood was shed for us.
In other words, unlike Time
magazine or McLean’s, we
who have been to school in
Israel
; we don’t compartmentalize life.
Meat-eating on any occasion, for any reason, is shot through with
spiritual significance.
Customarily before we eat a meal we “say
grace.” The English word
“grace” has two meanings. One
meaning is the dozen words we utter sincerely before we pick up knife
and fork and begin dismembering the meat.
The other meaning of “grace” has to do with God’s
undeserved mercy. Strictly
speaking grace, in scripture, is God’s faithfulness to his covenant
with us; and when his faithfulness to us collides with our sin, his
faithfulness takes the form of mercy.
There is the profoundest connexion between the grace of God and
our “saying grace.” The
words we utter before eating are intimately connected to the mercy of
God, connected specifically to that self-offering, sacrifice, whereby
God fashions our pardon and bleaches our stains and summons us home.
So far from compartmentalizing life, Hebrew logic renders all of
life – hamburger joint snack and weekly worship, thrice-daily meals
and once-only Messiah Banquet to come – a seamless whole.
II: -- Not
only was meat eaten regularly at Israelite meals; wine was drunk at
every meal as well. Where
wine is concerned our Israelite foreparents differed from us in two
ways. On the one hand, they
abhorred drunkenness, finding it disgusting, whereas we seem to find it
amusing. On the other hand,
Israelite people customarily drank wine at every meal.
The rare exception was the highly unusual ascetic like John the
Baptist. People like John
who didn’t touch wine also refrained from touching much else,
including soap and shampoo. They
also avoided women. They
lived on the fringe of society. Their
witness had its place, to be sure, but it was never the witness that God
had appointed his people to bear characteristically.
John, it must be remembered, lived in the wilderness, dressed in
animal skins, stank like a garbage can, and drank no wine.
Jesus did none of this.
Again and again the Older Testament speaks
of wine as God’s gift that gladdens the heart of men and women.
Wine doesn’t appear to be essential to life.
Bread is essential to life, but not wine.
Yet wine is essential
to life, said our Hebrew foreparents, just because joy
is essential to life. Life
in the
kingdom
of
God
is never to be bleak or drab or dull.
Life must never become utilitarian only.
In addition to the utilitarian there has to be a light heart and
a glad countenance, a happy time and a festive mood.
Jesus, we know partied frequently.
He partied so often that his enemies accused him of overdoing it.
They said he ate too much and he drank too much.
Whereupon he wheeled on his detractors, “John came neither
eating nor drinking and you said he was demon-possessed, crazy if not
wicked. I have come eating
and drinking, and you call me a glutton and drunkard.
You don’t care about God’s Kingdom.
You care only about spearing those who challenge your
self-righteousness and your lovelessness.
That’s deplorable. But
in any case I and the people who love me are going to a party.
And we’re going to have a good time.
You’re welcome to come to the party too.
Maybe you’d rather stay home and pout.
We can’t help that. But
in any case you aren’t going to spoil our party.”
Wine is God’s gift that gladdens the
human heart. When our Lord
insists, wine cup in hand, that he is the true vine, the wine of life,
he means that he is that gift of the Father who profoundly makes the human heart
to sing. Whenever we drink
wine, therefore, on any occasion – at the Lord’s Supper, at a meal,
in a place of public refreshment – we are announcing once again that
life is seamless. Jesus
Christ is the one who profoundly delights and satisfies, doing for us
what no one else can and imparting to us what no one can ever take away.
III: -- Since
our Lord most profoundly gladdens us through the blessing of his shed
blood, the apostles, together with the church after them, have
associated wine with blood. In
fact the church hasn’t hesitated to speak of eating Christ’s body
and drinking his blood. This
isn’t surprising, since Jesus himself said that he abides in us and we
in him only as we drink his blood. (John 6:54)
What did he mean?
What did he mean, in view of the fact that Jewish people abhor
drinking blood as they abhor little else?
The Torah forbids them to drink blood, and they take such
precautions with kosher meat as to ensure that they don’t eat or drink
blood. At the last supper,
when Jesus took the cup and declared to the disciples, “This is
God’s covenant with you renewed in my blood,” the one thing that his
disciples never thought they were doing was literally drinking his
blood. The thought of it
would have sickened them.
It so happens that among the Israelite
people to “shed blood” meant to murder.
Murder was reprehensible. It so happens that among the Israelite
people to “drink blood” meant to murder and to profit from the foul
deed. While it’s dreadful
to murder, it’s even worse to murder and then profit from the murder.
When Jesus tells us that we are going to
drink his blood, he means that our sin is going to do him in.
Humankind’s sin, collapsing on him, will crush him to death.
And humankind’s sin, crushing him to death, he will gladly bear
and bear away for our sakes, thereby giving us life.
We kill, and we profit from it.
We shed blood and we drink blood.
In the paradoxical mystery of God’s grace, the treachery of the
human heart, culminating in murder, the murder of the Son of God; this
becomes the means of our forgiveness and freedom.
Let me say it again. In
the paradoxical mystery of God’s grace, human treachery (the cross)
becomes the means whereby human treachery is pardoned and purged.
Plainly we do drink our Lord’s blood.
What
about bread, both everyday bread and Eucharistic bread?
Everyday bread, Eucharistic bread, and the body of Christ?
A discussion of this will have to wait for another sermon.
Today
it is enough to know, as we come to the Lord’s Table, that the wine we
drink is the blood of Christ. It
is enough to know that two hours from now, when we eat pork chops or
fried liver, we are joining in mind and heart the animal we eat (our
cousin had to give up its life for us) with the sacrifice of the lamb of
God, who gave up his life for us in order to give us his life.
Life
in the
kingdom
of
God
is seamless.
Victor
Shepherd
February 2007