August 6, 2018


Meal Sharing Changes Everything

Then Levi held a great banquet for Jesus at his house, and a large crowd of tax collectors and others were eating with them. But the Pharisees and the teachers of the law who belonged to their sect complained to his disciples, “Why do you eat and drink with tax collectors and sinners?” – Luke 5:29-30

Have you ever noticed how often Jesus shared a meal with others? In this passage, Jesus had just invited the man who would become Matthew to be His follower. It was only natural that Matthew host a banquet to celebrate Jesus.

Who did Matthew invite? His friends, of course. Except Matthew’s friends weren’t those the religious leaders would associate with. They weren’t people you or I might invite to our homes. They were sinners. They were tax collectors and thieves. They were people we avoid. Yet Jesus was at home with them.

What would happen if we opened ourselves up to those who aren’t like us? What might change if we shared a meal with people who don’t always share our views, our beliefs, our neighborhoods? What would happen if Jesus reached across the great divide and drew us all toward Himself?

There’s something special about sharing a meal. It’s different when you put down your cell phone, turn off the television, forget the iPad. There you are actually having a conversation with another person. Can you hear the laughter? Do you notice the shared stories and the comradery? It’s amazing how much we have in common when we get past the surface, isn’t it?

My Mother used to say if you want to get people to come to an event, offer free food. That’s sure proven to be true. People who never venture into a church sanctuary will come to a free dinner. People who rarely come to Sunday School class will come for a potluck at someone’s house.

Why is that, do you think? It’s like the meal, the fellowship, isn’t as threatening as hearing God’s Word convicting us of sin. It’s as though we can be ourselves over a shared meal and we can’t when we’re uncomfortably sitting on a church pew. Do we think God only sees us at church? Do we believe Jesus loves us more when we’re at a social gathering?

He sees. He knows. He understands. That’s not an excuse for bad behavior. It’s just that He loves us despite all those times we let Him down. We’re sinners. We’re only redeemed by the blood of Christ. That makes us equal with all those sinners we’d rather avoid. At the dinner table, we’re just us.

The Pharisees were furious that Jesus would associate with sinners. They saw themselves as superior, elite, the best of the best. They didn’t get it. They were so busy following rules and trying to preserve their own power and prestige that they missed the Messiah. They were so focused on themselves that they missed what was important.

Are we any different? We each have our own agendas, whether we recognize it or not. We have our own areas of interest, our own special ministries, our own way of doing things. It gets messy when our agenda collides with someone else’s agenda. It is not pretty or comfortable.

Until we sit down and share a meal. Adversaries aren’t so threatening when we’re eating the same food. Critics aren’t so hurtful when we’re eating dessert. And we see that people aren’t so rigid when we’re sharing a story or a laugh.

Our church shares a meal every Wednesday evening. We see people who attend other services. We share a table with people who rarely come on Sunday. We hear children tell stories of their day. Laughter fills the large Fellowship Hall. We gather together, this diverse group of people, and we become a family. Do you think that’s what Jesus was modeling for us when He spent so much time sharing meals with others?

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