Sunday Homily 6-14-09, Eucharist
Readings: Exodus 24, 3-8; Psalm 116, I will take the cup of Salvation, and call on the Name of the Lord; Hebrews 9, 11-15; Mark 14, 12-26
Exodus: 8 points on the readings, including Exodus–(2 on Exodus, 4 on points from the other readings, 2 more on Exodus
1. This is the 2nd book of the Torah/Pentateuch, the first section of the Old Testament. Deuteronomy, which we visited last week, is the 5th & last book.
2. Story: This is a fabulous and edifying fable that tells how the Israelites got out of slavery in Egypt with the leadership of Moses.
3. Passover: the night the angel passed over the first born male children of the Jews because they had smeared lamb blood on their door posts. But the angel killed all the Egyptian first born sons to make Pharaoh let the people go. Remember, this is not history, rather like a fable, like Aesop's Fables. The Last Supper was a Passover meal.
4. Covenant vs Contract: in a contract two parties agree to do something. If one fails, the contract is often null. In a covenant two people agree, and even if one party fails, the other party honors the covenant. The Covenant between Yahweh & the People: the people will honor Yahweh as their only god; Yahweh will protect and care for them as his chosen, and bring them into a new land.
5. Sacrifice & holocaust: ancient tribal belief that I must offer to my god (s) things precious to me to appease the god's anger or win his favor, for example, animals, prisoners, and the most beautiful girl in the community. Jesus was seen as this sacrifice to appease the god, and also as the high priest who usually performed the sacrifice. Thus the emphasis on blood & death.
6. 12 tribes: the 12 sons of the patriarch Jacob (or Israel; the 3 patiarchs were Abraham, Isaac, & Jacob-Israel).
7. Author & Date of Exodus: not Moses. Rather a compilation of material from different centuries, that was mostly put together after the Babylonian Captivity, e.g., ca. 550 BCE.
8. Our Selection from Exodus: the people have been wandering in the desert and are now being given laws and customs they must observe. The Covenant is being sealed.
The Special Meal
As usual, last Thursday & Friday I am preparing thoughts and ideas for our homily today. I tell Rosemary that I want to talk about the theme of special meals in connection with Eucharist and that I am going to take a big risk and put it together after the Collin County Classic Bike Rally. Why? Because I am anticipating that the meal they serve to the riders after the ride will be special, a meal from heaven.
After the race yesterday, however, I totally was not hungry. My stomach is not sick, just tight from so much exercise. In fact, if I want anything it is half of a cold watermellon. I even pass up some tremendous food at the Eshelbrenners where they were celebrating Gloria's visit from Seattle. She is getting married this Labor Day and guess who is doing it.
So I head home and tell Rosemary please get the watermellon ready. She opens it and, ugh, it is over ripe. So I go to Tom Thumb and finally about 3:30 I have the first bite of watermellon. Folks, it was watermellon from heaven. I did not have a big feast, but I had a special meal of watermellon & a salad.
What is your special meal? Your favorite? Your favorite restaurant? Favorite meal of the year? Thanksgiving? I talk about this because special meals are the form on which the Eucharist was originally built. I see 3 characteristics about a special meal that are common with good Eucharistic celebration.
First, camaraderie and conviviality. I expected that we would have a bunch of our people at the McKinney North High School dining room for lunch. It would have been an electric ambiance with everyone just finished the run. It did not turn out that way. Thanksgiving can have this characteristic. Our Vines celebrations have it.
Second, quality food and drink and often special food. Thanksgiving we have turkey, birthdays have ice cream & cake with candles, weddings have special cakes. In Tanzania a goat was roasted over a spit to celebrate a wedding. It lasted all day long. Which brings up time. Special meals take an hour or more when it is really working. We at Vines spend an hour, maybe a little more. We have good wine and good bread, home made bread.
Thirdly, rituals. At Thanksgiving we often say a prayer of thanks. At weddings, cake cuttings. At special events, blessings can be mentioned. At Vines we have our rituals, the sign of peace, the music, the readings and great homilies. Next week we have a special blessing for the old dads.
I would propose that special meals are the foundation for Eucharistic celebration.
What meals are special to you? How do you initiate them?
AUDIO: http://mysite.verizon.net/reso7rjy/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderfiles/2009-06-14.mp3
Picture 1: Cole Ryan Webster welcoming the community with Kevin & T.J.
Picture 2: Cole's baptism with his mom Erin & dad Chuck, Lisa & Brandon
Picture 3: Lynda with Kayla
Picture 4: Peyton & Madison with their mommy Ashley