Religion

Friday, December 5, 2025

The Table Series: Communion in Everyday Life

 

Session 3: The Table of Memory

Based on Luke 22:19


I. The Night Before the Cross

The last supper did not happen during a peaceful moment.
It happened on the night Jesus was betrayed.
The world around Him was tightening.
Shadows were lengthening.
Sorrow was drawing near.

And in that moment, He chose a table.

“And He took bread, gave thanks and broke it, and gave it to them, saying,
‘This is My body given for you.
Do this in remembrance of Me.’” (Luke 22:19)

Before the cross, there was bread.
Before the sacrifice, there was thanksgiving.
Before the suffering, there was communion.

Jesus showed that remembrance is not about looking backward.
It is about anchoring the heart in what is most true.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The table is the place of intimacy.
There we remember who we are and to whom we belong.”

Memory becomes a sacred act.


II. Gratitude in the Breaking

Jesus gave thanks before breaking the bread.
He blessed what would be torn.
He gave thanks for what would be given.

Thanksgiving came before the miracle of redemption, not after it.

“He took bread, gave thanks and broke it.”

Gratitude does not wait for understanding.
It blesses the moment in faith.
It declares that God is good even when the path ahead is dark.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“Gratitude is the heart’s answer to God’s unimaginable love.”

The table of memory is the table where gratitude becomes a posture of trust.


III. The Bread That Speaks

Jesus did not request a monument or a ritual of grandeur.
He chose bread and cup.
He chose something simple, familiar, and ordinary.

This makes His instruction more powerful.

“Do this in remembrance of Me.”

Bread becomes a sermon.
The cup becomes a story.
The table becomes a place where the gospel is tasted, not just told.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“The spirit of Christ is most present in the simple, trusted practices of daily devotion.”

The simplest things often carry the deepest truths.


IV. Memory That Shapes Identity

Jesus did not ask His disciples to remember their sins or their failures.
He asked them to remember Him.

This remembrance forms identity.
We are shaped by what we choose to recall.
At the table, memory becomes discipleship.

The ancient church understood this.
Early believers often ate together daily.
They saw every shared meal as a reminder of Christ’s presence.

“They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts.” (Acts 2:46)

Remembering Christ turns every table into a place of renewal.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“To remember Jesus means bringing His life into ours in such a way that we become living reminders of His love.”

Memory becomes mission.


V. The Invitation

The table of memory is not about dwelling on the past.
It is about carrying Christ into the present.
It is a rhythm.
A practice.
A sacred pause in the midst of life’s busyness.

When we break bread, we remember the One who is broken for us.
When we drink the cup, we remember the One who pours out grace.
When we gather at the table, we remember that we are not alone.

“You will be My witnesses.” (Acts 1:8)

Witness begins with remembrance.


Practicing the Table of Memory This Week

  1. Pause before eating.
    Whisper the words of Jesus:
    “I remember You.”
    Let the meal become a moment of communion.

  2. Break something intentionally.
    Tear a piece of bread or break a cracker as a small act of remembrance.
    Let the breaking speak.

  3. Give thanks in the moment you least feel grateful.
    Practice gratitude as Jesus did, before clarity arrives.

  4. Remember with joy.
    Write down one memory of God’s faithfulness and place it where you will see it this week.

  5. Pray to be a living reminder.

    “Lord, let my life be a table of memory.
    Help me remember Your love in the breaking,
    and reflect Your grace in every ordinary moment.”

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

The Table Series: Communion in Everyday Life

 

Session 2: The Table of Provision

Based on Psalm 23:5


I. The Table in the Valley

Psalm 23 is often read for comfort, but verse 5 contains a quiet and astonishing truth.
God does not wait until we escape our troubles to nourish us.
He sets a table in the middle of them.

“You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies.” (Psalm 23:5)

This is not a table of escape.
It is a table of provision in the very place where fear, pressure, and opposition surround us.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“God’s presence does not take away our loneliness or fear,
but it gives them meaning and makes them bearable.”

Provision is not the absence of enemies.
It is the presence of God.


II. The God Who Sets the Table

The verb is important.
God prepares the table.
He chooses the location.
He arranges the meal.
He hosts the moment.

The shepherd becomes a hospitable king.
The valley becomes a banquet hall.

This is the nature of divine provision:
God meets His people in the place they least expect to be fed.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“We are invited to trust that God is always doing for us what we cannot do for ourselves.”

Even when circumstances feel barren, God is setting a quiet feast of strength, peace, and rest.


III. The Presence That Changes Everything

Enemies do not disappear when the table appears.
Threats may still linger.
Voices of fear may still whisper.
Situations may remain unresolved.

Yet the psalmist sits and eats.

He chooses presence over panic, peace over pressure, and communion over chaos.

“You anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows.” (Psalm 23:5)

Overflow in Scripture always symbolizes abundance that cannot be contained.
It is the sign that God’s provision surpasses human need.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“The abundance of God is not a matter of resources. It is a matter of presence.”

God does not give barely enough.
He gives Himself.


IV. The Feast of Confidence

Sitting at a table while enemies surround you is an act of holy confidence.
It is the quiet declaration,
“I am safe because God is with me.”
“I can rest even when life is unsettled.”
“I can eat even when the battle has not finished.”

This is not denial.
It is trust.

“Surely Your goodness and love will follow me all the days of my life.” (Psalm 23:6)

Fear loses its grip when we realize that God sits nearer than the enemy stands.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The real work of prayer is to become silent and listen to the voice that says,
‘You are My beloved.’”

The table of provision is the place where belovedness is tasted.


V. The Invitation

Psalm 23 invites you to see every meal, every moment of quiet nourishment, and every pause of rest as a reminder of God’s presence.

The table is not only a symbol of welcome.
It is a symbol of provision that defies fear.

“Taste and see that the Lord is good.” (Psalm 34:8)

Even in unresolved tension, God sets a feast.
Even in uncertainty, He fills the cup.
Even in pressure, He prepares the table.


Practicing the Table of Provision This Week

  1. Pause at your meals.
    Before eating, say quietly,
    “You prepare this table for me.”

  2. Bring your enemies to the table.
    Name the pressures, fears, or burdens that surround you.
    See God seated with you in their midst.

  3. Look for small overflows.
    Notice even one moment of unexpected grace or kindness each day.
    Write it down as a sign of God’s provision.

  4. Eat slowly.
    Let meals become moments of awareness rather than hurry.
    Receive nourishment as a gift.

  5. Pray for a restful heart.

    “Lord, prepare a table for me again.
    Feed me with Your presence.
    Let Your goodness overflow in the places that feel most threatened.”

Monday, December 1, 2025

When the System Breaks the Soul: Learning to trust the Vine more than the vineyard walls.

 

“The wisdom from above is first pure, then peace-loving, gentle, compliant, full of mercy and good fruit….”
James 3:17

“By their fruits you will know them.”
Matthew 7:20


Opening Thought

There is a simple truth woven throughout Scripture:
The way of God produces the character of God.

Where His Spirit is present, mercy grows.
Where His presence forms a life, love deepens.
Where His truth anchors the heart, courage rises.

So if a pattern of discipleship does not produce these qualities, something fundamental is misaligned. The problem is not the soul seeking God — the problem is the system shaping that soul.


I. The Fruit Reveals the Formation

Jesus never directs His people to measure their faith by feelings, activity, or performance.
He directs them to look at fruit.

  • Is mercy increasing?

  • Is love taking root?

  • Is courage maturing?

  • Is presence replacing performance?

These are not optional traits for the spiritually mature.
They are the natural outgrowth of a heart reshaped by God.

When the fruit is absent, Jesus does not call His people to self-condemnation.
He calls them to discernment.

Unhealthy fruit reveals an unhealthy formation.


II. When Systems Misform the Soul

Throughout Scripture, God confronts spiritual systems that distort His character:

  • Israel performed sacrifices without justice (Isa. 1).

  • The Pharisees guarded rules but neglected compassion (Matt. 23).

  • Early believers struggled when tradition outweighed grace (Acts 15).

In each case, God does not accuse the worshipers of insincerity.
He exposes the system that malformed their worship.

This remains true today.

A spiritual structure can teach:

  • compliance without understanding

  • busyness without communion

  • rule-keeping without transformation

  • service without love

  • obedience without rest

Such systems may look rigorous, but they do not look like Jesus.

And when the system does not resemble Jesus, the fruit will not resemble Him either.


III. The Yoke of Christ: A Different Formation

Jesus describes His way with words rarely applied to religion:

easy • light • restful • strengthening • freeing

Not because His way lacks discipline,
but because His presence carries the weight.

Christ’s formation is not about striving harder;
it is about abiding deeper.

His love generates mercy.
His nearness forms courage.
His Spirit grows gentleness, kindness, and self-control.

Fruit does not come from force.
Fruit comes from fellowship.


IV. A Reorienting Question

A believer may ask:

“Is the way I am being formed producing the life Jesus said it would?”

If not, Scripture invites a shift of focus:

Not
“What is wrong with me?”
but
“What is shaping me?”

Not
“Why can’t I meet these expectations?”
but
“Whose expectations are these?”

Not
“Why am I exhausted?”
but
“Is this the voice of Christ or the weight of a system?”

Spiritual exhaustion is often the consequence of a yoke Christ never gave.


V. The Invitation of the Spirit

The Spirit gently redirects the misformed soul back to the heart of God.

He brings:

  • Mercy where shame once grew

  • Presence where performance once ruled

  • Love where fear once lived

  • Courage where silence once settled

This is not a rare experience for the spiritually elite.
It is the everyday fruit of those who dwell in God.


VI. Closing Reflection

If following God does not lead to mercy, presence, love, and courage —
then something is wrong with the system, not with the seeker.

This is not rebellion.
It is biblical wisdom.
It is Jesus’ own teaching:

Look at the fruit.
Discern the roots.
Return to the Vine.

God does not crush His people.
He forms them with gentleness.
He grows them with grace.
He shapes them through love.

Where His Spirit is, His character appears.

The Table Series: Communion in Everyday Life

 

Session 1: The Table of Welcome

Based on Luke 5:29 and Luke 5:31–32


I. The House Filled With Outsiders

Levi, also called Matthew, was a tax collector.
He was wealthy, disliked, and viewed as a traitor by his own people.
Yet when Jesus called him, he responded immediately.
His first act as a follower of Christ was not preaching or performing miracles.
It was opening his home.

“Then Levi held a great banquet for Jesus at his house, and a large crowd of tax collectors and others were eating with them.” (Luke 5:29)

The first table Jesus gathered around in Levi’s home was not filled with saints.
It was filled with outsiders, skeptics, broken people, and outcasts.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The table is the place where brokenness is converted into communion.”

Welcome is not an afterthought in the kingdom.
It is the doorway through which grace enters.


II. The Hospitality of Grace

The religious leaders were shocked.
They could not understand why Jesus would sit at a table with those they avoided.

“But the Pharisees and the teachers of the law complained to His disciples,
‘Why do you eat and drink with tax collectors and sinners?’” (Luke 5:30)

Jesus answered not with rebuke but with clarity.

“It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick.
I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.” (Luke 5:31–32)

Jesus used a table as His first pulpit for Levi.
The meal became a declaration of divine hospitality.
Grace made room where others closed the door.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“The beginning of love is the will to let those we love be perfectly themselves.”

Christ welcomed people as they were, and by doing so, He made transformation possible.


III. The Table as Sanctuary

In many cultures, to sit at someone’s table is to receive more than food.
It is to receive friendship, acceptance, and peace.
Jesus understood this deeply.
He used tables as sanctuaries long before He used crosses as symbols.

A meal slows us down.
It brings us close enough to see one another’s humanity.
It becomes a place where judgment is replaced by listening, and distance is replaced by presence.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“The presence of God is most naturally experienced in the ordinary moments of life,
when we stop long enough to recognize that He is already here.”

The table becomes sacred when we notice who sits across from us.


IV. The Invitation to Extend Welcome

The table of Jesus is not exclusive.
It is wide.
It is open.
It is generous.

He welcomed doubters.
He welcomed failures.
He welcomed the curious and the broken.
His hospitality was not based on worthiness but on need.

“Accept one another, then, just as Christ accepted you, in order to bring praise to God.” (Romans 15:7)

The table becomes holy when it becomes inclusive.
When we welcome others as Christ welcomed us, we become vessels of His grace in the simplest of ways.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Hospitality means creating a space where the stranger can enter and become a friend.”

The table is where strangers become friends through love that listens.


V. The Invitation

Jesus’ table is a place of welcome for the outsider and healing for the wounded.
It is a place where grace sits down beside the sinner and says,
“There is room for you here.”

“Come, all you who are thirsty.” (Isaiah 55:1)

In every meal, every gathering, every moment of shared fellowship, God turns the ordinary into sacred communion.
The table is not a small detail.
It is a window into the heart of Christ.


Practicing the Table of Welcome This Week

  1. Make room for someone.
    Invite someone into your space this week, even if it is simple.
    Hospitality is not about the menu.
    It is about the heart.

  2. Pause before a meal.
    Whisper a quiet prayer:
    “Lord, make this table a place of welcome.”

  3. See people through grace.
    Choose one person you usually overlook.
    Offer them attention, kindness, or encouragement.

  4. Create a listening space.
    When eating with someone, ask one question that shows genuine care.
    Let the table become a sanctuary.

  5. Pray for a welcoming spirit.

    “Lord, open my heart and my home.
    Let my table reflect Your kindness.
    Teach me to welcome others as You have welcomed me.”

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Beauty After the Breaking

 

Walking into Isaiah 54 and the glory that follows loss

Isaiah 54 is one of the most tender chapters in all of Scripture.
It speaks to the woman life overlooked, the woman grief hollowed out, the woman who carried more than anyone ever realized.
It is God’s love letter to the one left standing in the ruins.

Henri Nouwen once wrote, “Your brokenness is not a curse, but a gateway.” Isaiah 54 is that gateway, the moment God steps into the wreckage and says, This is where I will begin again.

The chapter opens with a woman who has been abandoned and left alone. She holds the weight of her own survival. She is unchosen, unseen, misunderstood. And yet, God calls her to sing. Not because her life is fixed, but because His nearness has become her new foundation. 

Thomas Merton said, “The real freedom is the freedom from the self that clings to every wound.” Isaiah 54 is God loosening your grip on wounds you were never meant to carry forever.

Then comes the astonishing command: enlarge your tent.
Expand your borders.
Make room for more.

It is God’s way of telling you that the season of contraction is over. You are being stretched in ways that do not reflect your losses, but your future. 

Dallas Willard puts it beautifully: “The life we have now is God’s gift to us. What we become is our gift to God.”

You are becoming more than the season that broke you.

Isaiah 54 then moves into the quiet ache of shame. The invisible weight carried by women who have survived abandonment, grief, silence, and loneliness. The shame of being unchosen. The shame of being left. The shame of holding everything together alone. And God says that this shame will not follow you into the next chapter. 

Nouwen reminds us, “God is not afraid of your deep places. He enters them.”
Your shame is losing its voice.

And then God speaks the most intimate line in the chapter: Your Maker is your Husband.

This is not about remarriage. It is about covering. It is about God naming Himself as the One who protects you, restores you, defends you, and holds you with a faithfulness human love could not match.

Brennan Manning captures the heart of it: “Define yourself radically as one beloved by God. This is the true self. Every other identity is illusion.”

When God calls Himself your Husband, He is naming your truest identity: beloved, covered, safeguarded, claimed.

From here, Isaiah 54 turns toward rebuilding.
God promises to restore your life with precious stones — sapphires, rubies, turquoise — jewels forged in fire and pressure.

Your suffering did not diminish you. It refined you.
The ruins you stand in now will be lined with beauty because God Himself is rebuilding you. 

Merton’s words echo through this promise: “Every breath you draw is a whisper of God’s loving presence.”

The chapter ends with legacy.
Your children will be taught by the Lord, and great will be their peace.
Your childrens’ strength is part of your inheritance. Their flourishing is the fruit of seeds you watered with tears. Isaiah 54 turns your family story toward peace, not pain.

And then the final declaration, the one that seals everything God has spoken:
No weapon formed against you will prosper.
It may form, but it will fail.
It may appear, but it will not define you.
Dallas Willard reminds us, “The safest place in all reality is in the kingdom of God.”
That is where you now stand.

Isaiah 54 is not written for the woman who is already thriving.
It is written for the woman who walked through fire and survived.
For the woman who thought the story was ending, only to discover that God was just turning the page.
It is the chapter of beauty after sorrow, honor after shame, expansion after contraction, inheritance after loss.

God is rebuilding you with tenderness, strength, and peace.
And nothing, absolutely nothing, can stop the life He is bringing forth.

Isaiah 54:10
“Though the mountains be shaken and the hills be removed,
my unfailing love for you will not be shaken
nor my covenant of peace be removed,”
says the Lord, who has compassion on you.