From
the beginning, the tiny group of Christian believers in Jerusalem gathered
together on a regular basis. Not long after the ascension of Christ, Acts 2:42
says that believers devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching, to
fellowship, to the “breaking of bread,” and to prayer. These are all communal
activities, although prayer is also individual.
What
this signifies, though, is that the original model of the church was people
coming together and sharing among themselves. They might have shared teaching,
meals, conversation prayer – but they shared it. Christianity was communal. Believers
met in homes; they were not exactly welcome in synagogues or other places where
Jews congregated in their religious life, although they did go to the temple
for a time.
In
Christian churches today, all of these activities are recognizable, including
the “breaking of bread.” The food may be more plentiful and elaborate than what
the early church experienced, but the idea is the same.
The
difference is that we live in a (Western) culture today where food has become
something of a social and political act, much like the environment was for an
earlier generation (mine). There is a desire for simpler, more natural and
slower (rather than fast) food. Processed and imported food is suspect; we want
natural and local. Many of us also want people to know what we doing in our desire
for simpler and more natural food, part of the conspicuous virtue that has
replaced the conspicuous consumption of the 1950s and 1960s.
This
wasn’t the point when the early church met and broke bread. Food was not an end
in itself but a means to an end – the being together, even with your children
running about. Christopher Smith,
John Pattison and Jonathan Wilson-Hargrove, in Slow
Church: Cultivating Community in the Patient Way of Jesus, ask us to
imagine a common life “centered around (a) eating together at the table and (b)
the slow, Eucharistic conversation that convivial feasting encourages.”
My own experience with churches eating together
is something different. They have more been times associated with an event or
purpose – a missions meeting, a congregational meeting, a newcomers luncheon.
There is food and conversation, to be sure, but it’s often hurried and surface
so we can get to the point of the group meeting. Off-building meals with Sunday
School classes has been different, approaching something like what the Slow
Church authors suggest.
What if the being together – the sitting, the
eating and the talking – was the point? What might happen as a result?
I don’t know, but I’m willing to find out.
For the past several Mondays, I’ve been
discussing Slow Church. This chapter, “Dinner Table Conversation as a Way of
Being Church,” is the last chapter in the book. A short conclusion remains, and
next Monday I’ll finish my own discussion with some overall thoughts about the
book.
Illustration
by Piotr Seidlecki via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
We have "dinner circles" with each other, and they are wonderful small gatherings of hospitality and fellowship.
ReplyDeleteIt is sad Glynn when we have to do what we did this past Sunday for our anniversary. Knowing people will eat and run, we had a building expansion planned for immediately after our worship time. To say, "Hang around until such-and-such a time and we will do this with time for questions" is not in the cards any more. Eat and run. Yeah, not quite like the early church practiced.
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