Hoc Est Corpus

I haven’t been up to blogging this week; sorry. I think I’m having one of those episodes of post-50 “mental pause.”

Here are some of my thoughts from leading at the table last Sunday, beginning with one short verse that takes place at the paschal meal, possibly at the end when the hidden matzoh is brought out to close the meal, and Jesus hands it to someone close to Him:


“As soon as Judas took the bread, Satan entered into him.” John 13:27

That’s a peculiar thing to read at the Lord’s table, isn’t it?

My point is that there’s no magic in the matzoh.

There’s no wizardry in the wine.

There’s no “hocus pocus” in the phrase hoc est corpus – “This is the body.”

There’s no intrinsic protection from the Evil One in the emblems. Like Judas, who took the bread and went out the door a couple of verses later in John, we can take this bread and walk out the doors and betray our Lord any number of ways this week.

Or …

We can choose to be changed. We can become what we eat. “You are what you eat;” that’s the saying. We can become the Body of Christ. We can be living witnesses this week to His brutal crucifixion, His entombment until the third day, His glorious resurrection that guarantees our own – just as we are when we share this meal; when we dine on the divine.


I appreciate your prayers this week while I’m listening for what the Lord intends in my life.

What Do You Bring To The Table?

It’s an old saw that I heard too many times during the money-mad eighties when a new candidate was being evaluated for a position at the firm where I worked:

What does she/he bring to the table?

As if the back-stabbing corporate life of those days could even approach the fellowship you would find at a family reunion picnic, or a church potluck … or even around that wooden table carved with “This Do In Remembrance Of Me.”

Hmmm. What do I bring to that table?

Do I bring my grief at His sacrifice? The joy of His resurrection? The emptiness of my own unworthiness? The sense of meaning that life would otherwise lack?

I wrote a short story years ago (now lost, except to my memory) about one of those Sunday mornings at the table when everything went wrong. Of course it was a morning when someone special was visiting: the wayward son of a beloved member. He was a raffish, hippie-looking fellow with a red-haired Afro who looked on with growing concern as prayers were mumbled, plates met mid-pew, a tray went crashing to the floor with cups spilling and clinking and breaking. During the collection, a screaming child failed to part with a dime. After worship, he dropped in on the serving gents who were gathered to supervise the counting of the collected offering. They mopped brows and joked; all were relieved it was over with and that nothing worse had happened. The visitor, face as red as his hair with anger, practically exploded: “You forgot something!” and seemed to have difficulty not adding “… you idiots!” The gathered servers reviewed all their procedure silently, wondering what they might have left out. Tired of waiting for them to “get it,” the visitor shouted in frustration: “JESUS!” and slammed the door on his way out. The servers clucked and shook their heads, one of them commenting about using the Lord’s name in vain in His own house.

What do I bring to the table?

Sunday, our preaching minister presided at the table, and beforehand introduced a clip from the movie Antwone Fisher – explaining that Antwone had been abused as a foster child; had gauged his foster mother’s mood by whether she made pancakes for breakfast (good mood); had been encouraged and accompanied by a counselor to reunite with his family … then said we would what awaits us at Christ’s table. The clip showed his greeting by enthusiastic young kindred in the hallway as they usher him into the dining room where the older kin wait, silent around a full table including, yes, pancakes. The family’s matriarch beckons him to sit next to her at the head of the table; clasps both of his hands with her very own and utters the word he yearns to hear: “Welcome.” If the picture of a meal of redemptive reunion in Christ was lost on some at my church, it wasn’t completely missed by my nine-year-old daughter. When she told her mommy that the clip made her miss her birth-mother, they both wept.

What do I bring to the table?

Sometimes nothing. Sometimes all I have. Sometimes I leave filled with more than I could have possibly brought. Sometimes I leave empty. Sometimes I share something important with God, His Son, and my brothers and sisters there. Sometimes I fail to perceive they’re even there.

Sometimes it all goes right. Sometimes it all goes wrong.

I still come back to it: hungry, hopeful, joyful, joyless, aware, absent-minded, praising, hurting, remembering, anticipating.

No matter what I bring to it or leave behind; no matter where I am physically or spiritually, the table is always surrounded by needy guests and tended by a loving Host.

And I am at home.

Jesus Leads the Feast

I’ve rotated out of my Worship Planning Committee. I’ve served for two years, and feel it’s time for another to lead the group I led; someone who can devote full attention to the planning. I’ve just asked to rotate out “for a while,” until I can get my schedule under control.

I have learned a lot about worship during the two years I’ve served:

  • Worship is not for me. That is, it isn’t directed toward me. It benefits me more than I can possibly perceive. But the object of worship is God. What I like or dislike is immaterial. What He wants is paramount.
  • Worship was never meant to make me comfortable. It was meant to make me uncomfortable, always craving more and better and closer in my relationship to the Lord.
  • Worship is more than what takes place Sunday morning and evening. It’s pointless and heartless if it begins and ends there.
  • Worship was never designed to be a personal experience. It was intended to be shared … between spouses, among families, within clusters and small groups, in choruses of throngs. And upward; always upward.
  • Worship may have leaders, but the leader of worship is always Christ. Everything He ever did; everything he ever does, points to God.

Something I wanted to convey in the worship last week was Christ’s leadership at His own table. I wanted Him to lead our thoughts in prayer. So we went back to what he prayed. With a clip-on mike at my own seat, I read the excerpts from His prayers in John 17 projected in a PowerPoint, just so the folks in the nursery tending babies could continue to participate, even if they couldn’t read the monitors there. In the first service, another leader did much the same.

But Jesus led. And when I thanked God and asked a blessing on the bread and on all of us who shared it, I asked what Jesus asked: that He would protect us by the power of His name; make us one as They are one; sanctify us by the word of truth; and send us into the world.

When I prayed the same thanksgiving and blessing on the cup and those who would drink, I tried to pray for the same unity that would lead those in the world to believe that God loves all of us as dearly as He loves His Son.

I led a blessing on our giving from the lectern after the sermon. It’s related to the feast, I know, because it’s our response to the sacrifice we remember. But it’s different. It’s just different.

Just once, I wanted it to be different.