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Jeremy John

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The Table Is a Microcosm of Practical Faith

Posted: 05/21/2012 2:20 pm

My generation is a practical generation, and I am challenged by my faith to be a practical person. Don't get me wrong: I love all verbal and theological things: story, theology, politics and history, perhaps even inordinately.

But I believe in places. I believe that relationships, rooted in love, transform us. And it just so happens that most lasting human relationships are formed around the table.

In the Eucharist, the ordinary is made sacred. The original Eucharist tradition as recorded in the book of Acts and later Paul was a feast that united people of all incomes and races in a common purpose.

The Eucharist gathers us at particular place, with a particular people, to eat particular food(s) together. While we believe theologically that Christ is present at the table with us, the Eucharist is more about what you do than what you believe.

The Eucharist is about gathering community and being together. It recognizes that gathering around the table is a sacred act. Our relationships expand from the table outwards into the world, teaching us how to love one another through the lens of table hospitality: as old as time itself, but intentionally sacred.

You may have guessed by now that I do not limit the Eucharist to Sunday morning. I believe that all of the foods we eat at our tables are sacred: not through their essential nature, but through the relationships that they represent: relationships between farmers and communities, relationships between food and bodies, food and the earth, and farms and our ecosystem. I believe Christ is present whenever two or more gather in his name.

The table is a place where we bypass rank and privilege and create a zone where you take what you need and bring what you are able. It is a commons where we are defined in new, equal relationships with one another, ensuring that all have enough and sharing. Believers in Acts took the idea of the common table even further and held all possessions in common, caring for the widows and dispossessed from the surplus, bypassing the inequality created by the currency stamped with the deified Caesar.

Our relationships are holy, and so they must be sustainable: wrought with great care for the integrity of communities and creation. Our tables are a microcosm of the way we live out our faith.

We know that hospitality is a sacred duty, as are all of our relationships within our economic system. A sacred relationship is one formed in love and rooted in mutual respect. It is therefore sustainable because it respects the health and integrity of all members of the relationship. God is calling all things into sustainability and right relation. Can you hear it?

Yes: this is practical. Abstract theology is safe, because it commits to nothing concrete, but theologies out of lived experiences of God present in community are dangerous because they invite the hearer to participate. Faith without works is dead.

So I will tell you how we are carrying out this theology. The Quixote Center's Crabgrass Christians Initiative is organizing local church/farmer distribution relationships based loosely around the the Kentucky organization New Roots' Fresh Stop model.

Our vision is to distribute in-season, local, wholesale, organic or near-organic fresh produce from churches to community and church members once every two weeks. People with higher incomes will pay more so that those with less will be able to afford it, restoring economic inequality in a small way.

We will teach classes at local churches that help us understand the holiness of food and table and the inequalities in our food system. These classes are designed to empower lay people to be leaders and carry out the work of the program.

In the long term, we will learn about our foods and tables by visiting farms and re-creating the local, particular relationships that have been broken by a globalized food production system that obscures the chemicals, unjust pricing systems and unsustainable practices that dominate our grocery stores.

Yes, the Eucharist calls us to invest in a particular place, with particular people, in sustainable relationships. And this, my sisters and brothers, can challenge our basic assumptions about the make-up of our world by giving us a vision of what a restorative community looks like.

Amen.

Want to get involve? If you're in D.C., join our listserv or Facebook group to get involved in planning.

Not in D.C., but want to get involved? As we set these partnerships up here in D.C., the Crabgrass Christians Initiative of the Quixote Center will work with partners to create a Food Justice model for you to use in other places. Crabgrass Christians Initiative is a movement for ground-up, practical faith, rooted in justice, that transforms our church and economic relationships. If you want to see that succeed, donate, sign up for email alerts, and like Crabgrass Christians on Facebook!

 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
methodman
03:31 PM on 05/22/2012
Your idea about abstraction shows you are confused. abstractions allow you to snapshots moments about things by increasing your vocabulary or the slant of the curve. These preclude process again a demonic important subject forbidden to teach about in church. You are not reading textbooks today by your comments. Sorry I am trying to help the clergy make the transition or not only I but my colleague as well will entirely refuse to embrace the clergy. This stuff is hard. but you hurt yourself by these insults that you inject. The same way my minister sister said it was better and more fun for her daughter to employed as a babysitter in a gym rather than be stuck doing data entry which is extremely creative and insight precluding. The expect conversation needs to be chucked it is destroying ones ability to make gains and I can only leave a church behind when they don't accept me and I have!!!
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methodman
03:19 PM on 05/22/2012
The truth about our society today is that people who eat at the same table are not eating the same food. I agree many christians insist that I eat meat because I don't want to they refuse to invite me. They aren't going to accommodate my feelings about not having a desire to visit a steak house. I was rude the last time they didi it. They don't invite me any more. But more to the literacy point of view. Different types of people have a different undertaking mechanism so that when it gets understood the quality of one's life improves. None of these growth centered conversations are presented from a pulpit. So the remarkable people have no duty, or business or are forbidden to employ any reasoning process among the faithful
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methodman
03:13 PM on 05/22/2012
I think you are continuing the same old tired thought but lets pretend its fresh. People can get the hang of college level thinking in todays society. You are right the church is keeping everyone who thinks the 50's is great. The rest of us don't relate and don't find what you say supportive of any causes or things that work up my interest. Ask people why they aren't interested I think you will be surprised. I am literate. I am not 4 years old so the worn out diatribe is uninteresting uninspiring and unsophisticated. I have decided to be unchurched.
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larry cifuentes
08:40 AM on 05/22/2012
When practicality is

put to show results,

all debaters have

nothing to say.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
F-BVFF
10:12 AM on 05/22/2012
Would you mind defining practical?
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larry cifuentes
07:13 PM on 05/22/2012
Practicality is putting on your shirt, thinking about the condition of the shirt, not how to wear the shirt.

The author of the article, instead of preaching doctrine, expects relations to form doctrinal meaning.
10:51 PM on 05/21/2012
I’m a Pagan and active in my local Pagan community. Yet, I found your piece very interesting and inspiring. I admit to getting discouraged sometimes, even getting angry, at the actions and attitudes of the more strident followers of the Galilean. But then I’ll read something like this and realize what strong allies we can be when facing the intractable problems of this world.
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F-BVFF
10:13 AM on 05/22/2012
Could you share more about what it means to be a Pagan? I'm not exactly clear about the definition.
09:26 PM on 05/22/2012
It would be disrespectful in this space for a drawn out discussion of Paganism. So, I’ll be as brief: I am Wiccan. Although we have no ancient bible, we subscribe to the saying “If it harm none, do what you will.” To me that means following your bliss wherever it leads you-as long as you are not hurting anyone (including yourself). Many of us now take “harm none” to include our fellow life forms on this planet. Proselytizing is highly discouraged, and is considered a form of harm. Our celebrations and Sabbats are tied to the cycles of life and seasons of the year. Actions are more important than dogma, so ritual practice is stressed. We don’t believe in “the Devil” or a concept of “sin”. We take responsibility for our actions, and if we’ve hurt anyone, forgiveness is sought from the one harmed, not from a higher power. We are polytheistic or henotheistic. We value syncretism; I know Pagan atheists, as well as Wiccans who include Jesus in their pantheon. Most of us subscribe to the ancient advice, “When first entering a foreign city, it’s best bow to their Gods”. We’re OK with science, and accept the facts of evolution and global warming. The Greek Neo-Platonists valued reason, and so do we. Many come to us from the LGBT community, because of the difficulties they’ve encountered in mainstream faiths. Women can rise to the highest ranks in our religion.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Jeremy John
12:21 PM on 05/23/2012
Thank you for your thoughts. All of us who are concerned with care for creation have much work to do. The road to sustainability is walked together, though we may come from different faiths!