Psalm 23: Part IV – Come To the Banquet Table
Where has our flock been
as we journey through the 23rd Psalm?
The Lord Is my Shepherd. I lack nothing. The Lord is our Shepherd, we lack
nothing. We have all that we need. We may not have everything we want, we may
not have everything we desire, there may be some items left of that wish list,
but our Great Shepherd has and will continue to ensure that we have everything
we need. In fact, the Shepherd knows
those needs before we even ask—but He invites us to seek first His Kingdom, His
Righteousness, and then ask, seek, and knock in accordance with His Will, we
will find, or perhaps just realize, that blessing upon blessing is being poured
out upon us.
One of the most important
things that the Shepherd provides that we need is an opportunity for rest and
renewal…God leads us along whatever grassy meadows and tranquil waters bring us
peace. He invites us to lay our burdens
down, not just lay them down, but to cast them upon Him meaning we aren’t to
take them back up again. God’s desire is
to restore us from whatever trials and tribulations have worn us down. Yet, I will remind us again, that there is no
retirement plan in God’s family, there is only transition from one labor to the
next. So we are led by God to a Sabbath
break, an oasis in the desert of life. Then
rested and strengthened, according to the Psalmist, God sets on the paths of
righteousness, on the paths of His saving justice, for His Name’s sake—in order
that He be given the honor and the glory in His restored Creation.
Then the Shepherd leads
us through the darkest of valleys.
Refreshed and renewed in the oasis, we begin walking through the desert
once more and there, we encounter the dark valleys—those places that in the day
time of our lives, seem to be constantly reeled with shadows; and that in the
evening hours of our lives, seem black and forbidding. Places of disease and death, of loss and
limitations…places that given a choice we would avoid at all cost. Yet we are led to enter them as we journey in
the name of God. What casts light into
that darkness is the assurance from God that is with us…not only is He with us,
with His rod and His staff, He protects us from enemies and then draws us
closer to Himself and one another and away from places of danger. The Shepherd, though, brings us completely
through the valley.
Today, we encounter the Shepherd
doing something completely unexpected.
Imagine that we’re on a battlefield. We are soldiers sent by the king to engage
the enemy in battle. We come to the battlefield
and glimpse the sizable enemy on the other side. It’s late at night and both armies decided to
encamp and prepare for battle the next day.
Then, settling in, as we are opening our packs to pick out our meager
rations to eat, the king and his entourage come in and set up a huge tent, unload
and set in place banquet tables, and then set out a unbelievable meal. The battle is the next day and the king has already
prepared a victory banquet. With that
action, the king is declaring victory!
What is our response?
Do we just stare in
unbelief, shocked by the gall of our king to set up this banquet right there in
the face of our enemy? I mean, that’s
like walking up to a five-star general, slapping him in the face, and walking
off, daring him to do something about it.
Do we join in the
festivities amazed at the confidence of our king?
Do we wake the next
morning, fearful of how this celebration might have riled up our enemies as our
king threw down the gauntlet—afraid it might have given them a determination
they didn’t have?
Do we jump out of our
tents, ready to head out, inspired by our leader, knowing that with his
presence we will be able to take down the enemy?
You see, my brothers and
sisters, that is just how, our Shepherd, our God, our King works. It may not seem like it at the time, but God
is all about setting up a victory banquet even before the battle happens.
Consider the first Passover
meal. While we may not see it as a major
banquet, it was a meal of celebration set in place while the Hebrew people were
still enslaved in Egypt. Practicing Jews
of today still gather at Passover, sharing a meal of roasted lamb, unleavened
bread, and bitter herbs. As they share
the meal, they remember and celebrate the victory that God brought them over Pharaoh
and his army.
From that Passover celebration
we get another of God’s victory banquets.
A group of thirteen Hebrew men, and possibly some others, gathered in an
upper room to celebrate the Passover.
While they were eating, one of the men, Jesus, took the bread, gave thanks
to God, broke the bread, and said, “‘This is my body which is given for
you. Do this in remembrance of me.’” Toward the end of the Passover meal, at the
time of the passing of the final cup, Jesus held up the cup, gave thanks to
God, and said, “’Drink from it, all of you; for this is my blood of the
covenant, which is poured out for man for the forgiveness of sins.”.
Little did the other men
and their friends know, they were partaking of God’s new victory banquet—for
that night Jesus would be arrested, the next day tried and hung upon a cross,
and then on the first day of the week, the Father would raise Him up,
conquering both sin and death—enemies even greater than Pharaoh and his army,
even greater than the Emperor and Roman Empire that the Jewish people sought to
be delivered from.
Just as those of the
Jewish faith continue to celebrate their victory banquet and remember their
deliverance, so to do we, who follow Christ, celebrate the victory meal that
Jesus began before his death and resurrection…we gather and share the bread and
the cup and in doing so declare God’s victory over sin and death.
In fact, today we are
going to be celebrating this meal…we are gathering at the table that God has
prepared for us in the presence of our enemies…and as we partake of bread and
the cup, we are declaring God’s victory over every enemy that we are facing.
We come to this table
declaring God’s victory over the depression we are fighting.
We come to this table
declaring God’s victory over the grief we are facing.
We come to this table
declaring God’s victory over relationships that are breaking or have broken.
We come to this table
declaring God’s victory over our battles with chronic pain.
We come to this table
declaring God’s victory over our battles with cancer.
We come to this table
declaring God’s victory over addictions.
We come to this table
declaring God’s victory over temptations.
We come to this table
declaring God’s victory over racism, over regionalism, over ageism, over
sexism, over political-partyism, over nationalism, and every other –ism which
we let the world label and divide the body of Christ and all those that God has
given life.
We come to this table
declaring God’s victory over the violence that fills our world and our nation.
We come to this table
declaring God’s victory over hunger and poverty.
We come to this table
declaring God’s victory over fear.
We come to this table
declaring once more, God’s victory over death itself.
And just as Moses and the
Hebrew people of his day still had to face Pharaoh and the soldiers after their
victory banquet, and just as Jesus had to face the cross after their victory
banquet, there are still battles to be endure after we celebrate this meal
today—but we feast together, at this table that God has prepared for us in the
presence of our enemies, and declare that the victory is assured.
In the Name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit…Amen.
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