The First Presbyterian Pulpit
A sermon by the Rev. Dr. David E. Leininger
SUNDAY DINNER
Delivered 8/5/01
Text: Leviticus 19:1-18
Have you ever tried to read the Bible all the way through?
Many have told me that they TRIED at one time or another, but
never were able to finish. They did fine getting through Genesis
and the great stories of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph.
Exodus was not bad, especially the first half with the stories of
Moses and the escape from slavery in Egypt. But the book of
Leviticus proved to be a bit much - all those ancient rules and
regulations, instructions for priests, directions for sacrifices,
dietary laws and so on got to be like wading in molasses.
Finally, the high resolve of reading the whole Bible through was
abandoned as an impossible job.
There is no question that a good bit of Leviticus does not
have much to say to modern Christians (which is the reason you
hear so little preaching from that book). But there is an
extended portion, chapters 17-26, known as the Holiness Code -
divine rules for living as a uniquely Godly community - that
contains some of the loftiest ethical teaching in all of
Scripture. There are commands to honor our parents and the
elderly, to be honest in business dealings, to be sensitive to
the physically handicapped. It is the original source of Jesus'
commandment to "Love your neighbor as yourself." It is worth our
attention. Listen to a portion of it.
Leviticus 19:1-18
Solid teaching, not only for ancient Israel, but for any
society that would be truly moral and just. In the midst of
these ethical instructions, we find one of those passages that
seems not to apply anymore, those verses saying that when one
brings an animal offering to the Temple, all the meat has to be
eaten the same day or the next day and that it would be a very
serious infraction to eat any of it on the third day (19:5-8).
The usual interpretation of the rule is that in a hot climate
like the Middle East, meat spoiled rapidly without refrigeration
(which did not exist then) and would be unhealthy to eat 48-hours
after cooking. But there are two problems with that. First, do
you really have to pass a law, especially such a strongly worded
law, telling folks not to eat spoiled food? I suspect you could
depend on people to figure that out for themselves. And second,
what would such a health regulation be doing in a chapter of
ethical instruction?
Let me offer another interpretation. If a man brought an
animal offering to the Temple, an offering in celebration of some
happy event, and knew that it had to be totally consumed in two
days, what would he do? Rather than waste the meat (which was a
relatively precious commodity in an agricultural society), he
would invite more of his relatives and neighbors. He would share
some of it with the poor, the beggars waiting on the Temple
grounds hoping for such an invitation. By setting the regulation
in the midst of ethical instruction, God's message appears to be
that there is something actually ethical, something RIGHT, about
the simple act of eating with one another.
Down deep, I think we know that. A shared meal binds people
together. Any child can tell you that when you share your candy
bar with the new kid down the street, it is an act that produces
instant friendship (just as two teenagers on a date sipping the
same ice cream soda through two straws know that a special bond
has been formed). Do you remember the movie, "Guess Who's Coming
to Dinner," and the furor caused by the daughter inviting the
WRONG sort of fellow for a meal? Eating together means something
more than collectively fending off hunger. That helps us
understand why ancient Israel was taught to bring the sacrifice
and share it - it was a way of making the participants feel that
they were linked to each other.
Sadly, there are not many opportunities to do that anymore.
The pace of modern life has seen to that. We eat many of our
meals with strangers, in cafeterias and restaurants, even jammed
together on airplanes. Mealtime becomes like a ride in an
elevator - there are other people around but we are expected to
pretend not to be aware of them. Families no longer eat together
like they used to, and when they do, there is seldom a sense of
an important shared experience. Eating has become a mundane
matter of refueling our bodies the way we gas up our cars. Too
bad. We have taken one more thing which used to be rich in
meaning and made it ordinary. No wonder there is so little magic
left in our lives.
I wish we could get back to that big deal known as Sunday
dinner that we experienced in years past. In a few weeks, we
Leiningers will have the joy of visiting with our former
parishioners at the Oakdale Presbyterian Church in Clover, South
Carolina, to celebrate that congregation's 50th anniversary. One
of our favorite memories of our years at Oakdale was Sunday
dinner with the Robinson's. The Robinsons are a huge family that
gathers every Sunday at Mama's - it is an army of brothers,
sisters, husbands, wives, and cousins tearing around and
screaming like banshees, hearing mothers and fathers yelling at
them to watch out for their Sunday clothes and each other's
skulls. Every so often, the preacher and his family would be
invited to join them. Of course, as the resident "Holy Man" I
was the designated pray-er...careful not to go on too long with
the blessing. It was wonderful. No one will ever have to
explain to any of the Robinson clan what it means to be family;
no one will ever have to explain what it means to belong or be
loved - Sunday dinner takes care of that.
In a way, that is what we are about to do as we gather at
the Lord's Table. The bit of bread and sip of juice will not do
much to fend off physical hunger; but the hunger we all feel, the
hunger for connectedness, for community, for family, for
assurance that we are not alone in this world is surely fed. How
does it happen? No one can explain it. As John Calvin said, "I
rather experience it than understand it."
Once when a preacher was marrying a young couple, he put the
usual question: "Do you take this woman to be your lawfully
wedded wife, to live together in the holy estate of matrimony, to
love her, comfort her, honor and keep her..." and so on? The
answer was not the usual soft, reserved "I do," but rather, "Yes
sir, that's what I came here for."
In a few moments, you will be invited to the Lord's Table as
we share our Christian family meal. Our response to the
invitation is most often the equivalent of that soft "I do," but
this morning we can make it, "Yes sir, that's what I came here
for." This morning, do something to reinforce that sense of
togetherness that comes in sharing food - as you pass the
elements to the person next to you, let your eyes meet, and
smile. Smile the smile that silently says, "You are not alone.
You are at Sunday dinner now, at the table of the family of God."
Amen!

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