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The Last Supper

by Dr. Linda Brupbacher

Matthew 26: 17-30

People gathering to eat and talk is common here at HBU.  It was common during Jesus’ ministry too.

Sharing meals was a regular part of Jesus’ ministry.  Scripture contains many stories about Jesus eating with His disciples and with sinners, teaching at meals, and teaching through parables that centered on meals/banquets.  Thus it seems only fitting that on the evening before His crucifixion, Jesus shared a meal, the Passover meal, with His disciples.  

The first Passover involved Jewish slaves in Egypt killing a lamb, smearing its blood over their doors to prevent the deaths of their firstborn children, and then eating the lamb as part of their last supper in Egypt.  Much as Jesus does for us, the sacrificed lamb provided both protection from death and sustenance for their upcoming journey. Much as the Lord’s Supper does for us, their annual ceremonial reenactment of that last supper in Egypt provided a tangible way to trigger memories of what God had done for them in the past and to help them recognize His continuing power and presence in their lives.  Like the Lord’s Supper, their Passover meal included bread and wine as symbols of what God had done and continued to do for them. 

It’s unlikely that the disciples truly understood His words declaring the bread and wine to be His body and blood.  We know what happened on Good Friday and on Easter so we do understand His words.   For us, the bread and wine (grape juice) symbolize his sacrifice.  At each Lord’s Supper, we reenact that Last Supper Jesus had with his disciples.  It is a time to remember and appreciate Christ’s sacrifice – and to rededicate ourselves and our lives to His service.

 

Heavenly Father,

Unlike the disciples, we know the whole story.  Help us to appreciate the gift of eternal life that comes through Christ’s body and blood.  Help us re-dedicate ourselves and our lives to You–today and each time we participate in the Lord’s Supper.   Amen

 

Excerpted from a Holy Week Devotional Guide written  for South Main Baptist Church in 2011

A Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day

Mark 14:  27-72

Sometimes when I read the children’s book Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day, I think: “Me too.”  Some days it seems like nothing goes right, I don’t get even the absolutely essential items on my things-to-do list accomplished, and I feel like the impossible is everyone’s minimum expectation for me.  Then I think about what Thursday of Holy Week must have been like for Jesus.  That puts even my worst day in perspective.  In one twenty-four hour period, Jesus was betrayed by those closest to Him:  Judas, Peter who denied even knowing Him, the inner circle of disciples who fell asleep when asked to wait and pray in the Garden of Gethsemane, and His entire band of disciples who scattered rather than standing by Him when He had to face the authorities.  He was arrested and condemned by a type of “kangaroo court.”   He was ridiculed, spit upon and beaten—all in one day.   And He knew that the next day would be even worse.  Wow!

                When I think about all that Jesus endured, it evokes all kinds of feelings within me—humility, sadness, awe, appreciation…  It is not just “when I survey the wondrous cross,” but also when I consider what His Thursday must have been like that I appreciate the enormity of what He suffered for me/us and the immensity of His love.  His sacrifice was a different order of magnitude than any misfortune or difficulty I encounter:  any sacrifice I’m asked to make.

During this Holy Week and every week, His model of strength and perseverance in the midst of adversity can enlighten and inspire us. The realization that He can and will help us have the same qualities He exhibited can empower us.   The enormity of His sacrifice can help us realize and appreciate all that He did for us—how much He loved and continues to love us.

Precious Savior,

Help me never take Your love for granted.  Help me realize and appreciate all that You suffered for me and the incredible enormity of Your love.  Help me learn from Your model of strength, perseverance, sacrifice and grace in the midst of adversity.  Please empower me to follow Your model.

Amen.

Excerpted from a Holy Week Devotional Guide written for South Main Baptist Church in 2011