"LAST SUPPER"

Matthew 26:26-29; Mark 14:22-25; Luke 22:15-20; I Corinthians 10:16-17, 11:23-26


GREETING   (Adapted from Isaiah 52:7)

How beautiful upon the mountains, O God,

      are the feet of the messenger who announces peace,

            who brings good news,

            who announces salvation,

            who says to Zion, “Your God reigns!”

HYMN   633   “The Bread of Life for All Is Broken”

PSALM   81

PRAYER

(Think back to the beginning of this day.  Start there, and mentally walk through the day again, while you thank God for the day's blessings and God's continuous work of love.  Confess and repent of those times when you forgot, ignored or rebelled against God.  Continue to pray with your personal prayer list.)

SCRIPTURE LESSON

(Choose a passage of scripture to read.  It can be a chapter, a paragraph, or a particular story.  Daily lectionaries are available online or in print that assign a lesson each day from the gospels, epistles, Old Testament and psalms on a three-year cycle.  Or you can create a plan to read a book of the Bible, or the whole Bible.  Then follow the steps below.)

Read a passage of scripture.  Read it out loud, very slowly and carefully as if for the first time.  Continue reading until a word, phrase or sentence captures your attention.  Stop there to repeat the word, phrase or sentence over and over, listening to it deeply in your heart.

Reflect on why the passage got your attention.  Consider the area of your life to which this may apply.  Is God saying something to you in this passage?  Take time to listen carefully to whatever God may be saying to you.

Respond to God in prayer (or with journaling, music, art or whatever you choose) about what you have heard.  Ask questions.  Open yourself to God’s will for you.

Rest in God’s company.  Be still and quiet.  Move beyond thinking, practicing interior silence.  Let yourself be open to God’s presence.  Savor this moment with God.

PRAYER    

God, who satisfies with finest wheat,

      God, who invigorates with your fine wine,

            you build your kingdom around your Son’s table.

It is not a throne or a military machine,

      not a huge pile of money or vast influence,

            but a table, a very, very large table, including all.

Only a God of immense love and grace,

      dares to construct a kingdom around a table,

            and then invites the whole world to join the feast.

When you gather us all in that equality,

      we expect greed, ambition, gluttony, disunity,

            and large portions of sneaky scheming and intrigue.

But we find harmony, unity, agreement,

      in a kingdom where your Son rules with love,

            a kingdom that stands on a unique sacrifice of love.

In Christ, you came among us to die.

      Creatures you brought to life, find eternity

            in a banquet spread by their self-giving Creator.

At this table the human drama is honored,

      the ridiculous dramatics of humanity absent,

            and your divine purpose recognized and revered.

We love your table, the bread and wine,

      a tiny taste of the great feast still coming, God,

            where your company will be eternal joy and peace.  Amen.

SILENCE AND COMMITMENT

(Pause to reflect and listen.  Work to push out of your mind any distracting or irrelevant thoughts.  Concentrate your thoughts on the words of the hymns and choruses you have sung, the prayers you have spoken and the scriptures you have read.  Be aware of what you are feeling.  Listen for anything that God might be saying to you in this time you have spent together.  As God responds to your prayer-time, seek guidance for how you can best respond to God’s will.  Then commit to serving God’s will for you.)

HYMN   614   “For the Bread Which You Have Broken”

CLOSING PRAYER          

You, God, are the very essence of love and grace,

      and tonight as we approach our beds for needed sleep,

            we turn over all our concerns to your compassionate heart.

Wrap our families and friends in your protection.

      Guard those whose paths we have crossed today,

            and our neighbors: known and unknown, near and far.

Heal those with diseases, wounds and afflictions;

      those boiling with deep troubles inside themselves;

            and those cursed with bad decisions and crippling habits.

Bring good news to the people suffering in wars;

      those impoverished by ignorance or sick economies;

            and those living under the burden of earth’s pollution.

Take all your people into your arms tonight, Lord.

      Comfort them with your steadfast and faithful love.

            Let them find rest and hope tonight in your tender care.  Amen.


Copyright 2020. Robert D. Ingram, 32746 Jourden Rd., Albany, Ohio 45710 (dr.bobingram@gmail.com).  Used by permission.