As I sat watching the film Midnight in Paris, I realized I might very much enjoy a visit to 1920s Paris, France.
Eventually, Hemingway had those notebooks transcribed, and then organized them into a book. He named it A Moveable Feast. The book was his memoir of those years and those people as he knew them. The title of the book comes from a comment Hemingway made to a friend in 1950: "If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you, for Paris is a movable feast."
This week's scriptures are about a different kind of moveable feast. Phrases like “delight yourselves in rich food” (Isaiah 55:2), and “My soul is satisfied as with a rich feast” (Psalms 63:5) capture the reality of eating the spiritual food God has prepared for us. And we are urged to not forget their true source when we ingest the "same spiritual food" and the "same spiritual drink" as the Israelites in the wilderness (1st Corinthians 10:3-4).
We may not be able to travel back in time to 1920s Paris. Many of us, perhaps, have no desire to. After all, those icons of the lost generation immersed themselves in Hemingway’s moveable feast, only to learn “There is no there there.” Ultimately, it was a feast that left an aftertaste of bitterness and disappointment. In contrast, we are urged to come to the feast prepared for us by God. It’s a feast that moves with us through our lives.
We can expect to be richly fed.
_________________________
PHOTO (from the Paris Convention and Visitors Bureau): https://en.parisinfo.com/
_________________________
Join us for a feast Friday morning at DaySpring’s Lectionary Breakfast. As usual, we meet in person at Our Breakfast Place and on Zoom**. We start at 8:00 for an hour like no other. We feast on food, we feast on God's word, and we feast on fellowship. And when we leave, part of those feasts moves with us, out into the day, the week, and the lives of those we meet.
https://lectionary.library.vanderbilt.edu/pdf//Cx_ThirdSundayinLent.pdf
Isaiah 55:1-9
Psalm 63:1-8
1 Corinthians 10:1-13
Luke 13:1-9
Third Sunday in Lent (March 20, 2022)
_________________________
No comments:
Post a Comment