Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Thinking Theologically about Food
- 2 The “Roots” of Eating: Our Life Together in Gardens
- 3 Eating in Exile: Dysfunction in the World of Food
- 4 Life through Death: Sacrificial Eating
- 5 Eucharistic Table Manners: Eating toward Communion
- 6 Saying Grace
- 7 Eating in Heaven? Consummating Communion
- Author Index
- Subject Index
- Scripture Citation Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Thinking Theologically about Food
- 2 The “Roots” of Eating: Our Life Together in Gardens
- 3 Eating in Exile: Dysfunction in the World of Food
- 4 Life through Death: Sacrificial Eating
- 5 Eucharistic Table Manners: Eating toward Communion
- 6 Saying Grace
- 7 Eating in Heaven? Consummating Communion
- Author Index
- Subject Index
- Scripture Citation Index
Summary
Several years ago on a warm fall evening at Anathoth Community Garden in Cedar Grove, North Carolina, I enjoyed a memorable meal. Roughly 100 people had gathered for a community feast. Though some of the meal was prepared by cooks from Cedar Grove United Methodist Church, the rest was potluck, and so included some of the freshest and best-tasting greens, tortillas, salsa, and chicken I have ever had. As our backdrop we enjoyed a double rainbow on a massive thundercloud to the east, while the sun slowly made its way down the horizon behind us. Children were running around blowing and catching bubbles. Others danced to the sound of a live bluegrass band. The taste of delectable food, the sounds of laughter and singing, the aroma of fresh flowers and harvest, the hugs of friends and neighbors, and the sensation of a cooling fall night all came together in what I considered a foretaste of heaven.
Why should I or anyone else think that this meal mattered? Is the invocation of heaven not overdrawn? After all, the evening has passed, and the physical sensations are no longer effective in me. No matter how much or how finely I eat, I, along with all the other animal and plant bodies, will still die, and so return to the soil out of which we came and upon which we daily feed.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Food and FaithA Theology of Eating, pp. xi - xxPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011