Thursday Huddle | Remembering That Night in The Upper Room – John 13-17

OPENING SONG

OPENING PRAYER

OPENING COMMENTS

  • Maundy Thursday draws us into the final evening Jesus spent with his disciples before the cross.  According to John’s Gospel, everything that happens on this night takes place with full awareness.  Jesus knows the hour has come.  He knows betrayal is already in motion.  He knows suffering and death are near.  And knowing all of this, he chooses to gather his friends around a table.  
  • John tells us, “Having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end.”  This love is not reactive or sentimental.  It is steady, deliberate, and costly.  It is love that kneels.  Love that serves.  Love that gives itself before anyone understands what is happening or why.  
  • A shared meal is meaningful on this night because it is the setting where Jesus shows us who God is.  In the middle of an ordinary human practice, eating together, Jesus reveals extraordinary grace.  He takes bread and wine. He takes a towel and a basin.  He does not explain suffering or offer a strategy for what comes next. Instead, he gives himself.  
  • Maundy Thursday is rooted in the Passover story, a meal that remembered God’s deliverance and faithfulness. Jesus receives this tradition and fulfills it in himself.  He becomes the true Passover Lamb, not by asking his disciples to act, but by acting on their behalf.  At the table, Jesus shows that salvation is something we receive before it is something we respond to.  
  • The meal also reveals how difficult receiving can be.  Peter resists having his feet washed, not because he doubts Jesus, but because being served exposes his need. Jesus does not argue Peter into agreement.  He stays with him. He insists on giving.  This moment points forward to the cross, where Jesus will wash humanity clean in a way we could never manage for ourselves.  
  • Gathering around a table on Maundy Thursday allows the church to slow down and enter this story with their whole bodies.  A table reminds us that faith is not only spoken but also shared.  Bread is taken.  Cups are lifted.  Hands are opened.  We are reminded that Jesus has already done for us what we could not do for ourselves, in us, and on our behalf.  
  • This night is not meant to rush toward Easter.  It invites us to linger with Jesus in the tension of love given freely in the shadow of the cross.  A meal allows space for that lingering.  It creates room for silence, for gratitude, and for the quiet work of the Spirit who forms us through receiving before sending us out to love others in the same way.
  • As pastors and leaders, hosting a meal on Maundy Thursday is a way of trusting the gospel to do its work.  We set the table.  Jesus does the serving.  We receive.  

 

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