A Hunger For
God
From the
"Annual Resource Companion" of the Greek Orthodox Department
of Religious Education 2001 Edition
by Paraskevθ (Eve) Tibbs, M.A.T.
Many of us raised in
the Greek culture understand that having company or parea is more
than just a get-together it's almost a rite with as many people
as the house can hold, the almost formal procession of the roast lamb
and pastitso from the kitchen to the dining table, and the blessing of
the meal before everyone feasts, laughing and lingering together at the
table. And we certainly
appear to have integrated this hospitality and food tradition into our
parish life. Our fabulous food festivals and Feast Day banquets are
usually well known throughout our local communities.
Most observers and insiders assume that it is the
"Greek" influence that brings to our parishes an attention to
food and gracious hospitality. But
perhaps it is not so much the Greek in our midst which influences the
"meal" orientation of our churches, but the sacramental nature
of Orthodox Christianity which has influenced the Greek and other
cultures that have embraced it. In
the theology of the Church, human beings are properly understood as
sacramental beings with a strong desire to share and participate
"in fellowship" with God and with one another.
Taking food, blessing it as a recognition that it comes as a gift
from God, and sharing it, was and still is an important way to
communicate a solidarity of heart and mind.
This is "koinonia" a New Testament word often
translated as either "fellowship" or "communion."
Meals are so prominent throughout the Holy Scriptures that Father
Alexander Schmemann,
of blessed memory, sees the banquet as the central image of the
Bible.
He views the entire drama of salvation history creation, the
fall, and renewal in Christ as being encapsulated within this
concept of food and feasting. In
the biblical story of creation, man
is presented as a hungry being, and the whole world is his food.
God's directives are few: Adam and Eve are told to propagate, to
have dominion over the earth, and to eat.
"See, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is
upon the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit;
you shall have them for food." (Gen. 1:29)
Even in paradise, human beings must eat in order to live.
But in the garden of Eden, the food given to man (Adam) to
partake of for life was given by God for communion with God.
All that exists in creation "is divine love made food, made
life for man"
God blessed everything He created, and that means all creation was made
to be a sign of His presence, wisdom, love and revelation.
Certainly, human beings were not the only beings created to be
hungry. All that lives must
exist by "eating." But
humanity is the thing created to have a hunger, above all, for God.
So it is not accidental that the biblical story of "the
Fall" is again centered on food.
Whatever else the forbidden tree and its fruit signified, it was
the only fruit not offered as a gift to man.
It was the only thing in creation not given, and not blessed by
God. It was food whose
eating "was condemned to be communion with itself alone, and not
with God. It is the image
of the world loved for itself, and eating it is the image of life
understood as an end in itself" according to Fr.
Schmemann.
One of the images of
the Eastern Orthodox understanding of original sin, therefore, is not
that Adam disobeyed God, but that he ceased to be hungry for God, and
for God alone.
This is not to say that Adam did not disobey God, for
certainly Adam did but rather there is a more important point which
is too often wrapped up in the simple package "Adam disobeyed
God." Adam stopped
seeing the entire world as a sacrament of communion or koinonia
with God. He sought the
creation as an end in itself. Since
creation has no life or meaning in itself apart from God, Adam's
disobedience brought all creation into a realm of death.
According
to the theology of Orthodox Christianity, God's plan was not entirely
obliterated by sin, but after the Fall, the planned union of God with
humanity was impossible until human nature could triumph over sin and
death. And not surprisingly, meals are featured
prominently throughout the
scriptural narratives of this lengthy process.
In the Old Testament, God's presence becomes known in feasts,
famines and even the subsistence level gift of manna for the Israelites
in the wilderness. In the
New Testament, Jesus Christ is the manna from heaven which gives life
(John 6.51) and the most important "banquets" feature His
taking food, blessing it, and partaking of a meal in fellowship with
others. He is the perfect
Priest the model Who honors His Father in all things the
antithesis of Adam, who forgot the Giver, in the seeking of the gifts.
In the feeding of the five
thousand, Jesus took the loaves, "blessed and broke them,
and gave them to the disciples to set before the multitude." (Luke
9.16b) In the Last Supper
"He took bread, gave thanks and broke it, and gave it to
them, saying, This is My body which is given for you; do this in
remembrance of Me. (Luke 22.19)
And in a post-resurrectional encounter, Jesus was recognized by
the very act of His taking, blessing, breaking and sharing of
bread. (Luke 24.30)
As
perfect human being, Jesus is the model of the proper way to partake of
a meal in thanksgiving. As
perfect God, Jesus is Himself the Bread of Life.
"...he who feeds on Me will live because of Me...He who eats
this bread will live forever. (John 6.57-58)
Christ, the perfect Man, becomes the perfect Eucharist He
gives Himself, in total obedience, as an offering of love and
thanksgiving to God, as a gift to us so that through Him we regain the
eucharistic life that we lost in Adam.
According to Saint Gregory the Theologian, "He hungered
but He fed thousands; He is the Bread that gives life, and
That is of heaven. He thirsted but He cried, If any man thirsts, let
him come unto me and drink." (Third
Theological Oration - XX.)
The banquet then, is
not only the image of life at creation, but also the image of life at
its fulfillment. "And
I bestow upon you a kingdom, just as My Father bestowed one upon Me,
that you may eat and drink at My table in My kingdom..."
(Luke 22.30) For
those of us who live during the time between the two comings of Christ,
it is the Holy Eucharist which allows us to participate now, if only
momentarily, in the Great Banquet of the Kingdom of God in paradise.
St. Ephrem the Syrian tells us
that the banquet of paradise was the goal of creation all along,
prepared from the beginning: "...whoever
inhales it is overjoyed and forgets his earthly bread; this is the table
of the Kingdom blessed is He who prepared it in Eden."
(Hymn XI, 15)
In his book, The
Orthodox Way, Bishop
Kallistos Ware observes that man does not merely live in the world,
think about it and use it, but is able to consider the world as God's
gift a sacrament of God's presence and a means of communion with
him."
Human beings are therefore able to offer the entire world back to God as
thanksgiving. And we do!
As Orthodox Christians gather at the Divine Liturgy to be the
Church the Body of Christ we bring the "ordinary"
elements of bread and wine as an offering to be sanctified and
mystically transformed into the Body and Blood of our Savior.
"Offering You these gifts from Your own gifts, in all and
for all." (The Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom)
And we are to heed the invitation to partake at the Holy Banquet
of the Eucharist with the understanding that it is the only
"food" which brings True Life.
Jesus said: "Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and
drink His blood, you have no life in you." (John 6.53)
But we are also called to live our entire lives in a
eucharistic manner, not only at the Divine Liturgy.
The degree to which we take the "ordinary" gifts of
creation, bless them and offer them back to God, in fellowship, is the
degree to which we come closer to the way of life intended for human
beings in paradise. So we
return to our own dining tables and parea with the understanding
that it is really part of our "theological heritage" to gather
at table with one another in hospitable sharing.
But the good gifts of God's creation only have meaning for us
when we recognize in them God's sustaining presence in the world.
"Therefore by Him let us continually offer the sacrifice of
praise to God, that is, the fruit of our lips, giving thanks to
His name." (Hebrews 13.15) Ultimately,
however, if we want true fulfillment, true fellowship, it will not be
found at any banquet table, unless we first have a hunger for God.
"Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for
righteousness, For they shall be filled." (Matthew 5.6)