Lectionary ReadingsGracious God, may only your truth be spoken
and only your truth be heard ☩
in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Have
you ever had an experience that caused you to see things differently? The
question reminds me of a 10-minute short film called “The Lunch Date,” in which
a woman is hurrying through a train station and misses her departure. So she
goes to get lunch at a restaurant in the station. She gets a salad, puts it
down on the table, and then walks back to the counter to get a napkin and
silverware. When she gets back to the table, she finds a man sitting there,
eating her salad. She rants and complains, but to no avail. So she takes her
fork and starts eating the salad as well. After a few minutes, the man goes up
to the counter and comes back with two coffees – one for him and one for her.
Well, she drinks the coffee and then gets up and leaves to head back to the
train platform to catch the next train, but realizes that she left her bag at
the restaurant. She goes back only to find her bag sitting at a table different
from the one she had been eating at and on the table sits her uneaten salad.
She thought this man had sat at her table and eaten her salad, when, in
reality, she had sat at his table and eaten his salad. She laughs to herself in
a moment of embarrassment, surprise, and epiphany. Again, it’s called “The
Lunch Date” and is a poignant 10-minute film that explores what happens when we
act on faulty assumptions and the grace that can come through seeing things
differently. The Scripture texts this morning from 1 Samuel and 2 Corinthians
help us to see things differently.