The Banquet of the Future
Scripture – Isaiah 25:6 (NIV)
On this mountain the LORD Almighty will prepare a feast of rich food for all peoples, a banquet of aged wine — the best of meats and the finest of wines.
Focus
The prophet Isaiah gives us a picture of a future banquet, a grand “feast of rich food for all peoples, a banquet of aged wine – the best of meats and the finest of wines” (Isaiah 25:6). Someday, the walls between peoples, countries, and cultures will be broken down, and we will share together in the riches of the nations. Yes, these riches include glorious food, but they are especially found in the people who will enjoy food and fellowship together.
Devotion
Often schools and churches sponsor international banquets, festive meals in which people bring foods representing diverse cultures. At such a feast you might find yourself eating tortillas and beans along with spaghetti, dim sum, chicken curry, and hot dogs. Quite a combination!
In Isaiah 25 we catch a glimpse of the ultimate international banquet, the most lavish feast of all. It’s a meal prepared by the Lord himself for peoples from all nations. The food will be exquisite, plentiful, and delicious. The celebration will be unsullied by gloom and tears, not to mention national or ethnic conflicts. All peoples will gather to share together in the Lord’s banquet.
Jesus picked up this vision of a great banquet for all people as he revealed the future of the kingdom of God (see, for example, Matthew 8:11). In fact, this image underlies Jesus’s statement at the Last Supper: “I tell you, I will not drink from this fruit of the vine from now on until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father’s kingdom” (Matthew 26:29). Thus, when we celebrate communion, we not only look back to the saving death of Jesus, but also ahead with hope to the great messianic banquet yet to come. Someday we, along with people from all nations, will sit at table with Jesus, enjoying rich food and drink in the peace of his kingdom.
What difference does this make for us today, apart from giving us hope? I believe it encourages us to find ways to begin, even now, to enjoy the banquet of the future. We do this as we celebrate the Lord’s Supper together. We do this as we reach out to those whose appearance, life experience, or homeland is not like ours, sharing a meal with them and getting to know them. We do this as we live beyond our comfort zone, building relationships with people from diverse places and perspectives. In these and many other ways, we enjoy a foretaste of the messianic banquet of the future.
I enjoyed such a banquet a few weeks ago. One of my doctoral students, Song, and his wife, Barbara, invited Linda and me to dinner along with a couple of friends. Song had just received his D.Min. degree and wanted to celebrate, so he and Barbara took us to dinner. They are from Singapore and have lived in several different Asian countries. The restaurant to which they took us served a wide range of pan-Asian dishes, most of which were unfamiliar to me. So Song and Barbara did the ordering and we did the eating. It was mostly unfamiliar and utterly marvelous. But here’s the thing. As much as I loved the food that night, what I treasured most of all was the time with dear people, sharing life together as we ate. I was reminded that the banquet of the future will be wonderful, not only because God is the master of international cooking, but mainly because we will be sharing this meal with peoples from around the world. What a feast that will be!
Reflect
Can you think of meals you have experienced that remind you of the vision of Isaiah 25?
What difference does it make today that we will one day enjoy the messianic banquet of the kingdom?
If we embrace the hope of the ultimate international banquet, how might this impact our actions as individuals? As churches? As citizens?
Act
The next time you’re eating delicious food, stop to thank the Lord for the promise of the banquet of the future.
Pray
Gracious God, what a joy it will be to finally sit at your table, enjoying your lavish food and drink, sharing in fellowship with people from all nations. How we will celebrate your goodness together!
Today, that reality seems far, far away—even as nations are divided against each other, even as Christians so often can’t get along. May the vision of the messianic banquet give us hope, Lord. Moreover, may it motivate us to reach out to those around us and draw them in, especially to those who aren’t just like us ethnically, racially, socio-economically, politically, or theologically. In light of your great banquet yet to come, may we extend hospitality to all. May our churches look less and less like exclusive clubs, and more and more like the feast of the future! Amen.
Find all Life for Leaders devotions here. Explore what the Bible has to say about work at the unique website of our partners, the Theology of Work Project. Commentary on today’s Life for Leaders theme can be found here: The Body of Christ (Matthew 26)
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Mark D. Roberts
Senior Strategist
Dr. Mark D. Roberts is a Senior Strategist for Fuller’s Max De Pree Center for Leadership, where he focuses on the spiritual development and thriving of leaders. He is the principal writer of the daily devotional, Life for Leaders,...