
Bread and Wine
Bread and Wine: Readings for Lent and Easter (Second Edition), editors at Plough Publishing. Plough Publishing (ISBN:
Summary A collection of 96 readings from writers throughout church history spanning the season from Ash Wednesday to Pentecost.
There are a variety of ways to approach Lenten readings. My reviews for the next three days will reflect three different approaches. Today’s approach is to collect readings from a variety of writers. This collection of readings offers one of the broadest selections of readings I’ve seen both in terms of historical reach and inclusiveness across denominational and ethnic lines. The readings offered here range from early church fathers like Ignatius of Antioch and Augustine to Brennan Manning and Tish Harrison Warren. Women are well-represented, including Fleming Rutledge, Barbara Brown Taylor, Christina Rosetti, and Therese of Lisieux. Then among the non-white authors are Gonzalo Baez Camargo, Sadhu Sundhar Singh, Kwong Jeong-saeng, Kahlil Gibran, Howard Thurman, Sojourner Truth, and Shusaku Endo.
The other thing about this collection is that there are ninety-six readings in this expanded edition of an earlier publication. The expansion extends the readings into Eastertide and the period up to Pentecost. All of the readings are short, taking at most a few minutes. Many, apart from poems, are extracts from longer works. One of the values, then, of this work is to whet your appetite for great Christian writers. A section giving the sources of these works is included in the end materials. The readings are organized into seven sections. I will highlight one from each, though they are all worth reading!
Invitation
In Time for Reflection,” Howard Thurman invites us to do the hard thing of slowing down and reflecting on the “dead places” in oiur lives. We want to offer selves thar are “clear, unsullied, fresh, clean.” However we can only do so if we also offer the “tainted, painful, and tragic.”
Temptation
Fleming Rutledge’s “Too Good For Jesus” relates the stories of two women. One could not worship in a church with a crucifix behind the altar with the figure of Christ hanging on it. The other, in a Passion play could not join with a crowd crying “crucify him.” Both struggled to see the depth of human sin, their sin. They were too good for the saving work of Jesus.
Passion
G.K. Chesterton, that master of paradox, observes in “God the Rebel” the extraordinary idea that in Gethsemane, God tempted God, and did not break; that at the cross, God forsook God. Thus, for at least a moment, God was the rebel, identified with our revolt. He concludes that there is “only one religion in which God seemed for an instant to be an atheist.”
Crucifixion
Many maintain that religion is about what we do, the doing of good works. “It is Done” by Watchman Nee begins with Jesus declaration “it is finished.” He argues that our first step of faith is to cease doing and trust in what was done for us by Jesus. For example, he describes a man who cannot forgive, no matter how hard he tries. Nee counsels, “Do nothing at all” maintained that in Christ, not only his sins but he, the unforgiving, was born away, and that he could trust Christ to do what he could not.
Resurrection
Gregory of Nazianzus, in “Today I Rise” ponders the wonder of moving from crucifying Christ to sharing in his glory, of being buried with Christ, and yet, in our sins being passed over, we escape Egypt and are alive. And what can we offer the one who has done this? Only ourselves.
New Life
Hannah Whittall Smith in “Monday Christians” decries the divorce between “religious life” and temporal life. Christ would work just as much in those who “keep the house and make the bargain.” Her point was Christ’s intention that we know his abiding presence in all of life, even in “the homely path of everyday duties.”
Pentecost
Kwon Jeong-saeng in “The Church I Dreamed Of” describes his vision of a church he never built in place of a struggling village church. Though poor, they prayed, and loved, served and gave and transformed a mountain village. Then, sadly, it gave way to authoritarianism, power, and status. Instead of trusting God, God became a convenient instrument. In place of dreams, The author describes his wish to live as did those poor villager, in loving service.
This is a collection for slow and repeated reading. Perhaps it will become one you return to year by year. And meanwhile, we can explore the riches of Christian reflections over the centuries in the works these readings represent. And all of this will hopefully remind us of Christ, our bread and wine!
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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.








