Family Meal Table | Table Tips For Your Meal Times Together

TABLE TIPS

for your Mealtimes Together

Do you love to gather your family around your table to eat and fellowship together? The family meal table is one of the foundations of family life. It’s a biblical principle. The picture God gives in the Bible of a blessed family is the wife in the heart of the home and all the children sitting around the table. Read it again in Psalm 128:3.

The first mention of the word table in the Bible is The Table of Shewbread in the tabernacle in the wilderness. On this table there were twelve loaves of bread called The Shewbread. The table was also called The Table of Faces and the bread, The Bread of Faces (Lechem haPanim). The bread upon the table pointed to Christ who is our bread, our life, our sustenance. As we look to Him and feed from Him, we are fed and satisfied.

Do you notice that a plural word is used for bread? Christ is more than one face. He has many attributes and the more we look to Him in His Word the more we come to know Him and all His glorious attributes. Colossians 2:3 says: “In Him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.

The twelve loaves upon the table also pointed to the Israelites. God also wanted the bread upon the table to represent His people. In the loaves, He saw each one of their faces. He wanted them in His presence. Each week the priests would take the week-old bread off the table and replace it with new bread. The priests would then eat the bread (which was still fresh because it had lain in the presence of the Lord) and fellowship together.

The Table and the Shewbread were considered one. They were like twins. Just as mother and home are synonymous, so the table and food are synonymous. They go together. In other words, we eat food at the table! We don’t eat food in front of the TV. We don’t allow each member to grab their food and eat in their rooms or wherever they like. God wants us to sit around the table together.

But the table is not only a biblical principle, it is a heavenly principle. Did you know that God had a table (or tables) in His heavenly kingdom before we ever had them on earth? Yes, tables originated in Heaven! Jesus often talked about His table in the heavenly realm (Matthew 8:11; Luke 14:15; 29:30; and Revelation 19:9).

Therefore, the more you gather at your table, the more of the heavenly atmosphere you will bring to your home! Ooops! “It’s not very heavenly at my table,” I hear you reply. “It’s welcome to the shambles.”

Don’t despair. God gives us principles in His Word about how we should gather at the table. Let me share some of them with you.

Set the Table

If you do not take time to set and prepare the table, your children will not feel it is important. How you prepare your table is how they will perceive the importance of the table. Proverbs 9:2 (RSV) says: “Wisdom has built her house . . . she has also set her table.” I love to set a beautiful table each evening. I love to use a tablecloth. It makes such a difference to the table and to the atmosphere of the meal. Food on a naked table does not have the same welcoming touch.

“Help, do you expect me to add more laundry to my already huge pile?” you scream. Dear lovely mother, you can purchase a lovely tablecloth and put a piece of clear plastic over it which you wipe down after the meal. There are seasons in life. As your children grow, there will come a time when you can eliminate the plastic.

Are you still thinking of the extra work? Teach your children how to set the table correctly. And beautifully and creatively. They love to do it. The children can take turns. They can become very competitive as each one seeks to outdo the other. You can encourage them to add centerpieces, candles, go outside and find wildflowers or leaves, or use their imagination to make something creative.

Make it Orderly

Is it often crazy at your table with children grumbling or even fighting? Are you desperate for peace? Here’s another Bible tip for you. Exodus 40:4 and 23 say: “And thou shalt bring in the table, and set in order the things that are to be set in order upon it . . . And he set the bread in order upon it before the LORD; as the LORD had commanded Moses.” This is speaking about the first time the table is mentioned in the Bible and it is a type for us today.

God is a God of order. He didn’t want the bowls and utensils to be placed haphazardly on the table. He wanted each one in its right order. When we take a few extra moments to make our table special and set it in an orderly manner, something amazing happens. When the children come to an orderly table, they naturally become more orderly. They follow the pattern of the table.

One of my affirmations as I prepare meals for my family and visitors who come to our home is to “Make every meal a love affair.” When you catch this vision, rather than grudgingly preparing another meal, you’ll be amazed how the atmosphere at your table changes.

Sit at the Table

Sitting at the table is also a Bible principle. I know it takes training to get your children to sit through the meal but keep on training, little by little.  

Not one word is wasted in the Bible. Every word is important. It’s interesting how the Bible takes time to talk about such a practical thing as sitting at the table. First Samuel, chapter 20 tells the story of how David and Jonathan planned David’s escape from the palace. It was mandatory for each person to be present for the evening meal at the palace and they all sat in their assigned places.

David said to Jonathan in verse 5 (ESV): “I should not fail to sit at table with the king.” No one was meant to be missing. All places were to be filled.

Later, down in verses 24 and 25 it says: “And when the new moon came, the king sat down to eat food. The king sat on his seat, as at other times on the seat by the wall. Jonathan sat opposite, and Abner sat by Saul’s side, but David’s place as empty.” Each person had their own assigned seat.

A mother shared with me that she allows her children to sit where they like when they come to the table. “But,” she complained, “they continually bicker and argue about where they are going to sit.” I suggested she assign seats for each child. It’s biblical, and it stops the arguing.

Let’s go over to the New Testament. There are many Scriptures about sitting at the meal table (not standing around)! However, let’s look at when Jesus’ fed the five thousand plus people. Jesus did not feed the multitude until they were all seated. He didn’t suggest they sit down. He “commanded” them to sit down. We get the same message in each Gospel.

Matthew 14:19 “He commanded the multitude to sit down on the grass.”

Mark 6:39, 40: “He commanded them to make all sit down by companies upon the green grass. And they sat down in ranks . . .” Do you notice that they all had to sit down, not just those who wanted to. No food unless seated!

Luke 9:14: “And he said to his disciples, Make them sit down . . .”

John 6:10 (NKJV): “Jesus said, ‘Make the people sit down . . . So the men sat down, in number about five thousand. And Jesus took the loves, and when He had given thanks He distributed them to the disciples, and the disciples to those sitting down.” We certainly get the feeling that there had to be some organization to get them all seated.

This certainly relates to our families, doesn’t it? Have you found that you need to make your children sit down? Unless you train them to learn to sit at the table they will be jumping up and down like a yo-yo!

We must also teach our children how to sit. I can’t believe how many children and teens sit with their knees up at the table! Has no one ever taught them how to sit correctly?

Unless we sit at the table, we will not receive the same nutritional benefit from our food or from fellowship together.

No iPhones

The purpose of the table is not only to eat, but to communicate together. We gather for “face to face table fellowship,” to dialogue, and converse with one another. From the moment of birth, feeding is face to face. God orchestrated His creation so beautifully that when a mother puts her baby to the breast, they are face to face. The babe not only draws milk from the mother’s breasts but looks to and communicates with the mother.

We don’t need the competition of iPhones when we gather at the table. They inhibit family communication. They interrupt—and are very rude.

This is another thing you must make happen. Nor do you give in to whining about the matter. Perhaps you could have a basket where each one drops their iPhones before coming to sit at the table. Place the basket far enough away that no one can hear any “dings.”

You will need to watch carefully. At times I have noticed teens and even adults looking down past their meal plate and I realize they are looking at an iPhone hiding under the table! I beg your pardon! Are they so addicted they cannot put it away even for a meal?

Direct the Conversation

Have you noticed that family conversation can be shallow or even turn to nothingness? I believe we as parents should direct the conversation. When I prepare a meal, I not only think of what I will cook, but what we will talk about at the table. I like to bring a subject or a question to the table for discussion so we can enjoy stimulating conversation. It’s a time to learn new things from one another, to hone our ideas, and cement convictions. And this saves the conversation from spiraling down into negativity and complaining. Table time should be positive, enjoyable, and fun. You make it happen, dear mother.

Finish the Meal

I guess I am from old school, but I hate waste. I hate to see good wholesome food left on plates. It seems to be a current fad for people to take what they feel like, eat a little, and throw the rest out! Help! Such waste.

I think it is a good idea to give children a small amount of each food on their plate. They should eat this first and come back for more if they are still hungry. I’m always happy to dish out seconds. I love to be generous with food, but I certainly don’t like waste.

But there is more! The table is not only a place to feed the body, but the soul and the spirit. Therefore, we never want to leave the table before we feed the most important part of our children—their spirits. They need feeding as much as their bodies. The spirits of some children must be literally starving! Famished. Dying.

Before we leave the table, my husband opens the Bible and reads a portion to the family and then we pray together. We call it Family Devotions in our home. You may have a different name. I love what they used to call it in Holland—Finishing up the Meal! Isn’t that great? These parents would not allow their children to leave the table until they truly finished their meal by feeding and nourishing their spirits from God’s living Word.

The following are a couple of tips for this part of the meal.

Bring out the Bible!

Because most men have a one-track mind, they often forget about having devotions with their family. They have their mind on other things, and they don’t get around to it. My husband is entrenched in this habit now, but when the children were growing up and we came to the end of the meal, I would bring the Bible or The Daily Light on the Daily Path (which we mostly use) and place it by his plate. I didn’t have to say anything. Just placing it there jogged his memory and he would pick it up and begin to read.

Don’t Clear the Table too Soon!

This is a necessary tip. I have found that if we begin to scrape the dishes, clear the table, and take them to the counter before we have our Family Devotions, that it’s nearly impossible to get everyone back to the table! Once they are up, they’re gone! So, I don’t let them get up!

“Do you mean to say you have Bible reading with all the dirty dishes still on the table?” Yes, we do, and we hardly notice it. It keeps everyone at the table and doesn’t break the atmosphere.

I trust these practical tips will encourage you as you establish the habit of gathering your family to eat around the table.

NANCY CAMPBELL

 

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Family Meal Table | FOOD TWINS

FOOD TWINS

Twenty-five different things God associates
with food in the Bible!

We find many things associated with food in the Bible. Food is more than feeding hungry stomachs. Food ministers to the whole person—body, soul, and spirit.

Enjoy looking up these Scriptures and sharing them with your family:

1.   FOOD AND THE TABLE (Seven points).

  1. Tables originate in Heaven: Matthew 8:11; Luke 13:29; 14:15; 22:29, 30; and Revelation 19:9. God told Moses to make The Table of Shewbread after the pattern of God’s table in Heaven (Exodus 25:23, 40; 26:30; Acts 7:44; Hebrews 8:1-5; and 9:8).

  2. God wants us to eat at the table, not on the run, or anywhere around the house: 2 Samuel 9:7-13 (19:28 and 1 Kings 2:7); 2 Kings 25:29 (Jeremiah 52:32, 33) and Psalm 128:3.

  3. God wants us to SIT at the table to eat: Genesis 37:25; Exodus 16:3; 32:6; Judges 19: 6; Ruth 2:14; 1 Samuel 20, especially verses 5, 18, 24-29; 1 Kings 10:4, 5 (2 Chronicles 9:3, 4); Esther 3:15; Psalm 139:2; Proverbs 23:1, 2; Matthew 8:11; Luke 12:37; 14:15; 22:27; and 24:30.

    When feeding the five thousand plus Jesus “COMMANDED them to MAKE ALL SIT DOWN by companies upon the green grass” (Mark 6:39). Have you found that you also need to MAKE your children sit down? The word “commanded” is in every gospel (Matthew 14:19; Mark 6:39, 40; Luke 9:14, 15; and John 6:10 11).

  4. Examples of Jesus siting at the table: When Jesus came to the table, they not only ate, but he taught, shared stories, and did miracles. The table is a great place for mighty things to happen, but it all starts with food: Matthew 26:6, 7 (Mark 14:3); Matthew 6:20, 21 (Mark 14:18); Luke 7:36, 37; 11:37; 14:1-4; and John 12:2.

  5. We should set the table and even spread a tablecloth: The first table mentioned in the Bible was the Table of Shewbread.
    Exodus 40:2-4, 23 says: “And thou shalt bring in the table, and set in order the things that are to be set in order upon it . . . And he set the bread in order before the LORD.”
    God’s Word translation says: “He arranged the bread on the table in the LORD’s presence, following the LORD’s instructions.” The word “order” is arak and means “to set in a row, put in order, set in array.” It is the same word used in the following Scriptures:
    Psalm 23:5: “Thou preparest (arak) a table before me in the presence of mine enemies.”
    Psalm 78:19: “Can God furnish (arak) a tale in the wilderness.”
    Proverbs 9:2: “Wisdom hath builded her house . . . she hath also furnished (arak) her table.”
    Obviously, God wants a table to be prepared and set in order. Read also 1 Kings 10:4, 5 (2 Chronicles 9:3, 4).

  6. We should eat food at set times: Luke 12:42 tells us that the steward of the healing household served food “at the proper time.”

  7. God loves a full table: Psalm 128:3 and Luke 14:23.

2.   FOOD AND ABUNDANCE

God delights to give food in abundance: Genesis 1:29; 9:3; Deuteronomy 6:11; 8:9, 10; 10:18; 28:5, 11; 30:9; Psalm 103:5; 104:14, 15; 111:5; 136:25; 145:15 16; 146:7; Isaiah 25: 6; and Acts 14:17.

3.   FOOD AND COOKING

You cannot enjoy food without cooking. We read of Jesus cooking a meal for His disciples, even after He rose from the dead! A resurrected Christ and yet cooking? It was not too lowly a task for Him. Read the story in John 21:4-17 (v. 9). Genesis 19:3; 1 Chronicles 9:31; and Proverbs 31:14, 15.

4.   FOOD AND COMFORT

Genesis 18:5 and Judges 19:5, 8.

5.   FOOD AND CELEBRATIONS

Genesis 21:8; 40:20; Exodus 5:1; 10:9; 12:14; Deuteronomy 14:23-26; 16:14, 15; 1 Kings 3:15; 19:21; 1 Chronicles 12:39, 40; 29:22; Esther 9:20-22; Job 1:4; Isaiah 25:6; Daniel 5;1; Matthew 22:2; Mark 6:21; and Revelation 19:9.

         Wedding feasts: Leah’s wedding (Genesis 29:21, 22); Samson’s wedding (Judges 14;10); Esther’s wedding (Esther 2:17, 18); Cana wedding (John 2:1-11); and Matthew 22:2.

          Reconciliations feasts: Genesis 26:26-31; 31:53, 54; Job 42:10-12; and Luke 15:21-24.

6.   FOOD AND FELLOWSHIP

Eating at the table should be “face to face table fellowship.” We sit around the table so we can see one another, look at one another’s faces, and dialogue and discuss things together. Read Acts 2:42 and 20:11.

The apostle John wrote to the elder lady: “I trust to come unto you and speak face to face, that our joy may be full” (1 John 1:12). Face to face table fellowship fills us with joy.

The apostle John also wrote to Gaius and said: “I rust I shall shortly see thee, and we shall speak face to face” (3 John 1:14).

 7.   FOOD AND FULLNESS

God loves us to be filled with His food. Not half full but filled. Nehemiah 9:25 says that God’s people “did eat, and were FILLED . . .”  The word “filled” is saba and means “to be filled to satisfaction, to satiate.” This word is often used to describe being filled with food.

Job 36:16b (NLT): “He is setting your table with the best food.”

Leviticus 25:19; 26:3-5; Deuteronomy 6:10-12; 8:8-14; 11:14, 15; 14:29; 26:12; Psalm 37:19; 81:16; 103:5; 104:27, 28; 144:13; 145:15, 16; 147:14; Proverbs 3:9, 10; Isaiah 25:6; Joel 2:19, 26; and Luke 6:21.

Jesus fed the hungry listeners until they were filled (Matthew 14:20; 15:37; Mark 6:42; 8:8; Luke 9:17; and John 6:12, 13, 26).

8.   FOOD AND GLADNESS, JOY, AND REJOICING

Deuteronomy 12:7; Ezra 6:22; Nehemiah 8:9-12; 12:27, 43; Esther 9:19-21; Ecclesiastes 8:15; 9:7; 1 Chronicles 12:39, 40; and Acts 2:46.

9.   FOOD AND GOOD CHEER

Acts 27:25, 36.

10.   FOOD AND GOOD THINGS

Psalm 103:5; Ecclesiastes 3;13; 5:18; and Ezekiel 24:15.

11.   FOOD AND HEALING

Luke 12:42 (Matthew 24:45); and Revelation 22:1, 2.

12.   FOOD AND HOSPITALITY

It is impossible to show hospitality without feeding your guests: Genesis 18:5-8; Deuteronomy 10:17-19; 14:27-29; Judges 6:18, 19; 13:15-21; 2 Samuel 9:10; Nehemiah 5:17, 18; Job 31:32; Matthew 25:35; Acts 2:44-47; Romans 12:13; 1 Timothy 5:10; Hebrews 13:2; 1 Peter 4:9; and 3 John 1:8.

13.   FOOD AND LAUGHTER

Ecclesiastes 10:19: “A feast is made for laughter.”

14.   FOOD AND LEFTOVERS

God not only fills us but provides more than we need. He loves to have leftovers.

2 Kings 4:42-44. Jesus provided a huge amount of leftovers when feeding the people (Matthew 14:20; 15:37; Mark 6:42-44; 8:8; Luke 9:17; and John 6:12, 13).

15.   FOOD AND LEISURE

Jesus showed us the example of how food should be eaten with leisure, not in a hurry: Mark 6:31. We must get into the habit of stopping our busyness in order to eat.

16.   FOOD AND MERRIMENT

Genesis 43:34; Ruth 3:7 and Luke 15:23.

17.   FOOD AND PRAYER AND PRAISE

When the disciples met together to eat, they also prayed and praised God: Acts 2:42, 46, 47; Deuteronomy 8:10; and Joel 2:26.

18.   FOOD AND THE PRESENCE OF GOD

Exodus 18:12 and 24:10, 11.

19.   FOOD AND PROPHECY

Prophecy can come forth as we eat food around the table: 1 Kings 13:19, 20.

20.   FOOD AND PROTECTION

The table is a place of protection: Psalm 23:5: “Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies.”

21.   FOOD AND PROVISION

Deuteronomy 28:4-6; Nehemiah 5:17, 18; Psalm 37:18, 19; 78:19-22.

22.   FOOD AND RAISING CHILDREN

1 Timothy 5:10 talks about the women who “brought up children.” The word in the Greek is teknotropheo meaning “to nurture with food.” One of the biggest jobs of raising our children is feeding them!

23.   FOOD AND STRENGTH (to the heart and body).

1 Kings 19:4-8 and Psalm 104:15.

24.   FOOD AND TEACHING

Jesus used the mealtime at the table or teaching time: Mark 16:14, 15 and Luke 24:41-49.

25.   FOOD AND WORK

We cannot expect to eat if we don’t work for it: Genesis 2:15; Psalm 128:2; Proverbs 10:4; 12:14; 20:4, 13; 21:5; Acts 20:34, 35; 1 Thessalonians 4:11; 1 Thessalonians 2:9; 2 Thessalonians 3:7-12; and 1 Timothy 5:8.

Love and blessings from Nancy Campbell

www.aboverubies.org

Family Meal Table | Have You Tried A Color Night?

Have You Tried A Color Night

HAVE YOU TRIED A COLOR NIGHT?

When raising our children, I would try to do something different at the meal table one night a week. One of the things the children loved was COLOR NIGHTS. For example, I would choose a color and put up a notice:

"Tonight is RED Night

No admittance unless wearing something Red.

Supper at 6.00 p.m. Please knock before entering."

I set the table with a red tablecloth, adding red candles, napkins, and centerpiece (red flowers if I could find them). I prepared red foods. There are plenty of foods from which to choose, e.g. beets, radishes, red beans, red hot dogs with tomato sauce, tomato soup, potatoes or rice colored with red food coloring, etc. For dessert you could have lovely red fruits such as pomegranates, blood oranges, cherries, strawberries, watermelon, or red grapes.

You can also purchase red paper plates and knives and forks, etc. I would often wrap a little gift (something inexpensive) in red paper and put it beside their plate. The children loved these nights and we tried every color of the rainbow!

Love from Nancy Campbell

Family Meal Table | The Five Senses

FeedFiveSensesTHE FIVE SENSES
Feed the Five Senses of Your Children at Each Meal

Sitting down to a meal is far more than eating food. Eating not only feeds a hungry tummy but includes all of the five senses--sight, hearing, touch, smell and taste. Can I encourage you to think about this as you prepare meals for your family? It will bring such blessing to your children.

Sight

To dish up a meal on an un-set table is, I think, a sacrilege. It is even worse to prepare a meal and let everyone eat it at different times and wherever they want-- even in front of the TV. You can spend time preparing a lovely meal but if it doesn't minister to the sight, it doesn't have a great appeal. On the other hand, you can sit down to a humble meal, placed on a table that is prepared with dignity and love and it can be a spiritual experience. Proverbs 9:1-2 tells us that the wise woman prepares her table.

Even young children are aware of the atmosphere when they sit up to a delightfully prepared table. Perhaps you are a mother of young children and you can't imagine one more task during the busy supper time. It takes all your effort to cook a meal without the extra work of setting a table! But, obstacles are only in our mind. It doesn't take long and you can teach young children how to set a table properly. It is a basic task for them to learn and they will love to do it. You can make it a competition, as they each have their turn, to see who can set it the most attractively.

It adds a touch of class and delight to use a tablecloth. If you haven't time for washing tablecloths, purchase some clear plastic which you can place over a pretty tablecloth, or purchase some attractive plastic cloths that you can wipe down after the meal. Add a candle, some flowers (even if they are wild flowers or weeds that your children find around), or a centerpiece to your table. Encourage your children to set the table beautifully, not haphazardly. It will make all the difference to your meal.

Did you know that we taste with the eyes as well as the mouth?

Make your food look attractive, too. Arrange it appealingly on the table in serving dishes, or on individual plates if you do it this way.

Hearing

If you do happen to have TV in your home, make sure you turn it off during mealtime. Put on lovely peaceful music which you can have quietly playing in the background. Create a soothing atmosphere.

Touch

Hold hands together as you give thanks to God at the beginning of the meal. Create an atmosphere of togetherness and love.

Smell

This is a very important part of each meal. Use herbs and spices to enhance your food. It will not only taste better, but will fill your home with tantalizing aromas. There is nothing like smelling the food that is cooking for supper. It really makes home feel like "Home, sweet home."

Did you know that God loves smells? The meat that burned upon the altar was a "sweet smelling savour" to God (e.g. Genesis 8:21; Exodus 29:18, 25, 41; Leviticus 8:21 and 2 Chronicles 13:11). Actually, I don't think there is any more wonderful smell than lamb cooking in the oven! God loves it too. I guess I say that because I am a New Zealander. It may not be the favorite smell of an American! However, you will have your favorite cooking aromas that you love to have in your home.

Taste

We wouldn't want to eat food if we couldn't delight in the flavor, would we? Make your food palatable and tasty. Be creative and make different kinds of tastes. Delight in the flavors of the foods God has created. We like to ooh and aah over the tastes of food in our family. I think God is happy about that. He likes us to appreciate what He has created.

You can also train your children's taste buds from a young age. Don't give them sweet foods when they are young and they won't clamor for them when they are older. Feed them healthy food, rather than junk food and that's the kind of food they'll enjoy. Don't even bring junk food into your home and you won't have trouble trying to stop your children eating it.

As you prepare your meal each evening, think about how you can impact the five senses of your husband and children. They will take these memories with them for life.

NANCY CAMPBELL
www.aboverubies.org

Family Meal Table | Try A Green Night

would you like to try a green night

WOULD YOU LIKE TO TRY A GREEN NIGHT?

I wanted to make a special meal for my daughter, her husband, and eight children. I decided to have a colour night, and because of the quantity of green vegetables which supply good nutritious food, without having to work hard, I decided to make green the colour for this occasion.

First, I wrote each member of the family a personal invitation in separate envelopes, steaming old stamps off letters to use, walked down the drive, and "posted" them in the letter box when no one was watching. The next morning I could hear the squeals of delight as each child discovered their own letter. I instructed each person to wear green, to bring something green, and to prepare an explanation to be shared at the table on why their "green thing" reminded them about God.

Calais, my eldest grandchild (10 at the time), wanted to help me set it all up. We went shopping together, which was more fun than doing it alone. Even if it did spoil some of the surprises, I was aware of teaching her true hospitality at the same time. We bought green plastic cutlery, plates, bowls, serviettes, balloons, streamers, sweets (for a little treat), green drink (yuk!) and plastic tumblers. We used a green tablecloth and raided the garden to make a green centrepiece. Calais made green name place settings. It all looked amazing! There are so very many different colours of greens that we don't even think about on a daily basis.

I made a special rice dish and coloured the rice green, adding green capsicum, parsley, peas and finely cut bean. The men like their meat, so it included chicken, which didn't go green though no one seemed to notice! For desert, I made a healthy steam pudding but coloured the custard green! It looked yuk, but if you closed your eyes, it didn't taste any different.

Everyone joined in and looked the part. After we had eaten, while still seated at the table, we started our sharing time, going around to each one at the table.

Jaeger (8) shared his disappointment in not being able to bring a green frog because he couldn't find one. He deflatedly settled for his green toothbrush and told us how important it is to keep our teeth clean; otherwise they, too will turn green!

Natalie (the mother) shared next. She brought parsley and explained how wonderful God is that He created something so amazing. The parsley roots go down into the brown dirt and draw from the earth nutrients to make it grow. It grows and flourishes in the light of the sun and is watered by the rain, which only makes it grow greener and healthier. The parsley is full of goodness and it was God who provided us with this wonderful food to garnish our meals and bless us with health.

Next came Kaylah (3) and Jace (18 months). Kaylah was chosen as the spokesperson and they showed us their handfuls of grass. She explained that God made the grass for the horse to eat. Jace echoed the word horse and grass a number of times and it was evident they were in agreement.

My son-in-law Mark 2 (I have two son-in-laws named Mark, so they are called Mark 1 and Mark 2) was full of enthusiasm. He had stripped a green vine off one of their passion fruits which reminded him of abiding in the vine. He had a fine message backed with Scriptures and everyone listened attentively.

My husband, Bill brought a green sock! He held it high and asked who it belonged to. The guilty person owned up and then was asked; "Did you know that God tells you to pick up after yourself and not leave your things lying around in other people's places causing them to have to pick up after you?" Some of us weren't quite clear where that Scripture is found but the message came across loud and clear.

Anais (5) had a green plate for which she had found two Popsicle sticks to make a green clock. "God made the time," she said.

Paige (7) had a zucchini and her message was similar to her mother's but lacking a little detail. Sadly, her closing comment was that she didn't like them, but her brilliant smile, which she constantly wears, didn't seem to convince any of us that it was a problem.

It was my turn. I showed them the money in my hand. Everyone protested, "That's not green. You said we had to bring something green." (We don't have any "green" money in Australia). I sat there saying nothing while everyone berated me by saying how unfair it was that I should get away with not bringing something green. The verdict was that I had cheated. Finally, they settled down and allowed me to speak.

I shared that even though the money wasn't green, it was capable of causing an emotion that is likened to "green."

"What is this emotion?" I asked. The adults were encouraged to give the children a chance to guess. "You see," I explained, "mine is a "hidden green" and it's not a good one. This money reminds me to always be thankful to God for His provision and not to rely on other securities such as money or be envious when others have money and I don't!"

At last it was Calais' turn (10). Surely she must have something brilliant for her to want to wait until last. To our disappointment she produced a green cup and some green cutlery that was left over from setting the table. Like the rest of us, she stood up to share. She cleared her throat, then proceeded to fire questions at us. Why are we all here tonight? A few weak answers filtered through. Calais continued in a strong voice, "Because grandma invited us, right?" We nodded our ascent. "What did we have to do?" she continued asking. We were starting to get the hang of it now and answered that we had to wear and bring something green along with a little message. "Right!" replied Calais, and then went round the table commenting on each person's offering and what they had to say about it. She tied everything up, pulled the whole night together and summarized every one's offering. We were amazed at this little girl's ability to do this. We had no idea she had this skill. God has given her this gift and when the opportunity afforded, being comfortable amongst her family, she let herself go. In the shock of the moment I have no idea what she had to say about the cup and utensils!

Take time to make special times at your meal table. You will be amazed at what gifts will come forth.

VAL STARES (Director of Above Rubies in Australia)
www.aboverubies.org.au

Above Rubies Address

AboveRubies
Email Nancy

PO Box 681687
Franklin, TN 37068-1687

Phone : 931-729-9861
Office Hrs 9am - 5pm, M - F, CTZ