I often wonder what Karlie, my 15 month old grand daughter
is learning. A few Sundays ago she drop her offering into the plate without any
prompting. How did she learn to do that? It wasn’t explained to her; even if it
was she couldn’t have understood what was said.
The neurosciences remind us that the brain creates neuro-pathways by
repeating an action or activity. Each Sunday since she was born I’ve carried
her forward and helped her place her offering in the plate. Neuro-pathways are
being created that connect attending worship with the bringing of an offering.
Bringing an offering, I trust, is becoming part of her identity in Christ.
That same Sunday as we gathered for the Lord’s Supper a
troubling thought raced through my mind. I was holding Karlie and as the
elements went by she eagerly and expectantly reached for a piece of bread. She seemed to intuit its significance. As
Karlie, a baptized member of the covenant community, reached out for the bread I
wondered “why not?” What is she learning about the community of faith when
everyone else partakes but she is not permitted too?
I’m still wondering what she is learning when she
experiences everyone else partaking of the Lord’s Supper. She cannot tell me;
she only looks at me with disappointment her eyes, pointing to the bread and
saying “That”. This saddens my heart because I suspect she is learning
something different than what is intended about her place and value within the
body of Christ.
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