NGƯỜI TÍN HỮU TRƯỠNG THÀNH - TÒNG NGÔ

  •  
    Tong Ngo
     
     

    The Intimacy of the Table

    16 | February | 2018

     

    The table is one of the most intimate places in our lives. It is there that we give ourselves to one another.

    When we say, “Take some more, let me serve you another plate, let me pour you another glass, don’t be shy, enjoy it,” we say a lot more than our words express. We invite our friends to become part of our lives. We want them to be nurtured by the same food and drink that nurture us. We desire communion. That is why a refusal to eat and drink what a host offers is so offensive. It feels like a rejection of an invitation to intimacy.

     

    Strange as it may sound, the table is the place where we want to become food for one another. Every breakfast, lunch, or dinner can become a time of growing communion with one another.

     

    The Intimate Personality of the Dining Table

     

    The dining table is one of the most intimate places in our lives. That's where we give each other who we are.

     

     

    --