O
Oscarthecat
Guest
I have heard this term a lot lately being used to subtly rename the Mass.
I was told, by someone who uses the term, is that it “harkens (yes, they said harkens) back to Jesus’ community where sharing your table with others was a sign of friendship and community.” Given that sharing a table with someone today also usually indicates friendship and community (unless you prefer eating alone, or in silence with complete strangers), I don’t see that this term is appropriate to refer to the liturgy.
Can anyone fill me in on what “table fellowship” is, where this term came from, and why its being used to refer to the liturgy?
I was told, by someone who uses the term, is that it “harkens (yes, they said harkens) back to Jesus’ community where sharing your table with others was a sign of friendship and community.” Given that sharing a table with someone today also usually indicates friendship and community (unless you prefer eating alone, or in silence with complete strangers), I don’t see that this term is appropriate to refer to the liturgy.
Can anyone fill me in on what “table fellowship” is, where this term came from, and why its being used to refer to the liturgy?