The Best Meal I Ever Ate

The best meal I ever ate was when I was eleven or twelve.

I didn’t even sit at the table. I sat on the floor, on the beige carpet of a middle-class home in Lincoln, Nebraska. My family had been invited to supper by a family who went to our church, by the almost worn-out custom of having the pastor over for dinner. I was a kid, sitting on the floor, eating off the coffee table.

There was nothing special about the home or the house, the neighborhood or the city. We weren’t celebrating an occasion or a holiday. It was just dinner, their family of three, our family of six. Nine people, from toddler to mid-forties. Midwestern people on an ordinary night, probably a Friday, during a time of year that I can’t remember.

It was one of the only meals I have experienced where every speck of food on the table was eaten, from the meat platter to the salad bowl. Every leaf, every crumb, every shred. Prime rib that I can still taste, marinated and grilled and cut in thin slices. Baked potatoes, starchy and buttery. And a Caesar salad with tangy dressing and homemade croutons, served up in an acacia wood bowl. Dinner rolls. I think there were dinner rolls.

But beyond the food was the laughter. I wish I could remember just one story, just one anecdote, but I can’t. I just remember the laughter. From one story to the next, we laughed until we cried. I’m surprised no one choked on their prime rib.

I don’t know now if I found so much humor in the stories that the adults told or if I simply found their laughter contagious: my mother’s head tilted to the side, my father’s shoulders heaving in silent, breathless bursts, glasses removed to wipe his eyes again and again.

That meal is the reason I love having people around my table. That meal is the reason I have always wanted an acacia wood salad bowl. It’s the reason I love simple meals with friends on ordinary Friday nights in the middle of the school year. Because I love people. I love hearing their stories. I love good food and a glass of wine. So simple, but marvelous again and again, the magic that happens around a dinner table.

The older I get and the more years I see fly off the calendar, I realize that there are a few really good things in life. And no matter who you are or how much you have or don’t have, everyone has access to these really good things. I used to think that celebrities and rich people, beautiful people and the insanely accomplished had the edge with their praise and access to all the things money can buy. But I really can’t imagine a meal they have had that I haven’t had: one with good food and good friends. One where we sit around a table or on the floor, with stories and laughter, like humans have done together for thousands of years. Coming together to feed each other.

I think this is why God describes heaven like a big banquet. It’s something we understand. And that’s what heaven’s about: being together with each other, being with God. I wonder what kind of stories we’ll share, how much we’ll laugh, how happy we’ll be. In the meantime, we can practice here on earth.

4 thoughts on “The Best Meal I Ever Ate

  1. Oh, how excellently put. It just makes me smile to think about our Lord’s goodness to us here…in simple pleasures and laughter. It makes me long for an eternity at His table set for us. God is GOOD!

  2. I do remember that meal. How all of us agreed right there at the table that we had never had better. Looking forward to the day when we will all share a table at that heavenly feast. (Those people now live in WI and the wife teaches in our town. I will share this blog with them…they should know how their Christian hospitality made us feel.

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