Place at the Table
Author: Dean Greer
January 31, 2022
By Dean Greer
This Sunday we at Desert Stream Ministries bring
our Living Waters Training to the Theology of the Body community. I remember my
first time with the TOB Institute, over twelve years ago. I attended one of Christopher
West’s week-long immersion courses with Andrew and immerse we did, right into
the Catholic world!

He and I were the lone Protestants in the mix.
It was the most in-depth Catholic event I had experienced. I was a tourist
visiting a new culture with a new language. I learned key insights that I still
find valuable. Pope St. John Paul II’s take on human sexuality stands alone in
excellence. Yet some stuff that week was foreign and startling. Honestly, I was
very grateful to return to my familiar Vineyard community where Desert Stream
began long ago.
Unlike me, Andrew converted to Catholicism, and
that rocked the world of Living Waters. The curriculum has changed. My role has
changed. My co-workers have changed.
While praying about all the changes Catholicism
has introduced to DSM, the Lord gave me a picture.
I saw an enormous dining hall with a
banqueting table set for a grand feast. The master of the house came in and
declared, “We need a bigger table! There are many more to feed!”
His staff were irritated at the extra work
required. “Things were great the way they were! Why do we need to bring in
other people we don’t know?”
Then the master of the house said, “We need to
prepare food they prefer, in a way that’s familiar to them.”
The staff began to work, but quietly murmured
to the steward about the difficulty the master had caused. Some were angry for
not being consulted. Some thought there should be two tables. Sadly, some
decided to leave.
This describes well what has taken place since
Andrew’s conversion to Catholicism.
It’s been difficult to make changes for Catholic
brothers and sisters. We need a spirit of patience and flexibility and openness
to new and different ways of seeing Christian reality. We must make room for others’ perspectives,
even if we disagree. It requires that we share a table with foreigners with
foreign table manners. It requires humility.
But oh the feast Jesus invites us to share.
With each training more Catholics come, and the feast becomes richer, more savory,
and more satisfying. Each time we gather, I am reminded that Living Waters is a
ministry of reconciliation for the whole church (2 Cor. 5:17-21). Not everyone
is willing to share the feast, but those who do feast like kings.
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