Today is Maundy Thursday, the day that celebrates "The Last Supper" of Jesus. Of course, it's not the last supper. After his resurrection, he gets right back to having meals with people, cooking fish on the beach for breakfast. But it's the last supper on this side of the crucifixion.
If you'd like a serious Maundy Thursday sermon, I've posted the manuscript (which might change a bit between now and tonight's 6:30 worship service at Faith Lutheran in Bristol, TN) in this blog post.
On a less serious note, I pulled a loaf of bread out of the freezer for tonight's worship and realized that I had pulled out a chunk of fatback. Happily, I realized it right away and pulled out the correct bag that contains bread not pig fat. I double checked and will double check again, probably several times before I leave for school.
My poet brain is already making connections. But it won't be in time for today's blog post.
Instead, let me post an earlier poem. It's never been published, and it's not my favorite Maundy Thursday poem (those are here and here). I wrote it back in 2012 when I was filling in for one of the deans who was away for a week on vacation. It was a high traffic time in the dean's office when students would come in to discuss their failures and their options, so the office needed to be staffed. I was a department chair who volunteered. It was also Holy Week, which provided me all kinds of interesting parallels and possibilities.
The Dean Hears Student Appeals During Holy Week
On the Monday after Palm
Sunday, the students form
a line outside the office of the Dean.
The students come to protest
their sudden change of fortune.
They’ve always been good
students! They can’t fathom
why they’ve been forced
to leave school.
The dean drifts off during
their pleas. The dean thinks of palm
branches, donkeys, and crowns of thorns.
The dean studies transcripts
and hears sad tales of woe.
Like Pontius Pilate,
the dean, several steps removed, asks
questions but never knows for sure:
each decision, a shot in the dark.
Unlike Pontius Pilate, the dean never
has scrubbed hands. The dean listens
to each appeal and offers second
chances, even if undeserved,
a gleam of grace
in a world where redemption
seems impossible.







