What Is The Great Banquet?
The Great Banquet is considered a short course in Christianity. It is an opportunity to be still, to listen, to share and to hear Christ’s plan for this world and our lives. It is a community of believers who desire to spend some time studying and learning about Christ.
The Gospel of Luke presents the parable of the Great Banquet (Luke 14:15-24) which provides the picture of our Great Banquet.
In this parable, Jesus tells of a master who prepared a great banquet and invited many guests, saying “Come, for everything is now ready.” After so many excuses for not attending by his invited guests, the master became angry and ordered his servants, “Go quickly into the streets and alleys of the town and bring in the poor, the crippled, the blind and the lame.”
After this had been done and still room remained, the master told his servant, “Go out to the roads and country lanes and make them come in, so that my house will be full.” Then, as additional invitations were given, the banquet was presented to his guests. The result of the master’s invitation was to feast and fellowship at a banquet given by God. (Luke 14:15-24)
What Happens At A Great Banquet weekend?
The Great Banquet is a 72-hour experience, beginning on Thursday evening and ending Sunday evening. For three days, guests live and study together in a worshipful time of singing, prayer, and discussion. During each of the fifteen talks given by laity, the theme of God’s grace is presented. Guests participate in the daily celebration of Holy Communion and examine more fully the presence of Christ in His body of believers. They personally experience His grace through the prayers and acts of a loving, Christian support community.
What Happens After The Great Banquet?
One of the most important parts of the Great Banquet is the follow-up. Although the weekend lasts only three days, guests are invited to use its lessons for the rest of their lives. After attending the Great Banquet, they are challenged to strengthen their own spiritual life through study and active congregational participation and strive to become active disciples of Jesus Christ in the world through their church.
History Of the Great Banquet
To become familiar with the Great Banquet, let’s look first at the history of its counterparts, the Cursillo and the Walk to Emmaus. The Cursillo (3-day course in Christianity) began in Spain in the 1940s in the Catholic Church. It spread to the United States and evolved for Protestants into the Walk to Emmaus under the auspices of the Upper Room and the United Methodist Church. An Emmaus Movement was started by the First Presbyterian Church in Madisonville, Kentucky in 1982. After a 10-year history of the Walk to Emmaus in Madisonville, Rev. John E. Pitzer and lay people from First Presbyterian Church formed the Great Banquet. Governed by an ecumenical board of directors and using the “Cursillo model”, but with a different image, the Great Banquet continues to emphasize personal Christian discipleship. The Great Banquet Movement is institutionally sponsored by local church groups in these areas. Lampstand Ministries was formed as a covering corporation to move the Great Banquet Movement to other areas.
Purpose Of The Great Banquet
The focus of the Great Banquet is to know Jesus as Lord and Savior and to make Him known. The objective of the Great Banquet is to continue the 3-day weekend by serving Christ in local churches, homes, and workplaces. To live a life of grace and to respond to higher levels of Christian discipleship becomes the purpose of the Great Banquet.
Who Should Attend The Great Banquet?
This Weekend Experience Is For Anyone Who:
- wishes to strengthen their spiritual life
- wants to have a better understanding of prayer, the sacraments, study, and Christian action
- strives to live a Christian life that bears fruit for God
- seeks to know Jesus as Lord and Savior and to make Him known