"...Come, for all is now ready." Luke 14:17

What is the Great Banquet anyway?

Beginning on Thursday evening and ending Sunday evening, Great Banquet guests eat, laugh, sing, pray, learn and live together.  During each of the fifteen talks given by laity and clergy, the theme of God's grace is presented, followed by a time of discussion.  Guests participate daily in the celebration of Holy Communion and examine the presence of Christ in his body of believers.  Through the prayers and acts of a loving, Christian support community, they experience God's grace in a personal and tangible way.

The Parable of the Great Banquet as told in Luke 14:15-24 provides the picture for the Great Banquet.  Jesus tells of a master who prepared a great banquet and invited many guests.  When he told his guests to, "Come, for everything is now ready," they made excuses and did not attend because the timing was inconvenient.  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, room still remained.  The master again instructed, "Go out to the roads and country lanes and make them come, so that my house will be full." 

NIV commentary tells us that, "It was customary to send two invitations to a party - the first to announce the event, the second to tell the guests that everything was ready.  The guests in Jesus's story insulted the host by making excuses when he issued the second invitation.  In Israel's history, God's first invitation came from Moses and the prophets; the second came from his Son.   The religious leaders accepted the first invitation.  They believed that God had called them to be his people, but they insulted God by refusing to accept his Son.  Thus, as the master in the story sent his servant into the streets to invite the needy to his banquet, so God sent his Son to the whole world of needy people to tell them that God's kingdom had arrived and was ready for them."

How did it start?

The Cursillo (3-day course in Christianity) was developed in Spain in the 1940s as an instrument of spiritual renewal within the Roman Catholic Church. As Catholic centers began to accept applications from Protestants, an effort was made to expand the movement inter-denominationally. It spread to the United States and evolved for Protestants into the Walk to Emmaus; when, in the late 1070s, the Upper Room (a unit within the United Methodist Church) formed the Upper Room Cursillo Community in Nashville, Tennessee. In 1981, the name of the Upper Room Cursillo was changed to the Walk to Emmaus.

The following year, the First Presbyterian Church in Madisonville, Kentucky became the sponsor for the Madisonville Emmaus Movement and the first Walk to Emmaus took place in that community. The Madisonville Emmaus Movement has helped begin similar communities throughout the United States, Australia and South Africa.

After a 10-year history with the Walk to Emmaus in Madisonville, Reverend John Pitzer, along with the Madisonville Emmaus Community, adopted the Great Banquet to further inspire, challenge and teach church members how to incorporate Christian faith into daily life. Governed by an ecumenical board of directors and using the "Cursillo model," but with a different image, the Great Banquet is a dynamic faith experience that continues to emphasize personal Christian discipleship.

Reverend Pitzer serves as the National Director of the Great Banquet Movement and President of Lampstand Ministries, a corporation formed in 1991 to assist in beginning the Great Banquet in other communities

What happens after the Banquet?

After attending the Great Banquet, guests are challenged to strengthen their own spiritual life through study and active congregational participation and to become active disciples of Jesus Christ in the world through their church.

The Great Banquet helps the banquet community in discipleship by assisting in the creation of Reunion Groups, providing opportunities to assist in future Banquets, and making them aware of the needs of other communities and Weekends, both locally and nationally, through newsletters, emails and this website.

See below for more information on what happens following a weekend.
The Purpose of the Great Banquet
and Who Should Attend

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 work places. To live a life of grace and to respond to higher levels of Christian discipleship becomes the purpose of the Great Banquet.

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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.
You are invited to be a guest at the Great Banquet given by God and to feast in His goodness and love.
Following 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; 
Strive to become active disciples of Jesus Christ in the world through their church.

To assist them in their discipleship, the Great Banquet offers specific opportunities. First, reunion groups of three to five people meet weekly to examine their goal of spiritual growth and to encourage one another to a life of discipleship. Second, there will be opportunities to assist in future Great Banquet weekends through prayer, support and team involvement. Third, guests are made aware of community needs through newsletters, emails and this website of other Great Banquet weekends, both locally and regionally.
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