Saturday, April 16, 2011

The Teacher and Table Fellowship

  
Learning may occur in a variety of settings.  While classrooms appear to be the conventional locale, many great teachers rarely if ever stood behind a lectern or upon the platform of an auditorium. 

As I read through the Gospel accounts, especially Luke, I'm struck by the number of times that Jesus teaches while reclining at table with his disciples.  One might even conclude that he preferred setting for instruction and thoughtful conversation about truth was indeed during a shared meal.

Students and teachers eating together, not so much in formal arrangements but in more casual settings, provides excellent opportunities for the engagement of ideas through more relaxed dialogue.  It is not surprising then to find other teachers through the ages who have also taken the opportunity for table fellowship as a wonderful venue for enriching the learning experiences of their students.

Martin Luther's kitchen table
Among my model teachers, Luther stands out as one, who through the gracious hospitality of his wife Katharina, regularly extended invitations to his students for discussions around his kitchen table. I've said on more than one occasion that when my students start bringing note pads to discussions we have during meals I will then regard myself as teacher worthy of being heard.

Having the opportunity to share a meal with my students and the good conversation that surrounds the table are clearly some of the most delightful blessings of teaching at a residential university.  In fact, I'm beginning to realize how very important such times of relaxed conversation are for my students.  They need to see and hear me in the totality of life -- not just in the formal setting of a lecture hall.

Paul followed Jesus example in this regard.  He could write to those he had taught, "What you have learned and received and heard and seen in me -- practice these things, and the God of peace with be with you." (Philippians 4:9).  Students rarely "see" in the classroom what their teachers are saying.  Rather, it is when students encounter their teacher in the fullness of life's experiences that they have the opportunity to see if what their teacher has taught is in fact practiced in his life.

I hope that my students here at Handong will be able to see whether that is true for me.  One of my favorite things is to invite several students out for a meal off campus. The student cafeteria at the university is called "Twelve Baskets" and I've been told that's because there are always at least twelve baskets of leftovers after every meal.  So, as you might expect, I don't have any problem gathering a crew to enjoy a Sunday lunch at "Mr. Big" -- the newest place to taste a hamburger in Pohang.

Each shared meal -- whether with many or just one or two -- provides a wonderful occasion for students and teacher to get to know one another better and talk more freely about those persistent questions of life.  Maybe one day, a careful listener within our happy fellowship will publish the Handong edition of "Table Talk."


3 comments:

  1. "Taste and see the Lord is Good" ! I always feel nourished both physically and spiritually when I have meals with you :)

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  2. We just need to make sure these meals don't have onions or seafood...LOL

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  3. Thanks for your kind words of encouragement and thoughtfulness, Ms. Han! Looking forward to future opportunities for sharing table fellowship this semester and maybe even next! ;)

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