The Table and the Road: Passover, Communion, and Juneteenth
On eating in bondage, eating in memory, and the strange lag between freedom declared and freedom felt
There is a particular kind of meal that shows up again and again in human history: the meal you eat standing up, bag packed, shoes on, because freedom might come tonight and you need to be ready for it. And there is another kind of meal — the one you eat sitting down, years or centuries later, to remember the first one.
Passover is both of these meals at once. So, in its own way, is Communion. And Juneteenth, though it isn’t a meal in the same liturgical sense, lives in the same family of memory: a day built around the gap between the moment freedom was declared and the moment freedom was known.
Put them side by side and something becomes visible that’s easy to miss when you only look at one.









































