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The Feast of Easter 00:00:0000:00:00

The Feast of Easter

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All the piety, rigor, and discipline presented to the world by the believers, the General knew, was done out of fear and the denial of God’s grace

This post is a part of our series of Psalms reflections for Lent.

Psalm 85

The full arc of our path through Lent and our final arrival at the Resurrection lie hidden within Isak Dinesen’s short story “Babette’s Feast,” upon which the Oscar-winning film was based. The story takes place in a Norwegian coastal village where two spinster sisters, Martine and Philippa, spend their days in plentiful prayer, generous good works, and ascetic living. Their late father had founded a Pietist sect, and his followers heeded his preaching. Dinesen says they “renounced the pleasures of this world, for the earth and all that it held to them was but a kind of illusion, and the true reality was the New Jerusalem toward which they were longing.” Now they had all grown old, the two sisters among them, and their lives were an unrelenting season of penitence and regret.

It was Lent, an endless Lent full of the giving up and letting go, the good intentions and plans for personal improvement, the pious submission to God’s stern demands, and the acquisition of the kind of rigorous discipline fitting of those who are in this world but not of it. The lives of the dwindling number of believers on Berlevaag Fjord were played out in drabness like Lenten ashes and a joyless cloud that contrasted with the whimsy of their colorful houses.

It was Lent, an endless Lent full of the giving up and letting go

In spite of the rigor and piety, the fault lines of the community never healed. As young women, the two sisters had been wooed by men of substance – Martine by an opera coach and Philippa by an upright soldier. The men left the village with unrequited affections, and the sisters remained unmarried. The other believers’ never-forgotten slights and unspoken competition weighed on them, grinding them down until the group had become a bitter collection of resentments.

Until Babette. She arrived on the Fjord at the recommendation of the opera coach to beg for the mercy of the sisters after losing everything to an insurrection in France. Babette became their cook and housekeeper, elevating the existence of her hosts and the extended community. When she won a lottery, she was permitted to prepare a dinner for Martine, Philippa, and the whole company of would-be Berlevaag saints. The dinner was no meager fare, for it was the very meal that had given her renown as the chef of the Café Anglais and made her the toast of Paris.

The ingredients for Babette’s feast came to the fjord by ship and were an accumulation of sumptuousness and largesse that none in the village had ever seen. If the believers were shocked by what was carted to the house from the docks, the tastes that were served from Babette’s stove and flowed from the many bottles of wine were worse. They determined not to mention the utter worldliness of what was set before them, so as not to appear judgmental or bring offense to the late pastor’s daughters.

But one guest had eyes to see the gift present in the feast. Philippa’s suitor, visiting his family’s nearby manor, had been invited. General Loewenhielm had eaten at the Café Anglais, and he knew each dish Babette had prepared. The delight of the lavish meal enjoyed at the rustic table stood in contrast to the self-denial and temperance practiced by the believers. It put him in mind of the psalm assigned for this week of Lent. He stood and quoted it to the other guests: “Mercy and truth, my friends, have met together….Righteousness and bliss shall kiss one another” (Psa 85:10). All the piety, rigor, and discipline presented to the world by the believers, the General knew, was done out of fear and the denial of God’s grace. His speech is one of the most faithful in literature:

All the piety, rigor, and discipline presented to the world by the believers, the General knew, was done out of fear and the denial of God’s grace

“We tremble before making our choice in life, and after having made it again tremble in fear of having chosen wrong. But the moment comes when our eyes are opened, and we see and realize that grace is infinite. Grace, my friends, demands nothing from us but that we shall await it with confidence and acknowledge it in gratitude. Grace, brothers, makes no conditions and singles out none of us in particular; grace takes us all to its bosom and proclaims general amnesty. See! That which we have chosen is given us, and that which we have refused is, also and at the same time, granted us. Ay, that which we have rejected is poured upon us abundantly. For mercy and truth have met together, and righteousness and bliss have kissed one another!”

The Christian life is one that hangs in the balance between God’s demands for righteousness and the peace and bliss that come from God through Christ’s mercy for sinners – both for pious believers and those, like the General, who are both in the world and of it. What arrived on the table of the Berlevaag feast was eschatological. It broke in as an Easter feast, full of God’s own largesse that itself arrived on the cross and Christ’s empty tomb. What the believers had hoped for all those years had finally come, but not in the expected way. It was no Lenten discipline that freed them. No, the giving up of chocolate and beer could open no shackles. Nor could avoiding four-letter slips or brushes with the law. All their rigor and self-denial did was make them hungry for the eternal feast of Christ’s victory over sin, death, and the devil.

Dinesen tells us that those seated at the table hardly knew what had happened to them. “The vain illusions of this earth had dissolved before their eyes like smoke, and they had seen the universe as it really is. They had been given one hour of the millennium.” The company left the little house to find it had snowed. As they struggled in the newly fallen snow and fell, it was “as if they had indeed had their sins washed white as wool, and in this regained innocent attire were gamboling like little lambs.”

What none knew, though, was that Babette had spent every last kroner of her lottery winnings on a group of Pietists lacking in sophistication and taste. She’d given up any hope of returning to the life she once knew. Her former Parisian glory was gone. As Christ for them, Babette had emptied herself for the sake of the believers on the fjord, before they could ever develop a palate that recognized what slid across it.

More rigor for Lent will not do

More rigor for Lent will not do. It only comes in the place where the peace the Holy Spirit sends in Christ finally kisses the unfulfilled righteousness under which we stand indicted. The arc leading from Ash Wednesday to Easter is the path from death to life, not of more demands and constant aspiration for betterment. The feast comes instead amid sin. God proves His love for us by Christ emptying Himself for us before any repair job could begin. It is Jesus, the end of the Law, who washes us clean and gives robes of white, in spite of our lifelong laundry list of failures. Take a whiff. The feast is in the oven even now.