Laurie Klein, Scribe

immerse in God, emerge refreshed

  • About
  • Books
  • Blog
    • Small Wonders
    • Soul Mimosas
    • Springboards
    • Wellsprings
    • BiblioDiva
  • Reveries
  • Links
  • Contact
  • Press Kit
  • Playlist

Table 23

by Laurie Klein 14 Chiming In

Table 23 beckons . . .

Table 23

“It’s a strange thing,” author Kate Bowler says, “to carry so much grief and . . . still make dinner.”

I slump over the kitchen counter, blindsided by clickbait headlines devised by others to stoke fear. They radiate hatred. Manipulation. I feel compassion unraveling.

How dare they?

Straightening, I redirect my emotions. Picture a curvy, seemingly armored, butternut squash. Armed with a knife that could be sharper, I decapitate, peel, halve, and scrape away stringy snarls of seeds and slime. A fitting soundtrack for processing hype-gripe-&-spin. Why merely vent when I can outargue, outmaneuver, the resistance?

Kitchen morphs to courtroom. Did I mention I am a lawyer’s daughter? A daughter of heaven, too.

And God eternally, thoroughly, absolutely treasures each person who disagrees with me. Love your enemies, the Prince of Peace says. Let them bring out the best in you.  

I rest my knife. Unevenly peeled and ker-chunked, the hapless vegetable before me awaits judicious seasoning. Messy, yet it brims with sustenance and care. Someone raised it, watered, and witnessed its rooted goodness.

So, what am I wrongly assuming from sensationalized public accusations and skewered truth?

I have blind spots. Biases. In other words, dirty dishes to bus, another surface to disinfect. Someone, please text me “6 Tips for Granting a Fair Hearing.”

Meanwhile, I tip squash into an oiled pan. Add quartered red onion, walnuts, fresh parsley, a glug of EVOO, a sploosh of pure maple syrup. Sprinkle feta like manna. Ingredients this good are bound to turn out alright. Right?

Earlier today a friend shared her take on King David’s twenty-third psalm—specifically, the metaphorical table God prepares for us in the presence of our enemies.

A personal Table 23.

“Morning by morning,” she says, “I get to ask, ‘Who will I be serving today? Can I facilitate goodwill? Celebrate common ground? Ease hunger or soothe a festering grievance?’”

She trusts God will inspire her with timely questions and observations meant to unlock a guest’s truest self, so that when they break bread together—be it supper, coffee and conversation—even confrontation—something honest and generous changes hands.

This rings true.

Time to set the timer.

Long ago, on the uphill road to Jerusalem (where Jesus would face a host of enemies ranged against him), he dropped in on two sisters. Perhaps he was pale, drawn, in need of a meal. Perhaps he hungered for someone to hear his troubled thoughts.

Look closer . . .

Martha cooks for him . . . dutifully takes on the work.
Mary sits by him . . . beautifully takes in the Word.

Mary embodies a loving gaze, a listening heart. And Martha, ever at her ancient counter, shows me myself—wanting to help but caught by inner arguments roiling, resentment building: fairness, on trial.

Gently chided for angst over Mary’s choice, did Martha mutter into her napkin? I hope she smiled, sheepish and loving, then passed the salt.

Afterward, perhaps they all felt heard and seen, deeply loved, doubly filled.

I survey my butchered squash, recall the day’s shock-wave news and toxic fallout, how people sometimes carry death on their tongues. Friends, too. Even family. I’ve mentally grilled a few of them today in my kitchen courtroom. Asked by God, would I feed them tonight? Or might my heroic preparations outweigh the worth of my guest?

Whatever they might feel compelled to say, may I also listen for what they secretly ache to hear. Then say it true.

Kate Bowler also says, “. . . you show quiet courage in continuing to care when cynicism would be easier.”

And then, there’s this prayer, from poet Gunilla Norris:

“You are the hidden joy which feeds
and keeps everything.
You are the table,
the guest, the meal . . .”

Go on. Slide that tender, truculent squash into the oven. Don’t be afraid. It can take the heat.

lauriekleinscribe logo

Friends, if you were to describe your Table 23, what would it look like?

table 23, to go

Teakettle Photo by Suraj Suryawanshi on Unsplash

“23” Photo by Portia Weiss on Unsplash

You might also enjoy this post, from the archives: Table Talk 

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: clickbait headlines, listening, psalm 23, say it true, squash, table, toxic fallout February 24, 2026

Shalom, Stinkbugs & Utmost Civility

by Laurie Klein 14 Chiming In

“Shalom” is the one word I cannot speak when faced with stinkbugs.

Sleep in a room infested with kamikaze wing-buzz and reek? Fat chance.

Shalom suggests lions laying down with lambs.

lion and lamb shalom

I will NOT lay down anywhere with stinkbugs.

Hence, The Bug Bomb.

And the death toll: 1 bedroom, 23 stinkos plus dozens of flies.

Then, post-carnage, the guilt.

Aren’t we meant to live at peace with creation as well as people?

Shalom

Peace is only one accurate translation for shalom.

The word also means harmony, both spiritual and physical.

Wholeness. Fullness. Prosperity.

Inner completeness, soundness, tranquility.

Welfare: “to be safe in mind, body, or estate.”

An inward sense of rest despite outward circumstances.

Doug Hershey describes shalom as reciprocity, “. . . a type of wholeness that encourages you to give back—to generously repay something in some way.”

Probably excluding bug bombs.

Rabbi David Zaslow writes, “In the Hebraic way of thinking, wholeness is the joining together of opposites.”

Seems like-mindedness is optional.

Shalom also means “hello” and “farewell.”

“When I come from somewhere,” Rabbi Zaslow explains, “I am going somewhere else…“ [which produces a peace with wholeness as its source]. “[A]ll my opposing energies are somehow linked and part of a single whole.”

Which may include one’s personal nemesis.

caged

Or take divergent political views wherein dissenters attempt to wall off the opposition. Who will restrain the roar between left- and right-wingers?

 

wings of shalom

“It takes two wings for an eagle to fly,” Rabbi Zaslow observes. “It takes the integration of two opposing positions for there to be real shalom.”

 

How do we approach integration?

We might consider the word dialogue, meaning “across reason” or “speech that goes back and forth.”

What if those who disagree with us—even stridently—uniquely offer each of us the potential gift of deeper personal wholeness?

A touch of shalom.

Speech that goes back and forth might mean:

  • redefining vocabulary when semantics derails discussion
  • refusing to formulate our comeback while the other person is still speaking
  • planting an idea, then making peace with our role in whatever sprouts

Shalom sprout

 

 

 

Can we listen deeply first, then challenge one another with civility?

What we speak embodies the power of life or death (Prov. 18:21).

Shalom To-Dos

My friend Mark, an artist, writer, and self-described “grumpy Jewish Christian,” tells me some rabbis teach that the Messiah will come when a certain unknown (yet fixed) number of good deeds are completed, each deed containing an element of shalom.

Could we add our small efforts to that growing number? Not to earn merit, or points, but rather enhance someone else’s tranquility, wholeness, safety, and rest.

Empowered by grace, good deeds are honest. Practical. Sustainable.

Years ago Bill and I recorded a song in unison. Blending our voices required deep listening to one another, surrendering our assumptions, and making ongoing, minute adjustments.

Can you discern each voice? Click here to hear “Shalom,” beautifully arranged and produced by our brilliant friend Chris Lobdell.

How might you live a life of shalom this week? I’d love more ideas . . .

p.s. I created a Playlist from song titles you suggested. Click “Reader’s Playlist” in menu bar.

Thank you again for sharing!

lauriekleinscribe logo

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: civility, dialogue, listening, peace, reciprocity, shalom, stinkbugs, sustainable October 2, 2017

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • RSS

Subscribe

Please enter your email address below to receive emails from Laurie twice a month.

Your information is safe with me. I will never spam you. Read my privacy policy here.

Hi, I’m Laurie.

  • Scribe for wonder
  • Contemplative author/artist
  • Reader/performer/speaker
  • Imagination maven
  • Biblio*Diva
  • Expert on chocolate raisins
  • Click here to read more.

House of 49 Doors: Entries in a Life

House of 49 Doors: Entries in a Life
Buy from Amazon

Where the Sky Opens, a Partial Cosmography

Where the Sky Opens, a Partial Cosmography
Buy from Amazon

Recent Posts

  • Table 23
  • Tangle, Crane
  • Ambushed
  • Strip. Trash. Sever. Yank.
  • Plot Twist

Categories

  • BiblioDiva
  • Immersions
  • Small Wonders
  • Soul Mimosas
  • Springboards
  • Wellsprings

Tags

adoption adventure attention Beauty blessing Blues breath change chosen contemplative delight emergence Gift grace gratitude hidden hope joy light longing love Magi marvel music nest pain path peace pearls pivot possibility praise prayer Risk shelf life soundings space star surrender transformation truth wait waiting wonder yes

Copyright © 2026 Laurie Klein, Scribe Laurie Klein, Scribe All Rights Reserved Laurie Klein, Scribe Privacy Policy