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Let Them Eat Cake
May 24, 2020
Though legend has often attributed the phrase, “Let them eat cake,” to Marie Antoinette, it’s more likely those words were said about 100 years before her time by Marie-Therese, wife of Louis XIV. British author and biographer Antonia Fraser writes, “It was a callous and ignorant statement and she, Marie Antoinette, was neither.” The phrase references the plight of the poor during a time of famine in France when bread was in short supply and extraordinarily expensive, consuming up to 50% of a household’s income. It shows us just how disconnected she was from the challenges facing the poorest citizens in France at that time.

As we continue in our study of 1 Corinthians this week, Paul has some words of correction for the believers in Corinth around their practice of communion. Originally, their remembrance of Jesus’ death on the cross was part of a larger feast, commonly called a “love feast,” meant to be a blessing to those in need in the congregation. But the practice within the Corinthian congregation had become significantly lacking in love. Their “let them eat cake” attitude was hurting the unity and strength that communion was meant to build. Paul, fed up with their drift from the purpose of the love feast, issues a strong rebuke, urging them to remember the price paid for their redemption and that they are now, one body.