
If Holy Week were a play — and in many ways it is — Maundy Thursday would be the quiet scene that somehow contains the entire story.
The parade is over.
The arguments in the temple have settled.
The city hums with Passover preparations.
And Jesus gathers his friends for supper.
Now, supper may not sound especially dramatic, but anyone who has attended enough church dinners knows that important things often happen around tables. Conversations deepen. Stories emerge. Occasionally someone discovers that the coffee urn has been unplugged, which can produce a minor ecclesiastical crisis.
But this meal is different.
Jesus knows the cross is coming. He knows betrayal has already begun its slow march through the city. The disciples, meanwhile, are still trying to determine who among them deserves the most prominent seating arrangement in the coming kingdom.
In other words, it is a fairly typical human gathering.
And then Jesus stands up.
He takes off his outer robe.
He wraps a towel around his waist.
He kneels down.
At this point the disciples should probably have realized that something unusual was happening.
Because the person they have been calling Lord is now performing the task normally assigned to the lowest servant in the household.
He begins washing their feet.
Now, in the modern world, feet are treated with a certain polite distance. But in the dusty roads of first-century Judea, foot washing was not symbolic — it was necessary, practical, and distinctly unglamorous.
It was the sort of job no one volunteered for.
Which makes it precisely the job Jesus chooses.
Peter, always the enthusiastic spokesperson for confused humanity, objects immediately. “Lord, you will never wash my feet!”
Peter understands what most of us instinctively understand: this is backwards.
Leaders are not supposed to kneel. Teachers are not supposed to scrub dust off fishermen’s toes. Kings are not supposed to pick up towels.
But Jesus gently insists.
“If I do not wash you, you have no share with me.”
The kingdom of God, it turns out, is built on a very different understanding of greatness.
In the world we know, authority rises upward.
In the kingdom Jesus reveals, love kneels down.
Maundy Thursday carries its name from the Latin mandatum — commandment. “A new commandment I give you: love one another.”
And just in case the disciples are tempted to interpret that commandment in a purely theoretical manner, Jesus demonstrates exactly what he means.
He washes their feet.
Including Judas’s.
Which may be the most astonishing detail of the entire evening.
Jesus serves the one who will betray him, the one who will deny him, the ones who will scatter in fear before sunrise.
Love kneels anyway.
Then, as if that were not enough for one night, Jesus takes bread.
“This is my body.”
He takes the cup.
“This is my blood.”
The ordinary meal becomes something holy — a sacrament that will be repeated around tables and altars for centuries to come.
And the message is unmistakable.
The heart of the Christian life is not prestige.
It is not success.
It is not even religious expertise.
It is love expressed in humble service.
The King does the washing.
The Teacher pours the wine.
The Lord gives himself away.
Which means that if we want to understand Maundy Thursday properly, we should probably keep an eye on the towel.
Because in the kingdom of God, greatness is measured not by how many people serve you…
…but by how willingly you serve them.
Companion Prayer
Servant Lord,
You kneel before your friends
with towel and basin.
Teach us the humility
that does not seek applause,
the love that serves quietly,
and the courage to care for others
even when it costs us.
Wash our hearts
of pride and fear.
And send us into the world
ready to love one another
as you have loved us.
Amen.








