Tuesday, 23 June 2015

Cana Catering Co

The father of the bride was furious. ‘But how could it have happened?’
       ‘I am very sorry sir.’
       ‘Sorry? That won’t do!’ He shoved his hands into the pockets of his fine suit. ‘Look, I’ve got guests here who were invited to come from miles and miles round, and they are entitled to celebrate with me and my daughter and her new husband today and tomorrow and probably Thursday as well, but right now, thanks to you and your inept planning, I am embarrassed in front of them. My party has only just begun and I shall gain a reputation as a skinflint.’
       ‘I understand your irritation…’
       ‘You what? You have no idea of how I am feeling! I am close to becoming furious with you. I don’t know what to say or to think. Where is your boss?’
       The man shuffled and examined his feet. ‘He is out of town, sir.’
       ‘Well, go fetch him from wherever he is and mention my name and remind him that we made this booking some time ago, when my daughter was pledged to be married. Tell him what has happened and get him to arrange a fresh delivery by nightfall. We can discuss financial arrange-ments later, but I must be able to offer my guests a drink.’
       ‘But sir, I don’t know where he will be able to get more stocks so quickly…’
       ‘Be that as it may, it’s his problem, isn’t it? Go, now, before I lose my temper. Go! No, wait! Is there enough for everyone to eat?’
       ‘Yes, sir, the main courses are now all distributed but the palate cleansing course and the sweet course have not yet been served.’ He was skilled at thinking on his feet. ‘And the barbecue is still cooking the chicken, the lamb and the fish, along with flatbread, rice, mashed yams, couscous and some vegetables. And there is the cake as well.’
       ‘Well, then that’s good. So you’d better get going now! Be back before sunset, won’t you? We can eke it out if we are careful and serve half-glassfuls and ration what is left. This is ridiculous! How could it have been overlooked? No, don’t answer, just go! Sunset, I warn you… Go! Go!’
       The nervous man left, in a hurry. At the gateway, he was passed as another dozen or so guests arrived. They looked dusty, tired and thirsty, and were carrying their invitations in expectation. They had missed the main course, but they could always fill up on cake, thought the nervous, fast-thinking caterer’s assistant.

He returned to Cana, as promised, by sundown, arriving on a wagon loaded with several pitchers of low-grade, inexpensive wine hurriedly bought from a vineyard not known for quality. It was probably going to be inadequate, but his hope was based on the normal practice of serving the best wine first. Experienced caterers reckoned that once most of the guests had become slightly squiffy (or worse), bringing out drinks of a poorer quality would go unnoticed.

His wagon was unloaded by the team of waiters and servants. But the pitchers were immediately placed in the storehouse, and not, as he expected, brought in to replenish the jugs on the serving tables. He sought out the father of the bride (the master of the banquet), eager to show that he had returned, as promised, before sundown, and with supplies of wine. He was also eager to discover why the order had been given for the flasks to be stored rather than used to serve the thirsty wedding guests.
       ‘Tell me, what’s going on?’
       ‘Ah, you have returned… yes, well, that is what we said, I suppose.’
       ‘Yes, I have brought the wine I promised, ready to supply to the guests.’
       ‘But look, my dear fellow; the guests have all they require.’ It was true: there was no cup unfilled, and at every table there were several jugs filled with wine. Every guest appeared to have (at least) sufficient wine inside them, too.
       The catering assistant (CA) was confused. ‘How can… ah, I suppose you found reserves of wine while I was away?’ And then a fearful thought struck him. ‘Or perhaps you thought you should hire another catering supplier, just in case I broke my promise and didn’t return…’ His tone was moderately aggressive, as he began to become enraged, thinking he may have been double-crossed.
       ‘We found no reserves of wine, and we bought nothing at all from anyone,’ the master of the banquet (MB) said, reassuringly.
       ‘So where has all this wine magically appeared from, then?’
       ‘Funny you should put it like that!’ said MB with a smile. ‘What happened was that a dozen or so working men turned up as guests – they were invited, but they were not all people who are used to this sort of social event, if I can put it like that. I think they turned up not long after you went, so we had already served most of the food and drink, and evidently they were thirsty. Fairly shortly afterwards one of the guests spotted that we were running low on wine, but rather than mention it to me or embarrass the bridegroom, she spoke first to one of the dozen, who was, I think, one of her sons. But then she approached the servants and told them to do exactly what her son said.’
       ‘So, tell me, are your servants in the habit of obeying instructions from guests, rather than checking with you?’
       ‘As a rule, they are good and faithful servants, but on this occasion, they started to do what he was ordering.’
       ‘Makes little sense to me. But go on…’
       ‘Well, they were told to fetch the large stone jars we use to get the water for ceremonial washing…’
       ‘What the huge ones?’
       ‘Uh-huh, the ones that hold about 25 gallons each,’ confirmed MB.
       ’25 gallons? What’s that in real money?’
       ‘About 110 litres.’
       ‘Okay…’
       ‘And there were six of them.’
       CA was becoming increasingly amazed. ‘And they were all full up?’
       ‘Yes, he insisted that they should all be filled to the brim.’
       ‘So, go on… what did he do with 660 litres of water?’
       ‘Well he told one of the servants to draw off some of the water and serve it to me in a cup.’
       ‘Hang on – did you know about this water business?’
       ‘No, this all happened while I was trying to think of a way of telling the bridegroom that the wine was running out at his wedding. I knew my daughter would be livid when she found out. So I had no idea.’
       ‘And this servant gives you a cup of water, right?’
       ‘Well, not exactly.’ MB paused, trying to find a way of expressing what happened without sounding ridiculous. But he could not make his extraordinary tale conform to the description normal.  ‘He gives me this cup, and I think he’s given me a cup of water, and he knows he’s given me a cup of water, but when I taste the water, it’s not water at all!’
       ‘What?’
       ‘H’mm, not water at all. It tastes like the finest wine that I have ever had. It was bright, fruity, smokey and spicey, with incredible depth and complex flavour combinations, wonderful caramel aromas, a long finish of course, and characteristics of stone fruit with full-bodied bell pepper and flamboyant toastiness and voluptuous, supple tannins.’ His voice drifted off as he finished his description, knowing he had sounded over-enthusiastic, but also feeling he had not done it justice.
       CA had never heard anything like it. ‘How can a wine be both smokey and voluptuous? And caramel-flavoured pepper sounds pretty nasty to me. I fear your description does not…’ His tirade was silenced as a servant handed him a cup of the liquid under scrutiny.
       He sampled the aroma, and his expression changed instantly from cynicism to interest.
       He took a sip of the wine, and rolled it around in his mouth, letting the liquid flow across his tongue and gums, back and forth, encouraging flavour to invade his taste buds. His eyebrows gave away his surprise and pleasure.
       He drew air in through his mouth, allowing the wine to release its depth. He blinked in astonishment and eagerness as it delivered punch and delicacy, right across the board. His pupils dilated in delight.
       He swallowed the mouthful, and remained still for several moments as the long finish of smoke and gentle acidity completed its work. He smacked his lips and licked them.
       ‘That is utterly… magnificent,’ he said, with wonder and no little emotion. ‘It is the nectar of heaven; the rich pressings and treatment of the most perfect combination of grapes and crystal clear mineral-laced water I have had the pleasure to encounter. I’m shocked, amazed, silenced, astonished, delighted and very jealous.’ He stopped babbling and re-tasted the wine, once again savouring the quality, complexity and sheer joy it possessed and released in wagonloads.
       His rapture was such that MB waited, rather than continuing with the story. He signalled to the servant to refill the jug, knowing that CA would want to keep on tasting.
       Eventually CA asked ‘And you say this came from where?’
       ‘I was as astonished as you are. I had no idea where it had come from, but my first thought was to go to the bridegroom and congratulate him on storing up this astonishing wine, and then having the brilliance to save it for when the – forgive me – frankly inferior wine you provided was all gone.’
       ‘Nothing to forgive, my friend! Of course my plonk CCC provided is inferior! I would say that if there is another wine anywhere at any price that matched this one you have just given me, I would certainly not serve it at a wedding, but perhaps only at a coronation or similarly rare and royal occasion.’ A thought crossed his mind. ‘So the bridegroom must have been storing this fabulous vintage and has served it now; may I speak to him about obtaining some and perhaps meeting the vintner who has produced this champion of champions?’
       ‘I shall certainly introduce you to the bridegroom; but first, you have not allowed me to finish the story. You see I did not send you off on a wild rock badger chase, to fetch quantities of inferior wine once the original shipment ran out. My request – yes, demand – for more wine was genuine. When I spoke to the bridegroom, I told him how astonished I was that he had held this glorious nectar in reserve, because – as I explained – it is usual for hosts to serve the best wine first, and then bring out the vin de table once the guests have had plenty of the decent stuff. He shocked me when he denied having planned anything of the sort. He was as eager as I had been that you would fetch more wine. He has, like me, no idea from where this extraordinary, glorious vintage has come.’
       ‘I don’t understand,’ said CA. ‘You had no reserves, and the bridegroom had none either? I go chasing off across the countryside and rush back to Cana with flagons of cheap plonk, and yet meanwhile this superb wine turns up from nowhere?’
       ‘Not exactly nowhere. I was telling you about the ceremonial jars and the cup of water from which they drew them? Well, the guest with the pushy mother somehow performed a miracle with the water.’
       CA sat still for a moment, while the implication of this sank in. ‘So, you are saying he turned the water into wine?’
       ‘Yes.’
       ‘The water in the ceremonial jars?’
       ‘Yes.’
       ‘The six ceremonial jars, full of water, are now full of wine?’
       ‘Yes.’
       ‘So we have the most magnificent, glorious wine anyone had ever tasted, being served to slightly squiffy guests, just sitting around in six ceremonial jars, each containing 110 litres. That means we have 660 litres of wine. That’s…’ He paused as he made the calculation. ‘Eight hundred and eighty bottles of wine that could sell for a major fortune per bottle. It would, of course, be wrong to call it vintage, since it was only produced this afternoon. This is as nouvelle as a wine can possibly be! But that’s by the by, really. The flavour, depth, aroma, presence and finish are quite superb.  I think we need to work together on this. What we should do is to decant some more of one of the jars, so we shall be able to keep on serving to the top table and any guests who turn up tomorrow or Thursday, but immediately switch all the other guests to the cheap plonk I just brought in. Then we should take the ceremonial jars to my brother’s bottling plant, and have a label designed and lay down most of the bottles and start marketing the rest. We should sell a few cases at a time, to ensure the top people have a little of what they can be told is a limited edition speciality wine, since then they will become willing to pay top drachma for more. You and I are going to make a serious amount of wealth from this, my friend!’
      
No-one knows if their plan worked out.
       Except if it had, perhaps history would have known about it. And thus far, no-one has ever told the full story.
       Yes, the gospel writer John Barzebedee gave away some details, but he was more bothered about the identity of the pushy woman’s son, and missed the entrepreneurial main point. He was also very keen, it seems, to get on with the rest of the story, and so he kind of rushed over this one, which he threw away as a sort of throat-clearance in his eagerness to get on with the temple-clearing, healings, other miracles, speeches and sacrifice of the pushy woman’s son.
       Rumour has it that a well-known teacher of those days sometimes spoke about wine as being a holy symbol, and a drink of fellowship. Towards the end of his life, he even told his followers that the wine they were drinking at the time was the last taste he would have of the stuff until they were all together in heaven. This strongly implies that there will be fruit of the vine in eternity. But I cannot possibly imagine how Celestial Chardonnay, Glory Grigio, Heavenly Hock or even Kingdom Cabernet could be better than the Miracle Merlot we tasted this afternoon.
       And what you have just read, ladies and gentlemen, is the plain truth, told for the first time.

Wine runs out – who’s responsible for replenishment?

Create a graph plotting Quantity of Available Wine
against Time, emphasising key moments in the story

The caterer did his best to save the face of the father
of the bride. Why did Jesus feel the need to step in?

How is the way this miracle is performed
echoed in the way Jesus feeds the 5000?

What can we learn about God from this amazing miracle?



No comments:

Post a Comment