"If your church observes the Lord's Supper infrequently, you may wonder what all the fuss is about. Can eating bread and drinking wine in a worship service really make a difference in one's life with God? In this beautifully written book, Hannah Miller King demonstrates the power of Holy Communion by generously, humbly describing the difference it has made in hers. Profound, mature, instructive, and deeply consoling, this book is a gift for the people of God."Wesley Hill, associate professor of New Testament at Western Theological Seminary
"In this beautiful meditation, weaving together her experience as an Anglican priest and the pain and hope she's met in her own life, Hannah Miller King helps us understand why the Eucharist has always been central for Christian worship. It is a meal that teaches us to live in the in-between, where joy and sorrow are indissolubly bound together. This is a book that rewards slow and attentive reading and revisiting. Highly recommended!"Tish Harrison Warren, Anglican priest and author of Liturgy of the Ordinary and Prayer in the Night
"Our Father has spread a table in the wilderness for us. His Son Jesus feeds us as we join him at the meal. And the Spirit of God unites us in his love as we eat. Hannah Miller King's apt reminder of these supernatural blessings is a word spoken in season. The Lord's Supper does not eradicate our pain and anxiety. But the communion it provides us with the Lord and one another gives us grace and peace now and bright hope for the day when God will make all things new and fulfill our every longing. Please join God's family as we feast."Douglas A. Sweeney, dean and professor of divinity at Beeson Divinity School at Samford University
"In Hannah Miller King's fabulous book, Feasting on Hope, we are reminded of things that we all-too quickly forget but desperately need to remember. We are reminded that our Lord feeds the hungry with bread that exceeds their deepest hungers, along with their greatest sorrows; satisfies the thirsty with wine that lasts for days; sits the stranger at the head table, not the kid one; sets the penniless and powerless at feasting tables while enemies watch nearby; and makes the wasteland of our lives blossom with beauty that both pierces and gladdens our hearts. Above all, he nourishes our bodies and souls with living food and the blood that is true drink. He does so with his very own self. There's so much to feast on in this book. Isay: eat up and enjoy!"W. David O. Taylor, associate professor of theology and culture at Fuller Theological Seminary and author of Prayers for the Pilgrimage and A Body of Praise
"Hannah Miller King invites us to examine and partake in the table that Christ has prepared for us. Her theological examinations are accessible, full of grace and conviction, and worthy of careful consideration for those who partake of the Lord's Supper."Kara Bettis Carvalho, editor at Christianity Today
"Writing from a deeply personal space, Hannah Miller King explores the beauty and significance of the Lord's Supper as a place of hope and encounter. She weaves in the profound significance of Jesus' embodiment—and our own—for the Lord's Supper and Christian community. With words of grace and hope, she shows how abundance, hospitality, and courage all flow from this sacrament. In the end, she presents the Lord's Supper as the anticipation of our deep longing to be truly home—the home that awaits us when we at last see the Lord face-to-face. This book is an invitation to the feast of weekly communion as well as the feast of seeing its profound significance for all believers. I warmly recommend this book to all who are hungry and long to be fed."Dana M. Harris, professor of New Testament at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School