The Feast That Is Coming, a wide 16:9 photo-realistic image of a long banquet table glowing in golden light beneath a bright sky, with bread, cups, and many places prepared, symbolizing the wedding supper of the Lamb in Revelation 19:6–9. The image includes the title The Feast That Is Coming and a paraphrase of Revelation 19:6–9.

June 13, 2026

Revelation 19:6–9 points to the wedding supper of the Lamb, where God’s people rejoice in the victory and faithfulness of Christ. The passage gives a vision of final celebration, holy joy, and the promised feast where grace reaches its completion.

Devotional: Some meals are more than meals. They carry memory, hope, family, grief, laughter, and promise. A holiday table can remind us who is missing. A church fellowship meal can remind us we are not alone. A quiet supper with someone we love can become a small sign of grace.

Revelation 19 gives us a picture of a feast still to come. It is called the wedding supper of the Lamb. The language is full of joy, worship, and celebration. After all the struggle, sorrow, evil, and endurance described in Revelation, God gives His people a picture of a table. Not a battlefield. Not a courtroom. A feast.

That matters. The Christian story does not end with hunger, loneliness, shame, or death. It ends with Christ reigning, evil defeated, and God’s people gathered in joy. The table we approach now points us toward the table that is coming. Every time we receive Communion, we remember what Christ has done, receive grace for the present, and look ahead to the day when faith becomes sight.

This does not mean life is easy now. Revelation was written to believers who knew pressure, suffering, temptation, and fear. The promise of the feast did not erase their hardship, but it gave them hope strong enough to endure. They were reminded that the Lamb who was slain is also the Lamb who reigns.

We need that hope too. Some days the world feels heavy. Some wounds heal slowly. Some prayers remain unanswered for longer than we want. But the table is still set in the future of God. Grace is moving toward completion. Mercy will not leave its work unfinished.

Until then, we come to Christ, receive what He gives, and live as people who know the feast is coming.

Action: Let your next meal become a prayer of hope. Thank God for daily bread, for Christ’s saving grace, and for the promised feast still to come.

Prayer: Lord Jesus, Lamb of God, thank You for the promise of the feast that is coming. When life feels heavy, help me remember that sorrow will not have the final word. When I feel weary, feed me with hope. When I come to Your table, teach me to remember Your sacrifice, receive Your grace, and look toward the joy You have promised. Keep me faithful until the day when all Your people are gathered in Your presence. In Jesus’ name I pray. Amen.

Thought for the Day: Every table of grace points us toward the feast Christ has promised.

Revelation 19:6–9 gives us a glimpse of the wedding supper of the Lamb, the feast that is coming when Christ’s victory is fully seen and God’s people are gathered in joy. After struggle, sorrow, and endurance, Scripture gives us a table as a picture of hope.

That promise matters when life feels heavy. Communion reminds us of what Christ has done, but it also points us forward. Grace is not unfinished forever. Mercy is moving toward completion. One day, the Lamb who gave Himself for us will gather His people in joy that cannot be taken away.

Until then, we live with hope. The table is already pointing us home.

This week's sermon: Grace at the Table

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