Untitled Sermon
A more ambiguous situation was provided by the great courtyard surrounding the fountain of Lerna, a pleasant place for relaxation attached to the sanctuary of Asclepios. Under the sanctuary’s main building have been found three dining rooms opening onto the courtyard. Because Lerna was such a desirable public place, it is likely that some Christians in Corinth would have defended their right to eat there, whether of their own accord or in response to an invitation. As Gooch concludes: “Even if there was unanimity concerning the wrongfulness of sharing in the table of demons [1 Cor 10:20–21] (as in the case of a meal in the sanctuary of Demeter and Kore), the dining rooms of Lerna would present an awkward case.”
As in the case of those initiating lawsuits against their less privileged “brothers” (1 Cor 6:1–8), it may have been the more affluent members of the congregation for whom the Lerna restaurant presented a special temptation. They “would have been invited to meals in such places as a regular part of their social life, to celebrate birthdays, weddings, healings attributed to the god, or other important occasions. … Their public and professional duties virtually required the networking that occurred through attending and sponsoring such events.” The poor, on the other hand, probably had access to meat only at public religious festivals where meat was distributed to everyone. For them, the eating of meat may have taken on “numinous” connotations.
Finally we need to mention the dilemma facing the Christian who was invited to a meal in the home of a non-Christian. While it appears that many meals in pagan homes were not accompanied by religious rites, it was particularly at special celebrations like feasts in honor of the gods, weddings, birthdays