The famous Round Table of Arthurian legend has got nothing on the infamous Round Table of Camp.
In short, we eat at Round Tables. Every meal. Every day. Banquet tables would hold more people. And they could be set up in neat rows.
But we prefer Round Tables. Of 8 people. Set up in free-flowing pods.
Pre-meal Round Tables are nothing to write home about. They would never grace the pages of a slick home and garden mag.
Adding bread and water livens things up a bit and is entirely lovely since the conversations and interactions that take place at the Round Tables are blessed and consecrated by the Bread of Life and the Living Water.

Feeding everyone at all of the Round Tables is not quite as miraculous as feeding the 5000 – but it surely is as beautiful.

The Round Tables are a perfect place to eat with friends, to look at one another face to face, to be part of a circle that is mightier by far than any group of Arthur’s noble knights.

In a world where Round Tables – or any other shaped tables – are becoming more and more rare, the chance to gather around one several times each day is a blessed gift indeed.
If there is any disadvantage to Round Tables, it is only this: half of the people must turn in their chairs…

…in order to see such momentous upfront events as…

…Baby and Baby blowing Coco-Puffs. Out of their noses. Into buckets. For points.
You might not be surprised to hear that Baby won (with 12) while Baby lost (with 8).
But at the Round Tables, there are no losers. Ever. Each and every middle-schooler circled around each and every meal is loved. Listened to. Cared for. Encouraged. Believed in. Prayed for. Delighted in. And so much more.
The shape of the table matters indeed.
But more importantly:
The hearts of the people eating around the table matter beyond measure.
Each and every one.