Remember
the last party you went to, what images come to mind? Maybe it was a Super Bowl party on Sunday,
New Year’s Eve, a recent birthday celebration, or fellowship after church. When we gather in Syster Hall on Sundays, we
are living the value of caring and belonging. Ponder, what helps make a party a party? Is it music, food, dancing, or meeting
someone new? Do you love big parties or
more intimate dinner gatherings with just a few others so you can all
participate in the conversation? One of
the key values of God, according to John, is gathering people where each can
show up as their God-created self. The
truth of worship isn’t just for us to celebrate God as if God needs the praise
to feed God’s ego. Rather, when we
worship, we get caught up in celebration as a key component and
characteristic of God. What
would it mean to worship a God who loves parties, not just somber, serious
prayers? What would it mean to welcome
others as a way of prayer? Welcoming
is one of our core values as a church.
We embody this in the practice of an open communion table ~ there is a
place for everyone at Christ’s table.
We don’t decide who is on God’s guest list. We don’t check baptismal cards, attendance
records, or contribution statements. All
means all. We practice a
prayerful welcome at fellowship, seeking to sit with people we don’t know as
well. We practice a prayerful welcome in
taking food to those who are food insecure at the Community Meal and
Resurrection House. We practice God’s
love in hospitality, taking food to friends who live in fear and cannot go out
because of ICE. You can practice prayerful
hospitality in conversations. Your
listening ear, curious questions, and open posture toward another is a loving
action. To be sure, it might be easier
to turn water into wine than listen to people who are full of hate. I would rather welcome people I like who
think like me. This is what social media
bubbles do to us. They promise us that
we are safe, secure, and soothed, but watch the moment you color outside the
line. When you post something that
doesn’t reflect the perspective or political position of another, there is
someone who lashes out with keyboard courage to “tell” you what is right. Just as Jesus lived in an honor and shame
society, so do we. We blame and shame each
other viciously online and in the 24-hour-news-tainment that is our world. Today, practice gracious, generative
hospitality with one person. Pro tip:
doesn’t have to be your mortal enemy, doesn’t have to be someone who makes your
blood boil and the tiny vein on your neck throb. Pick someone whom you do care about, but
perhaps can step on your toes. Finally,
please note, the goal is not to “change” the other person. The goal is not for you to do this to earn
God’s love (which is unconditional anyway).
The goal is to see what happens in your body, mind, soul, and life when
you welcome another person with an embrace of God’s love that has you. I pray this stirs your soul in new ways this
day.





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