The Bad News… The Good News… and The Great
News…
Do you have someone on your block, in your neighborhood, at
your school, or in your daily life that you would consider a stranger? Of
course you do… We all do. Our lives are filled with more people we don’t know
well, than people we do know well. For most people, this makes the world a very
scary place to live. It causes us to stick to the paths we are used to, it
causes us to be friendly to those we know and walk past those we don’t, and it
develops an attitude of self-preservation and mistrust rather than an openness
to the new. This overwhelming, perpetual lifestyle of fear of the unknown
causes a few dilemmas:
1.
We can easily become judgmental and
hostile to anything new.
2.
It can cause us to embrace and trust only
those we know.
3.
We tend to build walls relationally and
have unspoken rules for engaging others.
In a world full of fear and hostility, we need to work hard to
be people of peace. Our neighbors need people of peace in their lives. Our
neighborhoods need people of peace who bring a sense of safety. Your city
leaders need people advocating for peace in their cities. Your nation needs
peace desperately as well.
Just think… you could be that person of peace. But in order for
that to be a reality we all need to cultivate a more hospitable attitude that
is bent toward loving and welcoming the stranger into our lives, and learning
to live a life that is not ruled by fear.
“Hospitality is the
intangible tangible of the day. It is something you know and recognize when you
experience it, but you cannot teach it as information is taught to you in
school. It has to be learned from the inside out. Much like you cannot teach
someone how to fall in love.” – Bill Marvin
The Bad News: The spirit of hospitality cannot be
taught as if it were another job skill.
The Good News: You don't need to teach it. Like the
ability to love, hospitality is an innate capability of all human beings. You
just need to understand how to create and sustain a climate where it can emerge
and blossom naturally. (More to come on
how that climate is largely dependent of the presence of the Holy Spirit.)
The Great News: You may already know WHAT works, but
when you really understand WHY it works, maintaining that warm feeling becomes
remarkably effortless.
You can't fake love
and you can't pretend hospitality -- everyone recognizes a lack of genuine
caring. Hospitality must be from the heart or it won't have any real impact on
your guests ... and it won't last.
So, to get you thinking, let me give you a list of some of the
characteristics of a hospitable person. But let me give you a warning: these
are not just things you can become just because you decide to. Living as a
hospitable person goes against the very sin nature of human beings. The only
One who has been successful at being completely selfless and hospitable is
Christ, so keep in mind as you review the following list that it is only
through the power of His Spirit that these qualities can be realities for us. Read
through the list and identify one you have experienced recently from someone
you have crossed paths with. Then, identify one that you have practiced
recently and then, finally, choose one you think would not come naturally for
you to live out.
1.
Warm/ welcoming/ personable – This attitude is experienced when
you first meet someone or pass someone on the street, the park, or at the
grocery store. This person is usually looking up, attentive to their
surroundings, and carries with them a smile and a sense of wanting to know you.
2.
Safe/ relaxed – This person is not fidgety, or
self-conscious. They are at ease with themselves and carry with them an
attitude of everything is in its place and the day going just like it should,
even if it’s not.
3.
Interested in details/ Perceptive – This person is also very attentive
to the surroundings, they take it to a new level and try to perceive needs of
the person with whom they are interacting. They notice not only appearances,
but also attitudes and things they say. They are listeners with the intentional
effort to learn of that person’s needs or what those needs might be.
4.
Good listener/ non-intrusive – This one follows closely with the
previous characteristic, but focuses more on the method of listening and not so
much the perception. A good listener knows the art of asking good questions.
Questions that help the person feel respected and important and not questions
that pry at things that would cause them shame or embarrassment. Questions that
help the listener connect their perceptions with reality so the true needs
might be met. This also helps with the feeling of being safe.
5.
Happy/ joyful – This person has figured out how to
carry with them a happy, hopeful outlook on life that allows them to genuinely
smile and be joyful no matter what is happening. Now I know there are times
when there is grief and loss or terrible things that happen in life and I
believe there are times for sadness and gloom, but I am speaking here of a
consistent attitude towards the positive and being joyful.
6.
Encouraging – A truly peaceful, hospitable person is one who looks for the
good qualities in a person or circumstance and is able to articulate those
qualities and circumstances to a specific person in order to bring dignity,
pride, and accomplishment upon that person. This is something that goes very
tightly with the characteristic of consistency. If a person only does this only
when profitable for their own needs and satisfaction, they will quickly build
walls between themselves and those whom they are trying to encourage.
Hypocrites are sniffed out quickly. Do not try to become this type of person
overnight, it takes lots of time and practice.
7.
Open-minded/ non-judgmental – A person with this type of
characteristic can also be called a learner. They seek to know the truth and do
it without pushing their own agenda or ideas. When a person is not like this,
they are often seen as judgmental, assuming, hostile, and close-minded. This is
one of the foundational characteristics of a hospitable person in my mind. This
person seeks justice, and deeply desires for people to be heard and to feel
safe to voice their own opinions.
8.
Confident – This one might seem odd at first, but if one desires for others
to feel safe around them and with them, they must know themselves, possess
their own identity, and understand fully their own values and beliefs. If you
are unsure of yourself and who you are, you cannot invite strangers into your
life spheres without making them feel uncomfortable or uneasy. Confidence is
different from pride, because confidence is an acceptance of who you are and
not a platform to show yourself off or push your own agenda. This is summed up
in the understanding of where you are going in life and simply inviting others
to come along.
9.
Selfless/ Respectful – This one holds the hand of the
previous characteristic. If you are prideful, you are interested in getting
others to know you and your plans and agendas. A person who is selfless and
respectful is more interested in other people’s wants and needs than telling
you what they are all about and interested in. This doesn’t mean you cannot
have a conversation where both parties are sharing what they are interested in
or what they believe, but that kind of conversation must happen organically
between both parties involved and not inserted into a conversation for
conversation sake.
10. Giving – A selfless person also regards
others needs as a higher priority than their own. This often translates into
someone who is willing to sacrifice time, resources, and finances in order to
make the other tangibly taste and experience peace. This does not mean one
should be unwise and make rash decisions as to when and where their time,
resources, and finances are shared. These types of decisions must be made
wisely, but be careful not to use your own desires and wants as an excuse to
not meet the needs of others.
11. Consistent
– One of the most
important characteristics of one who is a person of peace and hospitable is one
who lives out all these characteristics consistently. Consistency lets people
see and understand that this is not a show or an act, but it is something you
are. When people see that it is something that you are, it gives them hope that
they too can become that type of person. If it is simply an act of kindness
done when convenient, there is no inspiration or challenge for them to rise
above who they are at the present time.
12. Surprising
– Got you
interested didn’t I? That is exactly what this characteristic does. Hospitable
people who possess all these other characteristics are pretty far and few
between. When you are warm and welcoming and possess the ability to make people
feel relaxed. When you show them you are truly interested in them, you present
something that is surprising. Then you can surprise them even more by truly
listening to their needs and who they are and then joyfully and consistently
meeting those needs. Then when you do that with an open, non-judgmental
attitude that is selfless and respectful of who they are, you present them with
something that is fully theirs to have and enjoy. Even at this point many will
still feel like there is a hidden agenda and when they find out that you are
truly doing this out of love and completely for free… you SURPRISE them.
Now take some time to identify the three different
characteristics that I asked you to
identify before you started the list. Then, once you have identified those
three different characteristics, ask yourself the question, “Why?” Why do you
identify those three?
Our world, nations, cities, neighborhoods, and neighbors need
people of peace. You could be the tangible change right where you are that makes
this world a more loving place.
In the coming weeks, I desire to begin unpacking what each of
these characteristics really mean and look like and how they can be lived out.
My goal is to give you some tangible practices that you can implement into your
lives to move you towards becoming a person that is truly hospitable; a peacemaker
in all aspects of your life.
Matthew 5:9 -
“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called sons of God.”
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