GOD WELCOMED ON THE WAY
The welcome of Jesus during his life on earth adds another fascinating perspective. He didn’t base himself in one location and demand that people come to him. Instead, he went to them. And he spread the net wide.
His encounter with Zacchaeus demonstrates how Jesus intentionally sought those on society’s margins, becoming their guest for the sake of the gospel. He was on his way to his Father’s house, a heavenly banquet, and everyone was welcome.
We are called to follow the same path. In Luke 10, Jesus commissioned his disciples to practice this itinerant hospitality – to go where people are, accept their welcome, and witness to the good news. We’re passing through this world on the way to paradise and there is room for more.
WE WELCOME BECAUSE GOD WELCOMED US
None of this should be a cause for arrogance. The foundation of Christian hospitality is humility, not strategic cleverness or prideful generosity. We welcome others because we have first been welcomed by God.
As someone once observed, we are simply beggars showing other beggars where to find bread. The source of our nourishment is not ourselves – we merely point to it.
Abdul’s story reminds us that hospitality can serve as the doorway through which faith enters. When we create spaces of genuine welcome, we’re not merely practicing good manners – we’re mirroring God’s redemptive work.
My encounter led me back to scripture to a new way of seeing Peter’s command to “show hospitality without grumbling,” (1 Peter 4:9). In our acts of welcome, we become a living spectacle of his love, a reflection of his eternal embrace.