Friday, March 3, 2017

Lent Reflection - Day 3

"Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for by doing that some have entertained angels without knowing it." - Hebrews 13:2

"Do not be afraid."  This is the most common command from God in Scripture. Not the greatest or most important - love is obviously the greatest and I think (if we must rank them) that "repent and believe in the good news" might be more important.  So, if the command against fear is not the greatest and if it's (arguably) not the most important, why does it occur so often?

The easy answer, of course, is that we are easily frightened.  And most of us are pretty good at hiding it - we like to cover up our fear with self-confidence, stubborn certainty, a lot of possessions, etc.  Fear is not always a bad thing and it can keep us from getting ourselves in trouble.  The problem is that we have a tendency to be ruled by our fear.  We let it dictate how we live and who we love, who we serve and to whom we show hospitality. 

While there are certainly times to exercise caution and hospitality does not mean letting people take advantage of us or putting ourselves or our loved ones in harm's way, there are times when we are reluctant to show hospitality to strangers because our fear of hypothetical 'what if' scenarios carries more weight with us than Jesus' command to love our neighbors and God's repeated command that we not be afraid.  These 'what if' scenarios are really powerful, but pay attention to the fact that Jesus doesn't leave us any wiggle room in his command for us to love our neighbor.  There's no "unless" in the greatest commandment. 

"Love your neighbor, unless they have been mean to you…"

"Love your neighbor, unless they are a different religion…"

"Love your neighbor, unless they have a lifestyle that you disagree with…"

"Love your neighbor, unless there's some hypothetical scenario that makes you afraid of doing so…"


It's difficult and sometimes it's inconvenient for me to do so (even anxiety-producing), but the command is pretty clear.  I'm thinking that I've got a ways to go and a lot of repenting to do during this season of Lent…

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Don't you love it when things all seem to come together. Last night, when you shared that John Wesley said the first sin was unbelief. I started wondering. I've never thought of the word belief before. So I looked up "be" and "lief". According to Merriam the two parts mean "to have" "beloved". So if the first sin was to not have love and Jesus says that the greatest commandment is to love. I guess it really takes thousands of pages of examples and we still don't get it. Maybe ine step at a time we can keep spreading it though.