Sunday, July 2, 2017

"Holy Hospitality." A Sermon from Littlefield Presbyterian Church on Matthew 10:40-42


"Holy Hospitality"

Matthew 10:40-42



            July Fourth is the anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence from Great Britain.
         The Declaration of Independence states, “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” Most of us are less familiar with the part of this historic document that calls the original inhabitants of our nation “merciless Indian Savages.”  (Don’t take my word for this. Google it and read the document. I think we ought to read our nation’s founding documents at least once a year anyway.)
         We need to remember that each of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were white, land-owning men.  When the Constitution was ratified in 1787, slavery was assumed as part of the way things were in the world.  The Constitution declared that a slave would count as three-fifths of a person in determining the population of a state and deciding how many representatives the state would have in Congress. 
         Not everyone was included in the vision of “unalienable rights” in the Declaration of Independence.  It wasn’t until 1865, when the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution passed, that slavery and involuntary servitude were abolished in the United States.  In 1870 voting rights were extended to all male citizens, and in 1920 women gained the right to vote.  The road to freedom and justice for all is not an easy one. 

         On this Independence Day weekend, it’s a time for us to celebrate the many things that are good about our nation.
         But we need to remember that we follow Jesus, who came to live among us, full of grace and truth, preaching a gospel of repentance, and who claims our ultimate loyalty.  As followers of Jesus, we are continually challenged to re-dedicate ourselves to his mission, to living more fully into the kingdom of God, the kingdom of justice and peace, which we also know as Beloved Community.  As followers of Jesus, we need to repent of the ways we benefit from various privileges that others are not free to enjoy, of the systemic injustices we are reluctant to challenge.

            So I think it’s fitting that this Sunday has been designated as Immigration Sunday in the Presbyterian Church (USA), and that the gospel lesson assigned for today challenges us to think more deeply about what it means to welcome one another.
         Hospitality to strangers is a major theme in the Bible. When the Hebrews wander in the wilderness, God is a gracious host and provides them with manna and water. When the Hebrew refugees finally settle down and have a home, hospitality is written into their holy law: “You are to love the sojourner,” says the book of Deuteronomy, “for you yourselves were once sojourners in the land of Egypt.”[1]
         In Leviticus, we are taught, “When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien.  The foreigner who resides with you shall be to you as the native-born among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt.”[2]
         The theme continues in the New Testament when Jesus teaches that acts of hospitality are actually a prime indicator of a person’s relationship with God. “I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me.”[3]
         The Book of Hebrews refers back to the Genesis story of Abraham and Sarah. “Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers,” it says, “for by doing that some have entertained angels without knowing it.”[4]
         Our scriptures make it clear that hospitality to strangers is fundamental to our Christian way of life.

            Regardless of our political leanings, it seems that, at the very least, followers of Jesus know we are called to be loving, merciful, and compassionate. This should include those who pick our crops and do a lot of things that most Americans don’t want to do. At the very least, we can understand the anguish that many parents experience, that they are willing to seek a better life for their children--even if it means risking their lives. At the very least, our hearts should break when we hear about children being torn from their parents by immigration raids.
         At the least, those of us who don’t really understand the issues related to immigration and immigration reform need to commit ourselves to get better informed. Some of us took a step in that direction recently when we read and discussed the book Tell Me How It Ends in our Engage! Book Group. .[5]
         Valeria Luiselli, is a Mexican writer who was dealing with her own struggles with the immigration process, trying to get her green card, when she and her niece ended up serving as volunteer interpreters for a surge of child refugees    with an immigration court in New York City during the summer of 2014.  
         Depending on how the children answered the forty questions on the questionnaire, the children might or might not be granted legal sanctuary of some sort and a future in the United States.
         The children were from Mexico. Guatemala, El Salvadore, or Honduras. “How did you travel here?” they ask the children.  Most said, “I came on La Bestia,” which literally means “the beast,” and refers to the freight trains that cross Mexico.  As many as half a million Central Americans migrants ride La Bestia annually, on top the rail-cars or in between them. Thousands have died or been gravely injured.   The train itself is dangerous, and there are additional threats from smugglers, thieves, soldiers, or policemen who frequently threaten or attack the people on board. 
         Luiselli writes that, despite the dangers, desperate people, many of them children, “chase after life, even if that chase might end up killing them. Children run and flee. They have an instinct for survival, perhaps, that allows them to endure almost anything just to make it to the other side of horror, whatever might be waiting there for them.”[6]
         Luiselli had shared some of the children’s stories with her young daughter in the course of her work, and her daughter repeatedly asked, “Tell me how it ends, Mamma.” Luiselli has no answers for her.  So far, there are no happy endings. But toward the end of the book she offers a small hint of promise. This is an informative and heartbreaking little book, and it could be a start for any of you who need to understand immigration better.

         Our scriptures make it clear that extending hospitality to strangers is fundamental to our Christian way of life.  But what does that mean? What does it look like?
         Hospitality can mean some obvious things: offering food, drink, and shelter to the stranger in need. But in the Bible, hospitality is a much deeper concept. Hospitality is an attitude, a disposition of the heart, out of which acts of generosity naturally flow. Hospitality is a habit of the heart that needs to be cultivated. In order to do that, we need to overcome our hostility toward people who are strange to us.  We need to remember that each human being is created in the image of God[7] and is a beloved child of God.

         Our Christian faith calls us to welcome the stranger, but that idea is loaded for some, in our divided country.  As followers of Christ, we need to live as if we know that our citizenship is in heaven.[8] People of faith have a heritage of radical and risky welcome that goes back over the centuries.
         When individuals and congregations chose to serve as a stop on the underground railroad during slavery in the United States of America, the church was engaging in the risky business of welcome as sanctuary.
          In the late twentieth century, churches responded to a humanitarian crisis of thousands of Central American refugees fleeing violent conflicts, which in many cases were fueled by United States government policies. These churches created the 1980’s Sanctuary Movement, born along the southern borders of the United States.
         In recent months, the number of churches who have officially declared themselves to be sanctuary churches has grown exponentially. I know of Methodist churches in Detroit and Ferndale who have offered sanctuary for refugees. In Western North Carolina, congregations who can’t or don’t want to declare Sanctuary can declare themselves as a “Supporting Sanctuary” church, pledging resources, people, and assistance to those churches who have declared Sanctuary.
         Some of us, as individuals, have provided what support we can for the immigrant community by purchasing food, diapers, and other necessities.

         I think we have a lot of ambivalence about what Jesus’ call to welcome should look like today, in our context.  What does it look like to embody Jesus’ radical welcome?
         We call this space in which we worship the “sanctuary.” I’ve been thinking about what the word means, so I looked it up and found that it can describe the most sacred part of a religious building, where worship services are held. But it also means “a place of refuge and protection.”
         I think we need to practice talking about this in loving and constructive ways. Is this a place of refuge and protection for us? Is it a place of refuge and protection for others?  Whom are we willing to welcome, in the name of Jesus?
         I don’t have any definitive answers for the questions I’m asking today, but I do believe we need to be talking and praying about them.

         As we come to the Lord’s Table today, may we be open to experience Christ’s presence in this holy mystery.  May we be fed and strengthened.  As we experience God’s gracious love, may we be transformed.  May our commitment to Jesus Christ and his radical welcome be renewed.
         Then let us go out into the world to serve Jesus by speaking and embodying God’s truth and love.
         Amen!

Rev. Fran Hayes, Pastor
Littlefield Presbyterian Church
Dearborn, Michigan
July 2, 2017


[1] Deuteronomy 10:19
[2] Levitius 19:34
[3] Matthew 25
[4] Hebrews 13:2
[5] Valeria Luiselli, Tell Me How It Ends: An Essay in Forty Questions (Coffee House Press, 2017).
[6] Luiselli, pages 19-20.
[7] Genesis 1:26
[8] Philippians 3:20

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