Sunday, September 1, 2013

She Had a Formidable Spirit and a Sturdy Cane

Brno, Czech Republic




C Lectionary 22 – September 1, 2013
Text: Hebrews 13:1-8, 15-16
Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, Grand Prairie, Texas

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May grace be yours, from God our Father, and the Lord, Jesus Christ. Amen.

Today, we finish up in the book of Hebrews, and in today’s reading, we are near the end of that letter, in chapter 13. Like Galatians and Colossians, as well as other letters, Hebrews ends with some words of exhortation for its readers. Kind of like a person leaving a note for the house-sitter for while they’ll be out of town: please remember to turn off the dryer before you leave the house; please feed the dog in the morning and at night; please water the plants twice a week.

And so, before wrapping up his letter (or sermon), the author of Hebrews has a few final things to say, and he begins with one over-arching appeal: “Let mutual love continue.”[1] And what’s the first thing on his list for mutual love? “Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for by doing that, some have entertained angels without knowing it.”[2]

True to form, the author is referring here to at least one story from the Old Testament – the story of Abraham and Sarah entertaining angels in Genesis 18. There they are, Abraham and Sarah, in their tent, finding some shade there in the heat of the day, when three strangers show up. Offering basic hospitality to strangers is expected in this culture, and so Abraham does that – offering water to wash the dust off their feet, shade to cool off in, and bread to eat.

Little do they know, upon opening those tent flaps and looking out, that they are really entertaining angels – actual angels. Not angels like we might think of them – with wings and harps – but angels in the true meaning of the word, “angel,” which is, “messenger.” And the message they carry from God is a big one – so big, in fact, that Sarah laughs when she first hears it – for these strangers bring the good news that after many years of waiting and growing older, Sarah will soon be pregnant with their first child.

And so – with one simple dinner party with a few angels – Abraham and Sarah are on to the next part of their relationship with God. They’ve been waiting for so long for God to fulfill his promise to them that their descendants would be greater than the number of stars in the sky. These strangers have now changed their lives – and changed the world – forever.

Hospitality, then, has consequences we can’t always see right away. It’s a risk, after all, to be hospitable. The author of Hebrews knows that just as well as anyone else – but, he says, out of mutual love, be hospitable, anyway.

About twenty years ago, I was serving as a missionary in Eastern Europe. We had spent about a month in Russia, and then we traveled west to the Czech Republic to spend several weeks there. We hooked up with different contacts at various points on our trip, and in the city of Brno (in the Czech Republic), our main contact person’s name was Andrew. He served as translator and guide during our time there.

One day – I don’t remember why – several of us were out and about and we were supposed to meet Andrew at his home. We found the address easily enough but he wasn’t home, so we waited out front for him. While we waited, his neighbor came home – an older lady, short, but with a formidable spirit and a sturdy cane.

She started yelling at us in Czech, which, of course, none of us spoke. We tried gesticulating, but she raised her cane in response and yelled louder. We went around our group of three, trying to figure out what language one of us might speak that she might also speak. Finally, I tried out my public high school French – “Parlez vous Français?” I asked.
“Oui, oui!” she responded, calming down.

My mind raced, trying to remember words that might apply to this particular situation (which, by the way, is not a scenario we ever talked about in high school)…” C'est le chez de mon ami, André,” I said, slowly and poorly, while pointing toward the house (“It is the home of my friend, Andrew”).

“AH! AH! André!” she began to yell, now excited. Her tone changed completely as she began speaking in French way too fast for me to follow – the important thing was, we were no longer in danger of having her call the police or beat us with her cane.

And then, the most extraordinary thing happened. This was January. It was cold. She began to gesture toward her own home, right next door, obviously wanting us to come inside with her. And so we did. And this older, formidable woman with the sturdy cane insisted on serving us coffee and snacks, as we sat in her kitchen, surrounded by her collection of crucifixes hanging on the wall.

Clearly, this was a woman who knew Jesus.

And beyond knowing Jesus, this was a woman who knew how to entertain strangers, too. I don’t know what message we brought her that day – maybe she was lonely and just wanted some companionship. Maybe she was nosy and wanted to know more about who Andrew was hanging around with. But – this I do know – by the time we left her house (after Andrew eventually found us), there was a sense of mutual love – love shared as brothers and sisters in Christ. It took some time and some effort to get to that point, but then again, most expressions of love do take time and effort!

We never know who it is we are welcoming into our midst. I’m not saying we shouldn’t be discerning – we have to be. But I invite us to think about hospitality beyond simply making sure the coffee is made and the cookies are set out. I invite us to consider that hospitality is graced by mutual love of some kind – if not love that we feel for each other, then at least a sharing of the love that God has for this other person. And when we begin to think of hospitality as a way of offering love to someone else, we begin to realize that we, too, are given grace. We, too, are given love.

“Now may the God of peace…make you complete in everything good so that you may do his will, working among us that which is pleasing in his sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be the glory forever and ever. Amen.”[3]

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[1] Hebrews 13:1
[2] Hebrews 13:2
[3] Hebrews 13:20

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