A recent response on an article of mine got me to thinking.
The response was centered around someone who came up to a woman and asked her if she knew the name of any local pastors. When pressed for what the man wanted, the man said he needed a place to stay for the night. The woman pointed him to a $10 a night flophouse and felt she had done her Christian duty. The man, according to the tale, walked away in a huff because she hadn't given the name of a pastor, as he had requested. After all, that HAD been his request.
And so, I got to thinking: what if Jesus came to your town? Would you recognize Him? Would you give him room and food for the night? And how would you recognize Him if you said that you would?
Hebrews 13:2 admonishes Christians to: "Be not forgetful to entertain strangers; for thereby some have entertained angels unawares". In this tale, the man was certainly a stranger, and a response consistent with the Christian call would have been to have helped him in any way she could. Certainly it would have been no burden for her to provide him with the name of a pastor, or even try to do so if indeed she didn't know the names of the pastors in town.
How will this lady give account when she stands before judgment? Will she be able to honestly say she lived a Christian life? Frankly, unless she repents, the answer is not what she would like to here, but is, instead, a clear and resounding NO. In Jesus' own recorded words (Matthew 25:31-46), He not only says that those who have fed the hungry, given drink for the thirsty, taken in the stranger, clothed the naked, and visited the sick and imprisoned will inherit the kingdom, but that those who FAIL to respond to this commission will NOT. He clearly states: "inasmuch as ye did not to one of the least of these, ye did not unto me", and follows with the prophecy: "and these shall go away into everlasting punishment".
Many in the church want the church to be a social club. They want to purchase their "stairway to heaven" by giving tithes, but they don't want to stop and help the stranger on the road to Damascus. They don't seem to realize that no amount of money can replace the touch of a hand that loves unconditionally and obediently. They don't seem to realize that their decision to follow Jesus is a call to action on their part to be transformed into the type of person that embodies Jesus in their everyday actions.
I'm FAR from perfect. I regret so many missed opportunities, so many people I could have and should have reached with my actions. But I can't go back and change that. All I can do is ask forgiveness, and in my repentance, strive to make my actions more consistent with my faith. And I can, and should, act as a watchman, warning the church and all in it that many are failing to heed what Jesus called one of the two commandments: loving one's neighbour as onesself. And I can, and should, entertain every stranger as if I were entertaining Jesus Christ Himself.
Because I just might be.
What about you, fellow Christians? Can you truly say that you have treated every stranger as you would treat Jesus, and that you have fed the hungry, given drink to the thirsty, clothed the naked and visited the sick and imprisoned? Can you truly say that you have lived the life that honors God consistently (and thus demand that you are "right with God"? If not, then you should prayerfully consider repenting and changing your actions in the future.