Sunday, September 23, 2012

Devotion #1- Plunge

I recently agreed to do a devotion of sorts for my MOPS group. The following is the first installment for our new season of MOPS. I hope you find it uplifting and inspiring!


1 Peter 4:8-10 "Above all keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins. Show hospitality to one another without grumbling. As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God's varied grace."

 

I'm going to be honest here and admit that I struggle with hospitality.  To me it represents the core of what a woman should be and I just don't have that gift. Effortless entertaining is just not my thing despite the fact that my mom was really good at it.  Sadly,  the gene just didn't get transferred. I'm the person who thinks I have all the ingredients for the recipe and then somehow at the last minute realize that I am one ingredient short or I'm cooking something I have cooked numerous times before only to get confused at the last minute and skip a step rendering the recipe a failure. I blame part of my problem on my refusal in elementary school to memorize  the cooking measurements.  Who knew those pesky little conversions would be so important later on?

Regardless of my failings in math, God has been working in my heart in the area of hospitality. Specifically, He has been convicting me in the area of loving my neighbors. I struggled with this when I realized that I didn't even know them. This fact is somewhat justified by the neighborhood in which we live. Everyone lives on at least three acres that are primarily wooded. I literally have not seen my next door neighbor in five years. I recently found out one of the houses on my street sat empty for two years and I didn't even notice. All that changed the day that my then two year old locked me out of the house while I was bringing in groceries forcing me to have to meet the neighbor across the street so that I could ask to use their phone.

Needless to say,  a special friendship with that neighbor was quickly formed and we discussed the need to get to know our other neighbors.  After finding out she was a party planner, it was quickly decided that we needed to have a block party for the neighbors on our street.   With her making a living out of hospitality,  I knew she would be able to teach this severely lacking student a thing or two.  Being an English teacher in my previous life, I wrote up the invitations and she had them printed using her connections as a party planner. A week later we handed out the invitations together by going door to door.  I  coordinated the food being brought and she did the running around buying the paper goods and other supplies. It ended up being a  partnership that only God could have orchestrated. 

That afternoon after the block party ended,  I remember going home with a huge smile filling my face.  My spirit was full from connecting with others. My belly was full from good food shared. My hands were full of food that neighbors had insisted I take in return for planning the block party for them. My heart was full from all the thank you's and kind words I unexpectedly received.  I was so thankful that I listened to God's voice and more importantly that I was obedient in allowing myself to be used as an instrument of hospitality which for me represented taking a scary plunge into the unknown. A  verse about Jesus coming to give life to the fullest ran across my mind as I reluctantly walked home and maybe in a small way, this is exactly what He meant.

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