The Hostess with the Mostest (Maximizing Your Hospitality Efforts)

For previous posts in this series on hospitality, please click here and here

It is a common for me to hear that people want to be more hospitable. When people desire to be more open to hosting people in their home, but then fail to follow through, one of the most common reasons is that they aren’t sure they can “pull it off.” Usually, this means that they have invented unlikely scenarios in their head, and they haven’t quite figured out how they will deal with them if they should occur. Generally speaking, I find that this is code for – “but what will people do when they are at my house?” In other words, there seems to be some concern that even if the meal is prepped, and the house is cleaned, that upon arrival, people will be at a lost for how to make sure that the time together is a success. Here are a few things that I have found helpful to maximize the moments when we open the doors of our home:

Invest in Fun Games

Maybe it is the type of people I hang out with, but I have never met someone who doesn’t enjoy a good board game. In our house, we have a variety of games for various skills and age levels. They have proven to be an easy way to continue the fellowship that comes after the meal, and as I previously wrote about, playing a board game with someone can give you insight into their personality and character that you otherwise might not have. Try to choose games that won’t take hours to play (i.e. avoid Monopoly, Risk, or Axis and Allies), and try to find games that, if they are interested, kids can join in and play too. If games are relatively simple to explain, but still contain an element of strategy or purposefulness, even better. Board games are a minimal investment, but they can pay big dividends in making your hospitality efforts effective.

If you have an outside space, you may consider investing in some outdoor activities too. This past summer we bought a bunch of easy-to-fill water balloons and had great fun having impromptu water balloon fights when we would invite people over to visit. A few soccer balls or a basketball hoop can go a long way to entertaining people as well. I don’t know what specifically will work for you, but if you are intentional about using some of the resources that God has given you to buy activities that guests can enjoy, I can almost guarantee it will make the time you spend hosting, and the time your guests spend visiting, more memorable.

Let Others Participate

Often when we invite people over to our home, we think that we have to pull all the details together ourselves. When people ask if there is something that they can bring, we quickly say “nothing” – either because we want to have sole command of the gathering or because we haven’t figured out yet what the plan is. Fight this tendency. People like to contribute and by letting them, you are actually creating a more welcoming environment for them because in letting them help, you are treating them like family. If you don’t have a meal planned yet, let them bring something that goes with almost anything. Even if I don’t know what I’m serving, I can tell people who ask that they can bring a salad or a dessert. If kids are coming, you can give your guests the option of bringing juice boxes for them to enjoy. These are relatively easy items for others to bring if they are the type who will make a quick trip to the store. If they are an elaborate chef who enjoys presentation – they can pursue those endeavors with both the salad and the dessert. However they approach it, your willingness to let them contribute will make them feel more at ease, and will go a long way to building genuine relationships.

Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff

If you are going to commit to be more hospitable, there are probably a lot of “ideals” that you are going to have to relinquish. For example – we often use paper goods in our house when we are hosting other people. This certainly isn’t the fanciest, but I have yet to hear a complaint, and I know that using paper goods makes clean-up afterwards easier, thus increasing the likelihood that I will be ready and willing to host again soon. I have also never had someone inspect my carpets or my counters to make sure that they are clean enough to eat off of. This isn’t to say that I throw all preparation out the window (if you happen to come over, do not fear – we will clean!) – but I try to major on what is most important, and not worry about the things that are inconsequential. A stressed host doesn’t make for a good host. And the more I enjoy the time spent with friends in my home, the most likely that they will too.

It’s Not Your Home

Lastly, one of the most important tips I can give you is to remember that the house in which you host people is not your home. First and foremost, if you are a child of God, then Heaven is your home. All your time and effort here should be focused on making a difference that will last in Eternity. Therefore, the inconveniences and challenges that come with hosting should pale in comparison to the fact that God may use the open doors of your house to open the doors of people’s hearts to a deeper, more sanctified relationship with Him. What matters therefore is not how much you plan the menu or the activities, but how intentional you are about using the time inside the walls where you reside to point people to Him.

There is another way that our house is not our home; the place where we live, like all good gifts, comes from God (James 1:17). It is rightly His – we are just stewarding it for however long He desires. Therefore, our mindset shouldn’t be whether we “feel” like having people over, but whether God has called to do so. If He has, than as obedient children, we should. Not because of the benefits accrued to us (although there are many), but because we long to please our Heavenly Father and to use whatever He has granted us to bring Him glory and praise.

Continue Reading

When The Holidays Are Hard

When we think of the holidays, we tend to think of joyous memories and festive celebrations. There is a reason for this. For many, this season is truly “the most wonderful time of the year.” They savor their holiday coffees and relish the search for the perfect gift.  They take joy in the times spent with family and friends and look forward to the respite from the daily grind. They have much to celebrate and can look back on the previous year with thankfulness and great joy.

As much as we might hope that this portrait reflects everyone’s experience, the truth is that it does not. For some, this holiday season is hard because instead of a time to celebrate all that they have, it is a painful reminder of what they have lost. The preceding year may have been filled with challenges, difficulties, or grief, and the twinkling Christmas lights only seem to illuminate and intensify their pain. If this describes you this season, or if you know someone for which this rings true, here are four things we should encourage ourselves, and others, to do when the holidays are hard:

Keep Eternity in View

One of the challenges about painful seasons is that it is hard to get away from our pain. It is ever present, like an extra appendage that we carry with us. Sometimes it can be difficult to see beyond our hurt. Yet if we are a child of God, we know that our focus should never be on this Earth. Our heart’s longing, and our purposeful focus, should be fixed on Eternity. There are things that God has called us to accomplish on this Earth but this is not His children’s Home. Whatever pain we experience now is temporary until He calls us to be with Him. If we recognize that our afflictions are “light” and “momentary” compared to the future glory we will experience when we are with Him (2 Cor. 4:17), it may not immediately lessen our hurt, but it will certainly help us keep it in perspective.

Focus On What God Has Given You

Seasons of challenge and pain are often intensified by the fact that things are not as we wish they were. We ache because of the struggles, but we also ache because our thoughts about our future – what we dreamed for and anticipated – are different than the path God has called us to walk. In these moments, it is helpful to remember that God uses even our struggles and our difficulties for the good of His children (Ro. 8:28). Life may not be what you thought it would be, but God is at work in the life that you have. Focus on what God has given you – the specific good gifts that you can identify and enumerate. But also remember that even if you can’t see it yet, if you are God’s kid, He is working through your pain to bring about His good purposes. Furthermore, the affliction that you are experiencing may be used by Him to help someone else later down the road (2 Cor. 1:4), and even that is a gift that without this trial, you may not have been able to experience.

Dive Into Serving Others

When we are in pain, we can tend to focus inward as we contend with the hurt. One of the best ways that I know how to deal with difficult seasons is to commit to serving others while you are going through them. Regardless of what is going on in your life, you will likely be able to find someone who has greater struggles. This won’t be easy – you are going to have to fight to bless other people even as you deal with your hurt. But it will be worth it. Your circumstances may not change because of your service to others, but your heart and your attitude likely will. And there are few better ways to spend the holidays, even the holidays that are hard, than blessing someone else and being an ambassador of Christ’s love to someone who needs Him.

Recall What Jesus Did….For You

Our familiarity with the Christmas account may prompt us to overlook the great sacrifice that Jesus made in condescending to come to Earth as a baby. We are more likely to associate sacrifice with Jesus’ death on the cross. While that assuredly was a sacrifice of great cost, the commemoration of His birth should also remind us of the great depths of His love. Jesus left Heaven – a place where He was rightly honored and glorified, where His majesty was continually proclaimed and praised, in order to come to Earth as a baby, willingly dependent upon people whom He created to provide for His basic needs, knowing full well that He would be ridiculed, mocked, beaten, and shamed, all because of His great love for us. Regardless of the hurt and difficulties that you experience during this time of year, you will never experience a greater love than this. And the same Savior who was willing to go to such magnitudes for you, will see you through this season as well.

 

In Any Season

Before Jesus’ ascended to Heaven, one of the promises that He left with His disciples was that He would always be with them (Mt. 28:20). If you are God’s child, you can take comfort in the fact that this promise is for you too. Whether this holiday season is full of joyous celebrations, or if it is replete with pleading prayers, God is with you. And He will continue to be with you – through all the joys, and the pains, that lay ahead.

Continue Reading