Church Hospitality and Belonging

Welcoming

I’ve recently had the joy of connecting with a Spanish speaking small church. It’s a small church, bouncing from 15-40 in attendance.

Our first visit was sometime last year, maybe October.  I’m clearly an American, so I stuck out. (When I visited a 700 member Spanish church in Panama, people welcomed me in English — my visit was a novelty).

We were welcomed, greeted, introduced to the Pastor, invited for coffee.

The welcome we received overcame all the clumsy portions of the service: feedback in the microphone, words misspelled in the songs, slides missing, laptop projector not working 100%, musicians starting music in different rhythms.

If one was into nitpicking quality, this church could be a case study.

But,

their hospitality overcame all those potential drawbacks.

The second time we visited, we were warmly received again, and invited to a home for Thanksgiving dinner.

Belonging

Now its 7 months later. We go every Sunday night.

We’ve been invited to homes, and in one case called 4 times by different people to make sure we were going to attend a cookout.

We feel loved and accepted, even when I don’t understand everything spoken to me.

In fact, there is one brother that I can’t understand at all. I need his heavily accented Spanish translated into Spanish so I can understand him. But they have the patience to repeat themselves and to make sure I understand.

We will miss this little church when we leave. They have already scheduled a cookout / farewell reception (two of them, actually) for us.

We have moved from visiting to belonging.

So what?

The hospitality of this little church overcame lots of possible quality issues that could drive visitors away. A church that focuses only on quality but doesn’t welcome the visitor is focused on the wrong issue.

When we were simply visitors, we weren’t ready to connect. Rather, this little church took the initiative to reach out to us, connect to us, and welcome us into their world. It was a one way street for a while.

Their hospitality has helped us to emotionally connect to this congregation.

We belong.

The Support Work

Hospitality in a church sets a good environment for hearing the gospel proclaimed. Hospitality itself is not evangelism — rather it’s an environmental factor that allows the gospel to be heard without distraction.Churches that I consult with are very interested in hospitality — the nuts and bolts of welcoming the visitor, making a good impression with a clean building, typo-less bulletins, clean and bright nurseries for children. But let’s not be confused — hospitality is not evangelism.

Rather, it is a leg that supports the evangelism work of the church.

Let me ask you this?

Think of the time when you first connected to your current church.

How important was the church’s hosptality to your decision to connect?

Now how do you personally welcome the stranger in your midst?

Other related posts:
How not to welcome a visitor
Hospitality is a piece of evangelism
No One Said Hello
I can’t silence the pain.
I want to feel Jesus

This story is one of the many stories in my book.  In the book, I elaborate more as to why evangelism is not hospitality

How To Welcome Church Visitors

Related posts:
About EvangelismCoach

Chris wants to help you increase the number of conversations that lead people towards Christ. He has studied evangelism and church growth ever since working for a Billy Graham crusade over 20 years ago, and has led countless training seminars throughout North and South America in many different denominations.

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