Hostility to Hospitality to Family – Hebrews 13:2

This exhortation comes at the end of the book of Hebrews, a part of a list of closing instructions – love each other, minister to those in prison, be sexually moral, and this one. “Do not forget to show hospitality to strangers, for by so doing some people have shown hospitality to angels without knowing it.”

The term is philoxenia, a combination of the terms philos or affection, and xenos or stranger. We see this same instruction in Romans 12:13 – “Share with the Lord’s people who are in need. Practice hospitality.” Both the people of God and the stranger, the xenos, are covered here.

The concept of welcoming the stranger is a continuance of the same instructions in the Old Testament where it is often connected to the people of Israel living as strangers, whether in Egypt or in Babylon.

But there is an additional angle here, this idea that there is more to these encounters than just the practical. At one level, it’s a reference to the story in Genesis where Abram and Sarai welcome and show hospitality to angels and are blessed in turn – or the reverse of that story that results in the destruction of Sodom. This negative example gives us a strong sense of how important hospitality is to God.

Beyond that is the promise that when we serve others in this way, we are touching something more than human, beyond the material world. It’s echo of the promise that when we serve others we are really serving Jesus in a very personal way. There is a magic to hospitality that transcends the practical effects, as valuable as those are.

And if we look at the “sin of Sodom” we also see that there is a negative magic as well, associated with hostility towards the stranger. This should give us pause, and give pause to the portions of the American church in particular that have set themselves up in opposition to the strangers and immigrants in our midst, painting them as criminals and as taking resources from deserving Americans.

In reality, immigrant churches are driving forward the kingdom of God across the country, especially in urban areas where white churches have declined or closed. A majority of the baptisms performed by the Evangelical church today are by immigrant churches. Immigration of non-Christians is bringing the mission field to the USA, while the work of immigrant pastors and churches are evangelizing Americans, reversing the typical ministry flow.

We must seek to go from hostility to hospitality to family as we engage with the strangers and immigrants around us. We should seek to learn from the ways of worship and teaching that seem foreign to us instead of putting up walls. We know that the ultimate destiny of the church is exactly this congregation from all peoples and all tribes.

But this unification of all voices can look a lot like a loss of control if we are used to being the only voice being heard. We must put that fear aside and instead step into the supernatural opportunity we are given to show hospitality to strangers–and possibly even to angels.

–Sermon Notes, Dave Sim, Renew Church, Lynnwood WA, November 2, 2025

The Sufficiency of God’s Message, Christ – Hebrews 1:1-3

Often in our lives, we wish God would just speak directly, concretely, telling us exactly what we should do or say, especially in the midst of major life decisions. It can be frustrating when He doesn’t do this. But God does speak to us, and here the author of Hebrews talks about how He does this.

This letter, though we don’t know the author, was written to Jewish Christians who were struggling to understand the nature and superiority of Christ versus the incomplete picture given to the Jews in the Old Testament.

In the past, God spoke through prophets, but that was not sufficient. There was a break of 400 years without any prophets, until the appearance of John the Baptist, the Herald of Christ, the new and final message, a message so vital that it came not merely as words but as a Person.

We are told several things here about Christ as the greatest message of God that we should remember when we seek to hear from God.

First, Christ is the heir of all things. He is bound to rule and care for His family. Ultimately, we are all His, as is everything around us. He is Himself the creator of all things. All the beauty of nature and all the genius of humanity has its origin in Him.

Second, He is the radiance of God’s glory. Like the light of the sun, we see the glory of God by the actions of Christ. He is, according Hebrews “the exact representation of God.” Christ himself said, “if you have seen me, you have seen the Father.” Separate from the Father and yet unified in the Trinity. Even coming as an infant, a carpenter and itinerant preacher, the glory of God shone out of Him.

Third, Christ sustains all things. Everything we take for granted is granted us by the love and grace of Christ. This gives us hope, because our trust in Him rests on the same thing that supports the very universe.

And He doesn’t merely sustain the universe, but purifies it, and us. This work of purification was complete and full, and afterwards He rested at the right hand of the Father.

The message God spoke through His Son was amazing, complete and sufficient. Christ’s life is the message that is sufficient to guide us in our lives.

Like in the garden, though, we question the sufficiency of this message from God. Like children who haven’t finished their dinner and yet are hungry, we think we have consumed all of what Christ is and want something more and new. Rather than asking for a new message, we should seek to better know and understand the message God gave us through His Son. It is not a message that comes to us once and is then finished with us, but a message that progressively reveals more and more to us about how we should love and love and find satisfaction in Christ.

– Sermon Notes, Jeff Krabach, Seed Church, Lynnwood, WA, July 8, 2018

Hebrews 1:1-3

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