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The Role of Biblical Hospitality in the Formation ofMissional Communities in the Exurbs of America
By
William Guice
Fuller Theological Seminary
School of Intercultural Studies
Doctor of Missiology
Edmond Gibbs, D.Min & Mark Hopkins, Ph.D.
Summer 2010
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Table of Contents
Table of Contents.........................................................................................................2Summary Sheet............................................................................................................3Introduction..................................................................................................................5American Exurbs.........................................................................................................8Biblical Hospitality....................................................................................................20Missional Communities.............................................................................................37Modeling For Engagement........................................................................................44Works Cited:..............................................................................................................50
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Summary Sheet
Title: The role of biblical hospitality in the formation of missional communities in the American suburbs
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to explore how the practice of biblical hospitality can yieldtransferable principals for the formation of missional communities in the American exurbs.
Goal: The goal of this study is to provide principles that can serve as a guide for leaders wanting toestablish missional communities in the American exurbs.
CRI: The central research issue of this study is the role of biblical hospitality and emerging MissionalCommunities in exurban America.
Variables:
A. Biblical Hospitality
B. Exurban America
C. Missional Communities
Research Questions:
1. What are key markers of biblical hospitality? (A)a. How is hospitality presented in the Scriptures?b. How has the practice been explored historically?c. What are characteristics of places of hospitality?
d. Is there evidence ofhospitality being used as an effective evangelism strategy?2. What are the contextual characteristics of the American exurbs? (B)
a. What are the founding factors of exurban living?b. What is the demographic makeup of the exurbs (economics, ethnicity, familySize, religious background, etc.)
c. Where and when do people living in the exurbs connect with other people?d. How has exurban living affected interpersonal relationships?e. How has exurban living effected our view of who is my neighbor?
3. What are defining markers of missional communities? (C)
a. What makes a community missional?b. How are missional communities different than small groups or house churches?c. Are there values or principles that are common and transferable?
4. How can emerging missional communities model biblical hospitality to engage theAmerican exurbs?a. What transferable principles have been found?b. Are there pitfalls that can lead to success and failure of this method of reaching into theexurbs?
c. Is there a process of implementation that allows for indigenous implementation andintegration?
Literature Review Categories:
1. Biblical Hospitality (RQ1)
2. American Exurbs (RQ2)
3. Missional Communities (RQ3)
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Significance:I believe that the work that will be carried forth in this study will be significant for me as I am part ofleading The Church at Spring Hill and for numbers of other leaders who are looking for information onexurban America, missional communities and practicing Biblical hospitality. The work will aid me as I leadour network of missional communities in reaching the city of Spring Hill, Williamson and Maury countiesand the world. We have been successful in our community starts so far but as we expand betterinformation will be needed as hosts and leaders get are further removed from the original planting core andtheir point of critical mass (the inertia of the moment being incredibly important in motivating people earlyon). The information and principles that will be derived from this study will hopefully serve as a guide toestablishing more missional communities. The work will be rendered in a way that it will be an aid to otherchurch leaders who are looking to birth missional communities in similar exurban settings across America.
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Introduction
Following World War II a new medium of housing development was established
in the United States the suburbs. These areas were created to relieve housing shortages
in the urban centers. With the advent of the automobile, many people could now live
outside the city center and drive in to the working areas.
The suburbs provided clean spacious areas and for many they were the picture of
the American dream, but this new mode of living did not come without cost. This way of
living has subtly and quietly changed the majority of Americans who live in them and the
church needs to know how and why people have changed if she hopes to function
missionaly in their midst.
Before World War II homes were built upward and placed close together to
promoted density. The housing areas had small streets and sidewalks. The houses
generally had front porches. Passing conversations with neighbors and commuters was
common as everyone was close together and the lack of technology that is prevalent
today, no television, as we know it or air conditioning, meant that people stayed outside.
They knew each other and spent time together.
Following World War II and into the late 20 th century as developers targeted more
affluent crowds, the suburbs changed. As they grew and as the Interstate systems
expanded, the housing presence moved outward and changed again. Streets were now
wider to accommodate faster driving, homes and yards now sit behind privacy fences and
there are few spaces for communal gatherings. The gathering places are now stores and
restaurants but not in the former sense. Today these establishments have drive through
windows and take out. You just dont have to be there. In America our ability to travel
and acquire more goods and service has grown but so to has our isolation. The home
instead of being the place where the family met and was productive in a social way has
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now become a fortress where people hide from the world. We are more connected
technologically than ever; me have more of the world out our fingertips than ever but we
are sadly and utterly alone. During the evening hours, the time when families and
neighbors used to connect, most of suburban and exurban Americans can be found
darting around the city shuttling their kids to the next event or hiding behind their privacy
fences.
For much of the American population, for those who live in the suburbs and now
on the fringes in exurbs life is nothing but a box-to-box shuffle. These people wake up in
a wood and mortar box just to move to a metal box with wheels, which then transports
them to a metal and stone box where they will work. Chances are that this workbox is
divided into rows or sets smaller boxes of glass, medal or maybe carpet where work
happens, sectioned off from everyone else. It will take effort and some times risk for any
two box dwellers to interact.
Those box dwellers that are fortunate get to leave the big work box in their metal
wheeled box to have a meal in another metal mortar or wood box where they could quite
possibly be served there meal in a box. They will then enter the medal box with wheels
go back to the work box(s) for the afternoon only to re-enter the metal box with wheels
that will take them back to their own wood or mortar box where they will probably stare
at a box, shower in a box and then sleep on a box until they wake up and do the box
shuffle all over again.
This monotonous existence is reality to many Americans who thought they were
chasing a dream but have found themselves in a nightmare of isolation and monotony. So
as a church leader the question must be asked where is the church? What does the church
do to help these box people or is this lifestyle acceptable? Does the church without
knowing it just provide another more cool box for them to visit, complete with their own
prayer boxes, offering boxes, classroom boxes or even box seats. Sadly after much
observation and research it seems that the church in America is often clueless about what
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to do to get people who were created by a God who is ultimately not boxed in or
monotonous to step out of their boxes to see that God created them for more than the
box-to-box shuffle. The church often just adds another metal and mortar box giving the
dance a new verse to the same old song.
It is my intention to review the literature on three research topics, which I believe
will lead to principles that can help communities of people, be missional in the American
exurbs so that this chain of isolation and monotony can be broken. The topics of interest
are the American exurbs, biblical hospitality and missional communities. It is my
contention that to meet people in their monotony and to help them find their way out into
the existence that God created for them (Ephesians 2:10) then we need missional
communities that are operating in exuburban America and I believe that the best way for
these communities to be birthed and thrive is through the life style of hospitality.
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American Exurbs
In the latter half of the American 20th century a new mode of living arose around
the cities of America. The bedroom community, also known as exurb, found its place at
the forefront of American living environments. These communities are known as
bedroom communities due to the fact that the people who live there generally only sleep
there. Auguste Comte Spectorsky established the more official label of exurb, for extra-
urban, in 1955 in his book The Exurbanites. Spectorsky used the term to describe the
communities that existed at the edges of a metropolitan area. These locales were beyond
the suburbs and were a place for people to live and be close enough to commute into
work (1955). These bedroom communities or exurbs go by any number of names and the
vast variation in these fringe cities has contributed to an inability to sufficiently label
them, though many names do exist1 (Brooks 2004) . Exurbs are growing in recognition.
In 2005 exurbs, exurbia, exurbanites were mentioned twice as many times in American
newspapers than they were in 2003 and 4 times as many times as they were in 1995
(Alan Berube 2006). Brooks later adds that these new communities have been able to
escape the gravitational pull of the city center to establish themselves as functioning
entities on the very edge of many American metropolitan areas (2004: 2).
Exurbs orbit at the edge of metropolitan areas but are different than the suburbs
that they often lie just outside of. These exurbs often have a green belt or open space in
1 David Brooks points out in On Paradise Drive that there are a number of names for these areas:edgeless city, major diversified center, multicentered net, ruraburbia, boomburg, spread city, technoburb,suburban growth corridor or sprinkler cities. In Megalopolis Unbound Robert Fishman adds the names
urban village, megalopolis, outtown, sprawl, slurb, nonplace, and urban field The fact that, in a culture thatis quick to label anything, researchers have not sufficiently labeled these fringe communities, may point toa strategic point of emphasis for church leaders seeking to plant and grow missional communities. I live inan exurb in Spring Hill, TN. By the same account Saddleback Community Church in Lake Forest, CA isalso in an exurb community. Demographic and geographic studies of each area will show vast differencesbetween the two though. They are not urban, suburban or rural. They need to be defined on a city-by-citybasis. There may be a danger here in considering all exurbs to be the same and there may be further workthat needs to be done in honing in on types of exurbs. This will be crucially important if church leaders arenot going to try a cookie-cutter approach to reaching their community but are intent on knowing, servingand loving it.
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between them and suburban areas that acts as a land moat (Barker 2009). Suburbs and
exurbs both contain housing units but there are differences between the two. As a rule,
suburbs are geographically located adjacent to work opportunities for its inhabitants. The
suburbs also take on more and more economic diversity as services are added to meet the
needs of its inhabitants. Exurbs on the other hand are for the most part residential areas.
They exist simply for the inhabitants to have living space. Very few services exist outside
of chain or big-box stores and restaurants.
Economies of suburban America reached unprecedented diversity by the 1980s
and could easily be said to have lost their bedroom community status. The suburbs in
many places contain all the elements of a city including a large number of poor
households (Lang 2003). The suburbs now had the same elements as the urban centers.
These characteristics were often things that people were trying to avoid. So, they looked
elsewhere; they looked further out.
The racial make up of todays exurbs is as well much different than the suburbs of
the late twentieth century. During that time those that lived in the outermost areas, the
suburbs, were predominately white. The outer ring housing or exurbs of the 21st century
are a mixture of races and cultures (Lyman 2005). Exurbanites are driven out to the
exurbs by many forces but the idea of white flight seems to have subsided in most
fringe areas of America.
Lyman points out as well that different from many suburban settings, homes in
exurban areas often face away from the street. Most of what happens in these homes is
guarded from public view and the houses are characteristically larger with less room in
between (2005). The families that he interviewed in the exurban city of Frisco, TX said
that they rarely see their neighbors. They have experienced the loss of neighborhood
friendships and have seen a decline in volunteering among friends in their childrens
activities. People are just not that involved or connected. This seems almost in
opposition to the early days of American suburbs with their front porches and evening
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walks. Something has changed but what is it and why?
The last decade has seen a phenomenal number of Americans now living in
exurbs. In the year 2000 there were approximately 10.8 million people living in the
exurbs of metropolitan areas. These areas grew twice as fast as the metropolitan areas
themselves did and by 31 percent in the 1990s. The majority of exurbs are located in the
south and Midwest with the south having 5 million people living in exurban areas. This
number represents 47 percent of the exurban population nation wide (Alan Berube 2006).
A Bloomburg Business Week article from August 2005 pointed that between 2000 and
2004, 17 of the 20 fastest growing counties in the USA were exurban in nature (Morrison
2005). A study from the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University showed
that between 1990 and 2000 there was an increase in over 2 million people who were
driving more than an hour to work in the 49 largest metropolitan areas in the United State
(Studies 2005).
Many exurbs find their genesis due to push forces that drives people out from
their present place of living to the edges of the metropolitan space. Suburban centers
often begin to house manufacturing, transportation and information processing centers.
Businesses over time are often drawn to the suburbs because they are less crowded and
appear to be safer than the city centers or business parks they have inhabited (Eiesland
2000). People often move to get away from the business that have intruded into the
suburban areas or most often for the opportunity to obtain inexpensive housing (Alan
Berube 2006). As early as 1994 in Atlanta, GA, the Atlanta Journal and Constitution
reported that more housing dollars were spent in the exurbs than in the urban
neighborhoods (Greer 2004). This trend has done nothing but increase since this time.
Some others move for a similar reason in that they can get more house 2 for the dollar
(Brooks 2004: 45). For numerous reasons, large numbers of people move outward. These
2 Here the idea is that they can get more accoutrements or more square footage by living fartherout. People often move out for things: more house, more amenities in the house, more land, better schools.Its as if we are convinced if we just had that one thing our families and we would be happy.
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transitions often begin subtly, often without being noticed.
They begin as embryonic subdivisions3 of a few hundred homes at the far
edge of beyond, surrounded by scrub. Then, they grow first gradually, but soon with explosive force attracting stores, creating jobs andstruggling to keep pace with the need for more schools, more roads, moreeverything. And eventually, when no more land is available and homeprices have skyrocketed, the whole cycle starts again, another 15 minutesdown the turnpike. (Lyman 2005)4
These communities begin because people are looking for something better.
Berube later points out that those who fill the exurbs are often looking for more open
space, a small town feel, better schools or environment for their children (2006: 8). These
exurbanites often see themselves as working the ladder of success or even as living the
American dream but they are the ones who will quickly flee to somewhere better when
the grass appears greener. This is what led them to the exurb and will one day lead them
away. Their eyes are constantly somewhere else.
The exurban people arent going to stay and fight the war against theinner-ring traffic, the rising mortgages, the influx of new sorts of rich andpoor. Theyre not going to mount a political campaign or wage a culturewar. Its not worth the trouble. They can bolt and start again in placeswhere everything is new and fresh. The highways are so clean and freshly
3 Notice that even in Lymans description of what is going on at the edges is the idea ofsubdivision. Subdivision is math terminology; it is a term that helps provide the idea of order to ourexurban sea of houses. Lost is the idea that we are neighbors joined together. We are people who are inproximity to each other. Even the vocabulary that we use to describe where we find our place has beentaken over by our desire to have order to our world. One of the challenges for the community or leader whois willing to know, serve and love the exurbs is that there will not always be order. Things are not and willnot be neat and tidy. Dont let the nice rows of houses and manicured lawns fool you. The messes behind
the facades are real and what is needed to missionaly embrace the exurbs is people who are willing to bedone with the math and to get to know their neighbor.
4 Lyman also hits on another important note for leaders as we consider planting in exurban areas.Exurban areas like the suburbs before them are transitional place. House are built; people come; businesscome to meet the needs of the people; instability grows in the area as traffic increases, schools are morepopulated and crime increases due to population and economic factors and then people move farther awayagain. This transitional nature of the exurban community must be considered so that we know what outsidepressures people are sensing in the communities current state. Our strategies and methodologies must beformed in light of where the culture is not where it was or will be. The missional leader must know his orher context and the exurban context is transitional.
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paved you can eat off of them. The elementary schools have spick-and-span playgrounds, unscuffed walls, and all the latest features such asobservatories, computer labs and batting cages. (Brooks 2004: 47)5
Robert Bruegmann in Sprawl: a Concise History goes to what I believe is and
extreme characterization when he says that cities and their citizens who participate in this
process of sprawling outwards are self-indulgent and undisciplined (2005)6. There is
indeed something lost when people and towns are left behind but this characterization is
totally oblivious to Gods work in that place through those people who are still there. God
has not forsaken them7 and not all people that move outward are undisciplined and or
self-indulgent. Due to the current recession, the exurbs have grown as some families have
seen the need to down size.
Not all exurbs begin due to push forces. Many do not happen by happenstance but
are planned. One such example is the New River development in Florida. This
development built by KB Home was reported on in the New York Times in August of
2005 in an article by Rick Lyman (Lyman 2005). Lymans research shows that as
5 Brooks like Lyman earlier again hits on the idea that the exurbs can be a transitional place. This
time the community is not the entity in transition but it is the person. The exurbanite seems to be like themajority of humans throughout history who flee from pressure. If things become insecure here, then theywills simply move on. This builds into those that live in the exurbs a lack of ownership in this place. Inthe conclusion of the section on exurbs I will argue that one of the weaknesses of living in the exurbs is ourlack of theology of place but it as well may be one of the greatest opportunities for the missionalcommunity to help attract and grow disciples.
6 While I will not go so far as to claim that every citizen of an exurb who is by their housingchoice participating in sprawl is self-indulgent and undisciplined, I will say that the Christian whoparticipates may be unknowingly participating in behavior that is not Christ like and does not fit the modelof the early church. Part of the mandate of the people of God is to be a blessing to those around us. Thisidea which goes back to the founding of God having a people in Genesis 12 and is expanded on in thePentateuch as Gods people are to honor and bless the foreigner, take care of the poor and outcast in theirmidst, and make sure that there were no poor among them. These ideas see themselves played out for the
first time in the New Testament in Acts 2 and 4 and Paul encourages similar activity in his writing mostnotably in his letter to the Christians in Galatia. If this is the case that we are to bless those around us andwork for the equality of all people around us, then the suburbs and the exurbs are built on a system that isactually at its core working against the plan of God. People move out to escape the pressures of the cityand if the afore mentioned process is true than by leaving the poor and hurting for the safety of the exurbsthen we are leaving behind those who really need blessing for safety. We are daily waking up in place,often surrounded by other believers who are participating in a system that is at odds with Gods plan for usto bless those around us.
7 I am reminded here of the saying that there are no God forsaken people on people forsakenplaces.
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builders know the clientele they are building for and every inch of ground and house is
planned out for residents who have average incomes but that want certain amenities that
make life more convenient and are equated with success. KB Home noted that in this
planned development, 60 percent of the residents had incomes between $40,000 and
$80,000, which places them in the middle class range of the Tampa area where New
River is located. The majority of the residents make the 20 minute commute to Tampa
and three quarters of them have children in the house. The space is planned for them and
is setup so they can have a perceived order and convenience.
Technology and the ability to work from home has even increased the fleeing
from the pressures as a number of exurbanites are now able to work from home or from
remote locations. This all leads to a community filled with people who are by their every
decisions fleeing from a perceived pressure or negative situation for a place that is better
but is it really? This tele-commuting work force as well contributes to another strand of
people who are not really present in the exurbs. They are physically present but mentally
they are attached to another place through their technology.
The exurb phenomenon is not a new or exclusively American phenomenon.
Bruegmann points out that it has been a feature of urban life since the earliest times. In
ancient China, the Roman Empire and colonial to 19th century England, major
metropolitan areas have always seen the affluent people seeking to move out away from
the pressures of urban areas. As transportation became more inexpensive and more
dependable this movement became more prevalent and acceptable (2005:18). America
has experienced has experienced waves of outward pushes since World War II according
to urban historian Joel Garreau (1991). People have always fled the pressures of the city
but they bring their issues to the outer areas for this review, the exurbs
Who then lives in the exurbs of America? According to the Brookings Institute
study the exurbs are while not dominated by Caucasians like the suburbs were, they are
still mostly filled with non-Hispanic white families. Most households are made up of
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married couple with children. The income levels are moderate to high with the
predominate work characteristic being that the vast majority of exurbanites commute to
work. Some commutes are upwards of an hour or super commutes. Some are
overcoming this trend by tele-commuting. Educational levels are higher than urban areas
and the political persuasion is largely republican. In some instances individuals even live
in the exurbs because of a political persuasion that they feel more comfortable with
(Teixeira 2008)8. These areas are not only often more conservative politically but
religiously as well (Alan Berube 2006).
Church plants are widespread in the exurbs as numbers of suburban churches see
opportunities for new works and satellite campuses in the exurbs9. Some main
thoroughfares in exurban areas seem to be what Nancy Eiesland refers to as Church
Growth Parkways (1999: 48). There is a danger here though. The church can be seen as
just another entrepreneurial entity trying to move in and take advantage of the new
growth. Moving into new communities is already hard enough for many families. The
struggle to build relationships takes time and with work, commutes and childrens
activities many exurbanites dont see any more space on their iPhone for anyone else.
The church that enters into these environments must recognize the ecology of the area
and the religious restructuring that is taking place in the lives of the older towns people
and the new exurbanites. The church should then respond appropriately and not in a
cookie cutter fashion (Eiesland 1999: 48)
The life rhythms of the exurbs present challenges and opportunities for
8 Mr. Teixeira tells of a woman who told a New York Times reporter that she moved to a Dallas
exurb over an Austin exurb because, Politically, I fell a lore more at home here. This state coupled withthe affluence and heavily Republican leaning of exurbs leads to a concern about gentrification that couldcreate economic and social disarray in lives of long time or lower income town residence. The emergingchurch communities in the area must be aware of not only the new families that are moving in, andprobably homogenous to the new church community, but they must as well consider the resident who hasbeen there for a longer period time.
9 For a people who are already struggling with no sense or a false sense of place, could satellitecampuses of larger churches be a detriment? This is an area that is worth exploring as the methodology forbeing the church is again telling people that a large part of what is important, of what has value isactually somewhere else.
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relationships. Will Samson points to the fact that the average American works 2,050
hours per year (that is slightly ahead of a 14th century miner who worked about 1,980
hours per year) (2007). This high number of work hours leaves us depleted of time and
energy for much else. The work force of the exurb faces a daily commute to the place of
employment with a large number making super-commutes of upwards of an hour.
Robert Putnam in Bowling Alone says that these massive drive times add to the
fragmentation between work and home and that for every hour of drive time a person
loses 10 percent of their social capital for the day (2000: 214, 391). Upon returning from
work, many pull into their garages or into their gated parking areas or alleys never to be
seen by others in the neighborhood. They live from the moment they arrive at home until
they leave the next morning behind fences and out of sight to those who live around
them10. This fragmentation is detrimental to all involved as people come to see part of
their day as productive and the other part as non-productive. When exurbanites come
home they have a tendency to shutdown to be uninvolved with anyone in their orbit.
Their social capital for the day has been spent and it has been insulated by drive time,
which adds to the separation for communal connection11. This fragmentation can be
exacerbated when families are split up in the evenings by activities or due to technology
that pulls us to different spaces of our homes where we spend time alone (Putnam 2000:
10 It has lately been brought to my attention in and interesting observation that the majority ofhomes in our exurb have decks on the rear of the house but not porches on the front. This is a major shift inarchitecture from earlier American centuries where it was good to be on the front porch seen andaccessible. The family was part of a communicating network of neighbors. Now we sit on the back deckhidden from all except those we allow in. What does this say about us? Are we a people who are no longeropen to interactions with others? Is our home our place? Is it a castle of protection for our families only?And if this is true of us, is our place a place at all or is it a hell of hurt, hurry, anger and fear that we havecreated. It is a place where we are, becoming less and less human as we interact with others in meaningful
relationships less and less.11 Some fragmentation is good. As Randy Frazee argues their does need to be a separation from
productive time and rest or family time (Frazee 2004). The danger here is not in the fragmentation of whereor how is spent but I think the danger is in seeing our home time as unproductive. This time at home or inthe community is simply productive in another way. It is a place for us through different methodology tonurture our families and relationships. So seeing that time as useless is dangerous. There is also a dangeron the opposite end of the spectrum when individuals approach their family time in the same way they dotheir workspace making family and communal time goal and accomplishment driven. The homecommunal space is not another game or contract that must be won. It is a time to nurture and growrelationships. It is a place to just be and it needs to be approached in that light.
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213). Putnam adds that by 1999, 77 percent of sixth graders had a television in their room
that they watch regularly. Families are fragmented even when they are in shared space
(2000: 213).
These patterns of living also create challenges for organizations in exurban areas,
as inhabitants are tired from work and commutes and on average dont volunteer to
participate in clubs, activities, churches or even youth leagues. These organizations all
saw massive drops in participation in the latter part of the 20th century as exurban areas
grew (Putnam 2000: 206)12. The reverse of this challenge is that the exurbs give those
who are present during the day the chance to be known and be involved. Exurban areas
generally empty out in the morning creating space for those who are stay at home parents,
non-working, tele-commuting or in between jobs the opportunity to be present in schools,
coffee shops, and local businesses. Normally a slower more family friendly pace of life
characterizes these areas so those who are in the exurb during the day have a greater
chance to be involved (Lyman 2005)
Connection with other people is a challenge. For those who commute, the
challenge is finding energy and time to be in common spaces with friends and family to
build relationships13. Lyman sadly points out though that for most exurbanites, life is
marked out by time spent in cars (2005)14.
For those who are not commuting a challenge still exists in that much of the
12 This is a point to be weighed when we consider what Putnam earlier points out that studies showthat American free time has not declined and has actually maybe doubled (2000: 187).
13 One of the ironies of the exurbs is that people pay large amounts of money for nice houses andliving areas (common spaces, club houses, planned activities, etc.) but they are too busy to have time toenjoy them. We are in danger of losing our missional calling if the car becomes our main place we mustbecome more ground in spaces where God has planted us with eyes to see the opportunities there.
14
This time is not only frustrating from the time wasted but also is frustrating from the emotionalenergy burned as many exurbs find themselves in a stage of awkwardness. As they grow often theinfrastructure is not prepared to handle the load of homeowners that move in. This leads to full road,construction, full schools, long time waiting in lines at drive-through windows and at traffic lights. All ofthese stop and starts lead to a hurry up and wait mentality which often adds to the frustration of people whoare commuting home. I can see why the house would be a safe place where all of the awkwardness goesaway. One example of this is in Frisco, TX, a town much like the one that I currently live in. Frisco due torapid growth is full of traffic cones, bulldozers, and traffic at a maddening crawl all in an attempt to keepup with the influx of residence (Lyman 2005). Lyman noted that in Frisco due to cheap housing peopleendure these nuisances often to allow one parent to stay at home.
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residential space in the exurbs is empty during the day. So to find connection,
relationships, one must commute to where people are. With everyone in the house always
commuting to get to places and people of value, there is a danger that our sense of who
is my neighbor gets distorted.
Many mobile people in America are tied to numerous relationships. These
relationships are often tied to work or third places but in a commuter society where we
spend very little time in space that is owned or safe, we dont have relationships that are
tied to our most sacred local (Bellah 1985). That place where God has given us to rest
and live with family and friends. The exurb is a place of beauty and order aesthetically
but I believe the call upon the Christian is to make it a place of beauty and order through
blessing. Kenneth Jackson once wrote,
[a] major casualty of Americas drive-in culture is the weakened sense ofcommunity which prevails in most metropolitan areas. I refer to atendency for social life to become privatized, and to a reduced feeling ofconcern and responsibility among families for their neighbors and amongsuburbanites in general for residents of the inner cityThe real shift,however is the way in which our lives are now centered inside the house,
rather than on the neighborhood or the community. With increased used ofautomobiles, the life of the sidewalk and the front yard has largelydisappeared, and the social intercourse that used to be the maincharacteristic of urban life has vanishedThere are few places as desolateand lonely as a suburban street on a hot afternoon. (Jackson 1985)
This isolation and loneliness has only increased as people have moved further
away from work, more time is spent in cars and the fragmentation due to technology has
increased.
To move into that place where we see, know, serve, bless and love our neighbors
we must be intentional about being in the exurbs. Just as intentionally as we moved there,
for whatever reason it was, we must with the same passion serve that local to see the
kingdom invade it. The exurb is a hard entity to label. As the material presented has been
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read and processed it is clear that the fringes of metropolitan areas where exurbs exist are
different from local to local. Paul Sutton says that providing a non-controversial
definition of exurbia is a daunting if not impossible task. (Sutton 206) These emerging
communities can be upscale or downscale and have everything from super size mansions
to trailer parks. The common factor is that they exist on the edge, where the urban fades
into the rural and where people have to commute into work (Lang 2006)15.
People in these areas long for community, but since there is no work close to
where they live, they must commute. This presents the conundrum for many and for the
church. People move out to the exurb; they move to the appearance of order and serenity
and community but when they get here they find that they have no time here. Sadly when
many people do have time here, they are so detached from here that they cannot interact
without fear.
The exurb is still for most of its inhabitants the place where most of their free time
is spent. And often for the wives and children who are left here during the day, this place
is the basic community, even if it takes driving to get to. So, how do we leverage time
and space to allow people to have the opportunity to enter into and stay involved with a
Christian community? I believe it begins with acknowledging that to live in the exurbs is
to live in a space that at its core is in opposition to the way were created to live. It is to
acknowledge the lie that here is better; it is to find a way to say that we will no longer
flee pressure but that we were created and charged to live without fear; we were created
to live with presence. We acknowledge that the grass isnt really greener in the exurbs
and that the exurbs have a whole set of problems all of their own, but the exurbs cannot
be forsaken. There is a tension here that must be lived with16.
15 For the purposes of my study these are two very important defining factors. My exurb has agreenbelt border, it wealthy mansion style houses but it also has trailer parks. In ten minutes you can bethick into the suburbs or thick into the woods. We sit on the edge of city in a sea of house with very littlelocal business. This is my frame of reference and the defining markers gleaned out of this review that I willuse going forward are the element listed in this note: on the edge of a metropolitan area, where the urbanmeets the rural and where people have to commute to work (with large numbers making super commutes).
16 Even in church attendance there is a tendency for exurbanites to attend more established
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I agree with Will Samson when he argues that we must regain a theology of place
that wherever we are we are there for a reason and that God doesnt waist resources
(Samson and Samson 2007) Our living in the exurbs is part of Gods economy and he has
good works for us to do here. Eiesland argued that earlier social theorist had been
incorrect when they stated that mass suburbanization had killed opportunity for extensive
community (2000). They argued that loss of the city core as center was coupled with
mobility provided no opportunity for people to have common ground to build deep
relationships. I agree with her that his is incorrect. The core, the spot of focus, the place
just has to be moved and the new local is the exurb. It is the place where the church has
an opportunity to turn strangers into friends and help back deck people become front
porch people. To do this there are a number of factors that must be addressed at some
point like pace of life issues, individualism, and protectionism, but the church has an
opportunity to shine in the exurbs if it can create new centers. New places that give
exurbanites pause to slow down and be a part and just see who is actually around them.
In the conclusion of this literature review, I will thread together the theology of
place with a commitment to hospitality that will in turn point towards principles for the
birthing and sustaining of missional communities in the exurbs of America.
suburban churches. This break down is in part due to our tendency to view churches in light of our love forthe events and programming and not as something that I am a part of. To win the exurbs more churchcommunities must find a way to have people committed to being missionaries in the exurbs. These peoplemust see themselves as not people who go to a church somewhere but are part of a church here.
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Biblical Hospitality
In I Was a StrangerArthur Sutherland writes that hospitality is the practice by
which the church stands or falls. (Sutherland 2006) Hospitality in our day has been
greatly been misconstrued to be a means to simply make other feel better about being
where they are. With the wide scale advent of hotel, restaurant, conference and event
industries a whole culture of business that revolves around making people comfortable
has evolved. All of these fall far short though of the biblical understanding of hospitality
and place that it has in the chord of redemption that runs throughout the scriptures and
history (Oden 2001)17. Hospitality runs beyond the offerings of food and drink or even
entertainment. For true hospitality to occur respect for the other must exist. The problem
with much of the modern concept of hospitality is that it depends on the end result often
returning customers but the Biblical view is different. End results are not the goal
entering into each others presence and dwelling there with them and the God who created
and loves them and us is the goal (Pohl 2005).
Sutherland would later expand on why hospitality is a must. He notes that as life
goes on we become more and more aware of our loneliness and our illusions of what the
world could be fade away. This is where God and the Christian community step in.
Gods goal for creation is a homecoming (2006: 83). God is giving and gracious. He
continually welcomes the stranger and as He does this relieving loneliness and clearing
up illusions we too are invited into the process. We do this; we enter in, because it has
been done for us. We also live out this role because we know that every human being is
created in the imago dei, the image of God. Just as we do, they carry in them a world of
possibility and hope that we have an opportunity to help bring out.
17 As we will see in the paragraphs that follow on the scriptural mandate for hospitality and how ithas been evidenced in history, hospitality has played a large part in the role of Gods work through outhistory. Odin as the chord of redemption refers to this stream of work. It runs through out time like astring or a chord that can be forever traced redeeming people along the way.
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In the coming pages, I will show that in the literature reviewed hospitality is very
much what Sutherland explained it to be a must for kingdom expansion. Jean Vanier of
LArche says that Welcome is one of the signs that community is alive. He also states,
A community which refuses to welcome whether through fear, weariness,insecurity, a desire to cling to comfort, or just because it is fed up withvisitors is dying spiritually. (Pohl 2005)
A community must be welcoming and hospitable. Part of its DNA must be set on
bringing the stranger in so that they can go out as friends. We are Gods earthly hosts
welcoming all into his house. Beyond the biblical and theological mandate I will show
that hospitality has been a driving force behind church expansion in various eras of
history, that there are discernable characteristics of hospitable people and places and that
hospitality can and must be a key component of forming effective lifestyles for the
formation of missional communities if the exurbs are to be influenced for the Kingdom of
God18.
Hospitality is a theme that is found through out the scriptures occurring direct
situations 71 times throughout the biblical story (Alexander and Rosner 2000).
Hospitality literally means love of strangers and was a key component in the world of
the Jews through out the biblical story and in the cultures of the Mideast (Youngblood et
al. 1995). Much of the ancient world saw hospitality as common good that was
18 I specifically chose the word lifestyles here because hospitality must become a lifestyle not astrategy; hospitality is way of life. The goal for leaders and missionaries is to live in a way that welcomes
the stranger and the friend daily. This will look different in different moments and the radical quality of theendeavor will depend on our distance from the margins of society. Christine Pohl argues that in anyinstance we have one of three choices. We can stay where we are and refuse to challenge identity in termsof race, class, gender sexuality or assumed labels. We can we can approach the margin and work forempowerment of those who are there or we can identify with those who are in power and continue toneglect those who are outside (Russell and Shannon-Clarkson 2009). So as we go forward we understandthat in ever instance as we observe an opportunity with a stranger we can move toward them and work toempower them, we can side with the prevailing powers against them or we can simply do nothing. I believethat only one of these options works in the kingdom vision. This way of life as well must be given attentionand nurtured because the results are not always immediate and the work is hard (Pohl 2005).
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demanded of everyone. It was a virtue and those who were virtuous displayed hospitality
by honoring guests and strangers.
Israelite hospitality extended beyond this ethic to a place of mandate as they saw
in their calling out at Sinai a God given directive protect and go above and beyond in
providing hospitality to all. They were to be the model and the launching pad for Gods
hospitable gift to the world (Ryken et al. 1998). Abraham their ancestor had been a
sojourner and depended on hospitality and famously gave it. Coming out of Egypt God
had provided for the people so they would graciously return the favor that had been
placed upon them. They would be challenged to remember and to know the heart of an
alien, for you were once aliens in the land of Egypt. (Exodus 23:9 NRSV)
Israels hospitality went beyond the customary provision and protection of the
guest but lived out some basic well-designed ideas of what it meant to receive and send
out a guest. The idea was that strangers would be changed to guests (Youngblood et al.
1995)19. Guests were welcomed and provided for through the customary washing of feet
(Genesis 18:4, 19:2, 24:32) water, lodging and a meal was provided. This was not just a
normal meal but also a meal that was the best that the host could provide20.
The people of God also recognized that very early in their story the patriarch
Abraham in Genesis 18 had entertained angels and provided them with provision and
19 This process was a three step process of evaluating the stranger, receiving the stranger andsending the stranger out, now as a friend (Malina 1996). We often see Jesus teaching when he enters anarea. This could possibly be a means of verification of his authenticity. It is part of the evaluation. Paulgoes through this as well (Acts 13:15) or presents letters (Romans 16:3, 1 Thess. 5:12-13). Jesus is onceactually asked to leave (Mark 5:17). The guests or strangers are most often received and cared for. Only ininstances when they are perceived as barbaric, beyond the ability to reason are they turned away. Thebarbarian it stands to reason would not allow himself to receive hospitality so in a way this takes care of
itself. After being receive, the guest would after usually up to two days, be sent out with food andprovisions. I will argue in later passages that this is where missional leaders and communities can recasttheir vision for what it means to be the church in lifestyle and in the community. I will also suggest afourth step of empowerment and connection.
20 A great symbol here is recognized when we consider the story of the prodigals in Luke 15. Thefather orders his servants And get the fatted calf and kill it, and let us eat and celebrate; (Luke 15:23NRSV). The father is saying that the son has become a stranger but is welcomed back. He had reached aplace of being unknown but the process is begun to change his identity. What if missional communitiesapproached strangers in this way? What if we saw opportunity to throw a big party not to meet people or tohelp people know me or to show off how cool we are but to change the identity of those that surround us?
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honor. He was blessed with the promise of a son within a year because of this action and
the people often discussed that maybe sometimes we do entertain the divine. Some times
angels visit us and we dont know it so we should be vigilant (Hebrews 13:2). These
divine appointments could be extraordinary and part of gods redemptive story and the
Israelites believed that there were times when divine messages or blessings from God
came through strangers or angels (Richards 1997)21.
Guests also seem to have a role in this relationship. Different than the Greco-
Roman idea of hospitality, where I am blessed and bless in hopes of building a network
for status and advancement, biblical guests are different. The biblical guest in receiving
hospitality allows the host to use his or her gifts. The guest takes on a humble state
allowing others to serve him or her. Being a guest is one way that we are taught humility
and reminded that we need each other. The guest in the biblical world would receive the
evaluation, the welcome rituals, and the sending away as a friend. The guest would show
honor to the host by not overstaying their welcome generally no more than two nights
stay. Their ultimate goal was to come into a new strange place and leave as a honored
righteous friend who did not disrupt the harmony of the home or community (Ryken et al.
1998).
Hospitality as a mandate transcended time, travels and exiles of the Israelites and
was with them solidly in the time of the New Testament. Jesus in his travels is dependent
on the hospitality of others and often uses it to set the stage for his teachings (Matthew
26:6, Mark 1:29, 7:24,12:9, 2:15, 14:3, Luke 10:34, 11:4, 14:12, John 12:1-2). One of the
more famous pictures is when Jesus receives hospitality from Mary and Martha in Luke
10:38-42 setting the stage for a moment of teaching (Ryken et al. 1998).
Jesus also setup hospitality as a rule for his followers and the missionaries that he
sent out. His followers were sent out on the assumption that they would receive
21 This idea of entertaining angels unaware leads to a needed awareness of divine moments aroundus. We never know when our availability leads to a moment of Gods activity that includes us in a biggerstory where people are transformed and our gifts are used.
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hospitality from host families in Matthew 10:9-14. Jesus then instructs them on how to
handle what they will be given. He made it a marker for who would enter into the
kingdom in Matthew 25:35 and villages that didnt provide it are consigned to doom
(Matthew 10:14-15, Mark 6:11, Luke 9:5). Jesus is keen as well to take homes like that of
Zaccheus and transition them then leave them as places of hospitality (Luke 19:1-10)22.
The life of the house owner does not have to be rejected. There is much work to be done
there.
The gospel of Luke seems particularly interested in hospitality. This gospel alone
gives us the story of the Good Samaritan, the Prodigal Son, the Rich Man and Lazarus,
Zaccheus and the Emmaus appearance of Jesus (Koenig 1992). In each of these stories it
can easily be said that the guest is sacred. For Luke, whose Gospel probably had the
largest gentile audience; the welcoming of outsiders seemed to be a key piece of Jesus
character.
Hospitality did not come with out its hazards, as one pitfall that corrupted
hospitality was the tendency of groups to neglect hospitality towards other ethnic groups.
Jews and Samaritans are one example. Because of their disdain for each other they would
serve only their own group and would steer clear of the other group. The story in Luke
11:5-8 shows us that hospitality is readily and easily offered to those who are like us, but
it is harder when demanded by those that we label outside of our circles. Jesus teaching
even point to the fact that hospitality must not be shown to only those who can
reciprocate this would be behaving as the pagans do. The parable of the banquet speaks
to this idea (Luke 14:15-24, Matthew 22:1-14) (Destro 2003).
Hospitality for the people of God presents a struggle that has always existed and
exists still to this day. The struggle is this: it is very easy to accept the position but the
vocation is difficult. By this statement I mean that it has always been the struggle of
22 It is worth noting here that the life-change in Zaccheus does not result in him picking up andleaving to go with Jesus. He is left there in his place to tell the story of what has happened to him and hisfamily and to show hospitality as it has been shown to him.
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Gods people to understand and live out our role as givers of love as quickly as we are
willing to accept the position that receiving his love has given us. It is much easier to
claim the position and set ones self up as judge of others than it is to take up the vocation
of servant and see others as better than me.
The early church assimilated the idea of hospitality and service rapidly and
continued with continuity the Jewish idea of hospitality that had been expanded upon by
Jesus. The missionary efforts of the early church depended on hospitality for itinerate
teachers and apostles (Alexander and Rosner 2000). Peter (Acts 10:6, 18, 23, 48) and
Paul (Acts 16:15; 18:7; 21:4, 8, 16; 28:7) depended upon the hospitality of the Christian
communities that they founded, discipled or travelled between. The New Testament has
a number of instructions to extend or give hospitality (Romans 12:13; Hebrews 13:2; 1
Peter 4:9) and it is even considered a must for those who would be in leadership in the
early church (1 Tim 3:2; Tit 1:8). Widows as well were given a special instruction in 1
Timothy 5:10 if they wanted to be put on the church lists (Ryken et al. 1998).
The early church as well regularly practiced the Eucharist, the good gift, and
recognized it as a sign of Gods hospitality. Each time the Eucharist was taken, the
costliness of the divine gift was remembered (Alexander and Rosner 2000). They also
saw it as a foreshadowing of how hospitable God will be in the future when all the
believers join him in the marriage supper of the Lamb (Rev 19:7-9). This regular
gathering around Gods table served to inspire them towards the future and remind them
of the Jubilee that was part of their past and present. Jesus while present reminded them,
But when you give a banquet, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind.
(Luke 14:13 NRSV) (Russell, Clarkson, and Ott 2009)The visions of John end with a
simple call that is a model for what the church is to be when he writes, The Spirit and
the bride say, Come. And let everyone who hears say, Come. And let everyone who is
thirsty come. Let anyone who wishes take the water of life as a gift. (Revelation 22:17
NRSV)
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The tradition of hospitality carried its way into the early church years and
evidenced by continued discussion about its practice. In the Didache (Did 11f.) travelling
evangelists are said to have special privilege in receiving hospitality (Elliott 1986). The
travelling preacher is to be given food enough to reach the next nights lodgings and that
if he asks for money he is a false prophet (Carson 1994). In Early Christian Hospitality
D.W. Riddle uses the word charming when describing the hospitality of the early
church. In a reference to patristic sources he notes,
These examples of hospitality suggest that the custom may account for anotable phenomenon of those days: the acceptance of the traveling preacher's message by entire households.... that the primitive churcheswere house-churches is a detail of this, and an aspect of early Christianhospitality.... This brings the student directly to the social processes inChristianity's expansion. One of them was early Christian hospitality. In itone sees an ultimate medium of Christianity's growth. (Riddle 1938)
These early Christians saw themselves as resident aliens. Though they knew much
of the surrounding culture they realized that they were different. Referencing theLetter
to Diognetus, Husbands and Green in Ancient Faith for the Churchs Future paints the
picture that for the early Christians every place was and was not their home or it could be
said that every foreign land for them was their Fatherland yet every Fatherland was a
foreign land (Husbands and Greenman 2008). Jerome in more heart felt terms wrote that
believers should let the poor men and strangers be acquainted with your modest table,
and with them Christ shall be your guest. (Jerome)
Within just a few centuries John Chrysostom spoke highly and often about the
need for Christians to be hospitable. His limits on hospitality were said to have been
nearly boundless (Pohl 2006). Chrysostom often reminded the wealthy among the church
of Gods outlook on the self-indulgent. Using Luke 16:14-31 as the text the audience is
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drawn in as the rich man in the story. Chrysostom would later give the famous image of
the almsgiver as a harbor for people who are in need. A harbor receives all who have
encountered shipwreck, and frees them from dangerSo you likewise, when you see on
earth the man who has encountered the shipwreck of poverty, do not judge him, do not
seek an account of his life, but free him from his misfortune. (Husbands and Greenman
2008)
In The Rise of Christianity by Rodney Stark paints a picture of a hospitable
church appears that would no doubt be appealing to the pagan cultures that hosted them.
One of the cities he studies is Antioch, where the followers of Christ were first called
Christians. This city was a missional launching pad for much of what the church did and
became the home base of Christianity early in the Christian story but this city had its
issues. During the 600 years of Roman rule it was taken by unfriendly forces eleven
times; it was put to siege two other times but resisted and did not fall; it burned to the
ground on at least four occasions; it suffered from hundreds of small earthquakes and
eight that leveled the city to the ground; three severe plagues hit the city with at least 25
percent mortality rates and finally, it experienced 5 harsh famines. In all at least 41
natural or social disasters hit the city during that time. It was if they experienced 9/11
over and over again. Large numbers of people obviously died and large numbers came
and went but the Christians stayed and they formed a community that stood in the face of
the fear and misery that this city so often experienced. They cared for the sick that were
left to die. They cared for orphans and widows when Greco-Roman culture would allow
these people to be lost to slavery or death. They took care of the homeless and offered
family to those who had none. They responded quickly to needs and it was in this way
that they won the city. All of these acts of hospitality helped to create a family fabric
among Christians and aided in the creation of disciples who took the Christian story
outward into the world (Stark 1997).
Augustine as well chimed in on the conversation in his time arguing that
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hospitable acts fit into a network of need. The giver and the recipient were in need before
God. While God does not need what the giver has he has taken up a position in the place
of the needy and the poor. God is there with them and as we serve them we serve our
king (Augustine)
Benedict of Nursia, St. Benedict, was also a proponent of hospitality. His writings
would form the churches most well accepted and understood principles of hospitality
which would literally last and function for the past 1500 years (O'Gorman). His Chapter
53, entitled The Reception of Guests, is the foundation of all western European religious
hospitality and would influence church and monasteries for centuries23. His way of life
focused on communal living, physical labor and the giving of alms and food to the poor.
Monasteries across the world would pick up on these practices and to this day
give these accommodations to those in their surroundings. In the medieval period the
monasteries took up comprehensive houses and even added guest housing for those who
were in transit or in need of respite (Lenoir 1852).
As the church expanded westward across Europe with the Roman Empire there
were often struggles in reaching out to groups of peoples who were seen as barbarians.
Some groups were just written off as unable to receive the gospel due to their barbaric
state. It is into a setting that was perceived to be unredeemable that St. Patrick used a
variation of hospitality to spread Christianity into Ireland. The people that filled this land
were adversarial to Roman occupation and rule and have been labeled barbaric by the
church; they were thus beyond hope (Winter et al. 2009).
23
The leading statement in Benedicts rules for receiving guests could be the one of the greatest ofchallenges for modern believers. I think due at some levels to our modern media and political systems andthe proliferation of athletic competitions we are forced to pick sides. We often quickly choose who is withus or against us, who is like us who is not, who we will interact with, stranger or guest, who we will notinteract with, the barbarian in our midst. To receive and honor each guest, each person we interact with inthe way that Benedict entreats us to demands that we drop our labels and consider each person as Jesus.This will also mean that to take this rule seriously we will have to slow down and pay attention as I believethat we would if we knew Jesus were present. This is a challenge and one that exurbanites must face if weare to truly be a church where we live and not just go to one maybe where we live or maybe somewhereelse.
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Patrick made an unprecedented move in that he took time to get to know the
people he now lived among, the barbarians. This was unheard of in church circles.
Because he took time to get to know them, to understand them, they believed that maybe
his high god would too. Previous Roman models of evangelism had been based on
presenting the gospel, asking for a decision then fellowship could happen. Patrick turned
this system upside down. He sought fellowship first. He shared conversations and meals
with people inviting them to fellowship first. He would then find joint projects that they
could work on together. He played on shared communal interests. He would then move to
belief and eventually to conversion. His method was incredibly successful and won of
whole groups of people who had been labeled barbarians people who were without
sufficient knowledge or hope(Hunter 2000)24.
As the church and empires grew in European circles, which had the largest affect
on American society, hospitality began to fade. The practiced reverted to a Greco-
Roman model of virtue that was used for individuals to be present in courts and work
themselves up the status ladder. Hospitality was seen by the affluent as a means to
network and achieve their own goals. In much of Europe hospitality was equated to tea-
parties and cozy get-togethers (Pohl 2006). This slide to a misshapen form of hospitality
was not help by the reformers. Many of the reformers equated the ability to provide
hospitality with economic means and in their rebellion against the church and the
depravity and corruptions that came with it; they carried strong beliefs in simplicity and
thrift. Calvin while not promoting the hospitable places and homes as places of
hospitality did write on the fact that individuals are to show hospitality to strangers. He
24 It is worth noting that in life strangers and barbarians will assemble around a cause before theywill assemble around a belief. In assembling to serve around a cause we are reacting to certain base ideasabout what is write and wrong or maybe even just. We as Christians believe that God planted these in theuniverse and that they are available to all men and women who will be aware. So this is an easy step forpeople to make. It is not nearly as complex as asking them to enter into our communities through ourevents or worship gatherings or Bible discussions where there are a whole myriad of interactions that theyknow up front they have to navigate. We would be much better served to get to know the stranger andbarbarian in our midst and find common ground where we can work together so that as we go moreimportant discussions can happen.
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honored those who showed hospitality to religious refugees. In hisInstitutes he wrote,
Therefore, whatever man you meet who needs your aid, you have no
reason to refuse to help him. Say, He is a stranger; but the Lord hasgiven him a mark that ought to be familiar to you, by virtue of the fact thathe forbids you to despise your own flesh (Isa. 58:7, Vg.). Say, He iscontemptible and worthless; but the Lord shows him to be one to whomhe has deigned to give the beauty of his image. Say that you owe nothingfor any service of his; but God, as it were, has put him in his own place inorder that you may recognize toward him the many and great benefits withwhich God has bound you to himself. Say that he does not deserve evenyour least effort for his sake; but the image of God, which recommendshim to you, is worthy of your giving yourself and all your possessions.(Calvin 1960)
The continuation of a discontinuity of the purpose and effectiveness of
hospitality has continued into the 20th and 21st century as business has jumped into what
they pitch as the hospitality business. These current iterations of hospitality are yet no
different than what has been perceived as hospitality in western and American cultures
for many years. They all revolve around an end of pleasing the guest in order to move
them toward a result that favors an outcome that we desire. As presented in the
introduction Christian hospitality is different. Our goal is to be with our guest to create
space where God can work in their lives. Christian hospitality is not nearly as much about
creating an event as it is about creating space for God to work. Christine Pohl argues as
well that in America, hospitality has lost its moral dimension as well meaning that
Christians have lost part of their great tradition (Pohl 1999).
This divorce from the moral dimension may have harmed as well by the fact that
as monasteries grew in specialized compassionate acts and as the Enlightenment saw
growth in knowledge and technology, much of what was needed in the old world from
the church was handed off to hospitals, hospices and hostels (Pohl 1999:4). All of these
entities are good and function well but they helped remove immediate need from the local
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community. As we have now reached the twenty first century much human need is
cleansed from the every day life of the average American. We are insulated from medical
hurt, emotional trauma and certainly death.
In more recent years hospitality has been moved back into the Christian
discussion as churches are trying to learn how to relate to people who are for the most
part relationally bankrupt. Church leaders hear over and over again that people are
looking to connect and a few modern churches have made attempts at ministries that
focus on Biblical hospitality as a means to connect them. One leader in this area has been
Randy Frazee who in the past decade led Pantego Bible Church and Willow Creek
Community Church in introduced hospitality as a means of evangelizing and connecting
people in urban and suburban areas. Frazees method was driven by asking people to
adopt a new operating system (Frazee 2007). Frazee saw that at the core what most
people were struggling with were pace of life issues that led to relational difficulties.
His churches used a model of beginning hospitality at the family level. Going
back to Hebrew models of keeping account of the day and of the table as the family altar,
Frazee sought to heal the family through shared meals together first. Families would seek
to live out this time together 4-5 nights a week and monthly would be a part of gatherings
of strangers, friends, guests and hopefully barbarians who in the perfect scenario lived
within a 10 minute walk at the most a 10 minute drive (Frazee 2004). His ultimate vision
was to see communities of believers getting to know those around them, working to serve
those around them and learning to love those around them. The model was very
successful in bringing in new people into the Christian community. Much like St.
Patricks model he found that people would connect and serve together more readily than
they will commit to a new belief system. His methods leveraged time spent over meals
and service that led to discussions and space for the Spirit to work hopefully drawing the
person to repentance.25
Hospitality itself is an action that is made up of people and place. Christine Pohl
25 This process is remarkably similar to St. Patricks model that was used all over Ireland.
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writes that in the act we combine physical space, social relationships and particular
meanings and values (Pohl 2006). These spaces have boundaries that must be crossed as
people are connected and these interactions take surrender on both the part of the host
and the guest and both are transformed through the experience26. For Christians,
hospitality is the act of Gods welcome. It is in these places where we help for a brief
moment the creator bring hope and healing to a place and a person or people. It is in these
places that Nouwen says strangers can cast off their strangeness and become fellow
human beings (Nouwen 1996)27. Nouwen also adds that for us to fully understand
hospitality we must to be strangers. In reaching out he adds a story about a student who
learns this lesson. Nouwen writes,
I left Nice one day with little money and stuck out my thumb. For fivedays I went wherever the wind blew me. I ran out of money and had todepend on the kindness of others. I learned what it is to be humble,thankful for a meal, a ride, and totally at the mercy of chance. (Nouwen1996: 52)
Its in this place of understanding, empathizing with the stranger that we find
connection. Like St. Patricks getting to know the people around him that we find
connection. The place or the space that we do this just simply becomes a free space for
God to move, whether it is a place that we own or not. Places where people practice
26 The initial steps through a boundary seem to be the hardest. This again is why it seems obviousto me that these interactions should happen among people who have the opportunity to see each otherregularly in a geographic setting like an exurb. Proximity and frequency of encounter will help makeboundary tension subside so how do we create regularly scheduled space that is close where people caninteract and lose tension of crossing boundaries to meet each other? It is also worth noting that as strangers
cross the boundary and become part of the inner group, the group will inevitably change. So it is imperativethat the non-negotiable of the group be clearly stated on the front end and that ground is not surrendered sothat those who are new to the community do not cause vision or mission drift.
27 There is so much depth to this comment from Nouwen. As labels are dropped as the strangenesscomes off, then people are not what we thought they were. As long as they are strangers or barbarians, theyare those people they are them. They are referred to in the 3 rd person they are not known to us theyare not fully human. As the strangeness drops from the stranger in or as they become known to us, he or shebecomes more and more human in our eyes. The missional community in the exurbs must not be a labelingpeople but be set up helping others cast off strangeness. The strangeness may be wrapped up in distance sowe may have to be keen on going to them to lessen that distance or strangeness.
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hospitality regularly appear to guests and strangers as sanctuaries. They are welcoming
and lived in. They are settings where people flourish. They may not always be the most
beautiful or most well maintained but they and the people who live and enter them are
cared for. Sharing a meal is often central to acts of hospitality but it is not the meal that
makes the moment; it is not the event that makes the change in people; it is the full
attention of those involved, especially the host. Hospitality provides a window into the
Christian world it shows the world what Christians and Christian community look like in
their relationships (Pohl 2005). People who embrace hospitality are ready. Oden writes,
Early Christian voices tell us again and again that whether we are guest orhost we must be ready, ready to welcome, ready to enter anothers world,ready to be vulnerable. This readiness is expectant. It may be akin tomoral nerve. It exudes trust; no so much that one will succeed in somemeasurable way, but that participation in hospitality and its consequences.At the same time, the readiness that opens into hospitality also leads torepentance. (Oden 2001)
The readiness can and often will be painful as the guest and the host must
reconsider initial conceptions about the other. Oden calls this a de-centering of
perspective (Oden 2001: 15). And as Oden points out, hospitality is sacrament. It is
celebrating the reconciliation and relationship available to us because of his sacrifice
and through his hospitality. (Pohl 1999)
Amy Odin writes inAnd You Welcomed Me that Christian hospitality is a form of
metanoia or repentance. It forces us to rethink who we are and who we think that others
are. It then as we see others and ourselves as image bearers of God and reorient our
thoughts and actions a form of worship (Oden 2001). We should approach each person
with five traditional thoughts about hospitality as presented by Christine Pohl in her 2006
Article Responding to Strangers: Insights from the Christian Tradition:
1) The affirmation of the value of every person and recognition of the
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human capacity for sin
2) Emphasis on offering welcome to the most vulnerable and thosewithout strategic value
3) There is a need to address limits
4) There needs to be recognition of the complex interaction betweenwelcoming strangers and maintaining identity and community boundaries
5) There is to be a willingness to see and to respond at multiple levels
Pohl uses these five concepts to discuss the initial interactions with refugees,
asylum seekers and immigrants but in todays American exurbs they may be just as
needed as we journey toward our own metanoia by being hospitable Christian
communities. There are numerous needs and cruelties in the exurbs and it is my
contention that along with Jean Vanier that it is suppers together that can turn spiritually
needy people in to friends. Phillip Hallie wrote that the opposite of cruelty is not simply
freedom from the cruel relationship, it is hospitality. (Hallie 1981)
Peter Maurin wrote over 70 years ago that what we need are Houses of
Hospitality to show the world what idealism looks like when it is practiced (Maurin
1936). I also agree with Christine Pohl when she writes,
Hospitality I not optional for Christians, nor is it limited to those who arespecifically gifted for it. It is, instead, a necessary practice in thecommunity of faith. (Pohl 1999: 430-443)28
28 We serve a God that could easily be defined as hospitable. The scriptures paint the picture of aGod who is completely into bringing people into the house home. So why must we be hospitable?Because our God is hospitable and he first evaluated us, welcomed us and sent us out as friends. As Goddid these things for us, it is our place to go and do them for others. It is lifes highest end and our chiefcalling. I believe that there is no option here and resistance to this idea is missing the point. Many willresist on the grounds that they arent people built for hospitality but this is to misunderstand the argument.Being hospitable is not a matter of resources, comfort or cleanliness it is a matter of the heart. People withopen hearts have open tables and homes. They are vulnerable and available and as I will argue in theconclusion this is what the exurbs need.
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This necessary practice must be reclaimed if we are to plant and grow thriving
missional communities in the exurbs of America. In the New Testament conversations
about hospitality two different labels are used in the naming of those who are to be
extended hospitality. The words arexenoi, the word for strangers and barbaroi, the word
for strangers who knew nothing at all barbarians. I would argue that both groups still
exist in our culture today. They may not exist economically or from a position of force
but they do exist socially as we are quick to label those around us. It is my hope that
hospitality can be used to create stories that end well not only for the believers in our
midst but for the stranger and the barbarian. It is my hope that the Christian community
will open its heart and invite these people to the table for hospitality is not an issue of
space; it is an issue of the heart. People with open hearts have open homes and lives.
The practices of St. Patrick and the Rule of St. Benedict have much to teach us
about receiving others and Christ into the moment so that all are known. Randy Frazee
has taught us to move hospitality back to the household creating spaces of hope and
peace in the residential areas of America. We can as well learn from Wesley and his love
feasts. The feasts were made up of simple foods but they were regularly scheduled. The
space was provided but the food and the people created the environment where lives were
changed places where the Spirit was invited in.
For the church to reclaim hospitality we will have to be intentional and it will take
work. Randy Frazee often says that the food is enough and I believe that he is right. If
we are focused on how things look or how we entertain, then we have missed the point
but if we invest our resources in the food, if we invest ourselves in the invitation and
preparation of the space so that it is not an event but open and freeing locale, then we too
can hopefully say like Wesley, Come, and see how these Christians love each other!
and like the church in Acts 2 we will have the favor of all the people.
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Missional Communities
More and more, the desire grows in me simply to walk around, greetpeople, enter their homes, sit on their doorsteps, play ball, throw water,and be known as someone who wants to live with them. It is a privilege tohave the time to practice this simple ministry of presence. Still, it is not assimple as it seems. My own desire to be useful, to do somethingsignificant, or to be part of some impressive project is so strong that soonmy time is taken up by meetings, conferences, study groups, andworkshops that prevent me from walking the streets. It is difficult not tohave plans, not to organize people around an urgent cause, and not to feelthat you are working directly for social progress. But I wonder more and
more if the first thing shouldnt be to know people by name, to eat anddrink with them, to listen to their stories and tell your own, and to let themknow with words, handshakes, and hugs that you do not simply like them,but truly love them (Nouwen 1994).
Nouwens quote while beautiful haunts me. It is the life I want; the life I seek in
the exurbs but somehow it seems elusive. I live in the American exurbs - an area that
appears to promise everything, even the beauty of a Nouwenesque utopian street walk but
that often yields dysfuncti
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