Last week I mentioned George Washington, and some of his strengths and weaknesses. One of the good qualities that he and his wife Martha had was the gift of hospitality. After the Revolutionary War, in which Washington became a hero, he went back home. His mother was thinking about moving in with him, and he wrote back to her that she shouldn’t consider it unless she liked a lot of people — because there were hardly any hotels like there are today, so people just stayed in the nearest home — that’s just what everyone did. And since the Washingtons were famous, everyone who traveled anywhere near Mt. Vernon wanted to stay there and eat with the war hero. I read that at one point he had something like FOUR total days in over two years when it was just he and Marta in their home. The Washingtons just had an amazing gift of hospitality.
Well as we look at the story of Mary & Martha here in Luke 10, that is what Martha did too, isn’t it? Here was this traveling evangelist/preacher/Messiah, Jesus, and the Bible says in :38 that Martha “welcomed Him into her home.”
The word “welcomed” here in the original Bible language is hupo-dexomai: literally, “under,” “to receive” — in other words, to “receive under” your roof; to “receive under” your personal care and attention. That is what Martha did with Jesus: she “received Him under her roof” — and that is what EACH of us must do with Jesus as well. We must invite Him “under the roof” of our heart, and our home. A lot of people think about Christianity as being a lot about things that we do “at church.” But real Christianity is not just about “church;” it is about our real, everyday life at HOME. If Jesus is really going to be your Lord & Savior, you have to personally “receive Him into” your own life, and into your HOME.
So in this final message in this “Mary & Martha” series in Luke 10, I want us to look at this idea of “Inviting Jesus Into Your Home.” This is a personal and IMPORTANT thing for each one of us. So: WHAT ARE SPECIFIC WAYS WE CAN “WELCOME JESUS INTO OUR HOME”? Continue reading
Instead of closing with the perfunctory “I was sent this book in exchange for reading it and promising to write a review,” I am going to open with it. Because that is exactly how I encountered this book. But I am glad I did, because I can also honestly say that it is a very readable, very quotable Christian apologetics source which I would recommend to anyone.