How to Get Ready For Christ’s Second Coming…Today

Part VI of our series on Opening Your Home

Receiving Christ, as we learned from our last post, is a physical act (contrary to what the sinner’s prayer teaches us); it happens in the body first, and only then does it happen in the spirit.  But don’t take my word for it.

Jesus makes this point by drawing on an understanding that would have been crucial for his hearers. As Truett Seminary professor Andrew Arterbury notes, a crucial function of hospitality is to neutralize a possible external threat by currying favor with what might be a potentially powerful ally. So if a town scorns Jesus’ messengers, they will eventually discover the power and wrath of this stranger. Here’s what Arterbury says:

In essence, the custom of hospitality in antiquity grew out of a desire to neutralize potential threats—both threats to strangers and threats to one’s community. Not only were generous hosts protecting strangers from thieves along the road and from townspeople inclined toward mob violence, they were seeking to protect their household and community from the wrath of the stranger. In the event that a traveler had either military resources or “magical” powers, it was thought that a host’s abundant generosity might neutralize the potential threat while cultivating the stranger’s favor (see, for example, the story of Joshua’s ‘spies’ being hosted by Rahab in Joshua 2:1-21 and 6:22-25). As a result, the leading citizens of a community often bore the primary responsibility for hosting strangers.[1]

That means when we fail to receive those whom Christ has appointed as messengers (even those who do not realize they have been appointed by him in this way), we can expect to receive the wrath of Christ.

That’s the message of the parable of the sheep and the goats.

Notice the external focus in all of this. It’s all about self-denial, which is at the core of the Christian life. This is the exact opposite of the Sinner’s Prayer approach, where the focus is on the sinner and repairing what is wrong in his or her self-identity so that he or she can be assured of the self-fulfillment of going to heaven when he or she dies. If salvation is undertaken as this kind of therapeutic act of self-fulfillment rather than as the hospitality of self-emptying, it is an act completely at odds to how Christ directs one to live out the rest of the Christian life. If, however, salvation is self-emptying hospitality that begins with making room for God, it is the perfect prelude for a life of hospitality where one makes room for others in the name of Christ.

There’s a song with this message of hospitality at its core which I would recommend you learn: “Stay awake! Be ready! For the Lord is coming soon!”

Typically, it is sung in relation to the second coming of Christ. But if you are not ready for the ways Christ is coming to you daily, then you are certainly not ready for his return in glory!

You who work at McDonald’s: How do you greet each customer that comes through the drive-through? Are you expecting Christ in each car? (That’s different, by the way, than being “Christ-like” with your attitude.)

You who work in an office: How do you regard each person who calls on the phone or stops you to ask a question? If you see someone lost or confused or angry, do you see an inconvenience, or do you see Christ?

Are you ready with your tithe? Do you carry it with you at all times to spend on acts of hospitality?

Is your home ready with an extra bed set up? I mean, literally?

Is there an extra plate at your dinner table? I mean, literally? Having it there will be a reminder to you. Work it into your dinner prayer. Instead of praying, “Lord, thanks for feeding us,” pray, “Lord, please open our eyes tomorrow so that this place at the table will be filled, because you always give us enough of everything—time, money, food, compassion—to care for you.”

Do you pack extra food in your lunch? Do you have restaurant gift certificates in your car and in your wallet or purse?

These are simple, simple acts of ministry preparation to undertake daily. But they lead to profound encounters with Christ every day. It’s a foundational aspect of the Christian life that, sadly, few Christians ever experience (or experience only a few times in their lives as radical, special events).

John Chrysostom sharpens the question poignantly: How can you have a special room in your house for your car but no space for the wandering Christ?

In every believer and brother, though they be least of all, Christ comes to you. Open your house, take them in. “Whoever receives a prophet, shall receive a prophet’s reward.”…

These are the qualities that ought to be in those who welcome strangers: readiness, cheerfulness, liberality. For strangers feel abashed and ashamed, and unless their host shows real joy, they feel slighted and go away, and their being received in this way makes it worse than not to have received them. Therefore, set aside a room in your house, to which Christ may come; say, “This is Christ’s room; this is set apart for him.” Even if it is very simple, he will not disdain it. Christ goes about “naked and a stranger”; he needs shelter: do not hesitate to give it to him. Do not be uncompassionate, nor inhuman. You are earnest in worldly matters, do not be cold in spiritual matters…

You have a place set apart for your chariot, but none for Christ who is wandering by?[2]

What can you do today to be ready for Christ’s daily coming to you?

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[1] Andrew Arterbury, “Entertaining Angels: Hospitality in Luke and Acts,” in Hospitality. ed. Rober B. Kruschwitz (Waco, TX: Baylor University, 2007), 21.

[2]Sherry Weddell, “St. John Chrysostom on ‘Christ’s Room,'” Catherine of Siena Institute, July 12, 2010.

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How to Receive Christ as Lord

Part V of our series on Opening Your Home

In our last post, we explored how receiving Christ is a physical act that changes us spiritually (not vice versa) and the ramifications this has for things like the sinner’s prayer.  One good example of this truth is in Christmas itself: the Word of God become man.  But the consistent witness of Scripture is that nothing has changed.  This is still the way God works and it has significant impact for how we think about the Work of Mercy of Opening Your Home.

In Romans 10:13-15 Paul says that the Gospel always comes with a messenger attached; one’s reception of the messenger is synonymous with one’s reception of the message:

13…for, “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”

14How, then, can they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them? 15And how can they preach unless they are sent? As it is written, “How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news!”

In the New Testament, the treatment of those feet is regarded as the bellwether response to the message.

Jesus equates himself with the messengers he dispatches.

The one who receives the messenger hospitably and gives heed receives Christ himself. The affirmative response is not, then, mental assent (receiving Christ “into your heart”) but rather hospitality extended to the messenger and the Good News the messenger brings.

As Paul describes it in 2 Corinthians 5:20, “We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us.” In contrast to the Sinner’s Prayer approach, where the work of intellectual assent is the gateway to fellowship with God, the hospitality model genuinely portrays faith without works. The host’s sole act is opening his or her home widely and warmly to the Christ who stands at the door and knocks. Repentance occurs in the resultant reordering of one’s household to receive, understand, prize, and share the gifts offered by the messenger.

It is in the form of a sojourning stranger totally dependent upon the generosity of those inside the house on which he calls, that Christ stands at the door and knocks (cf. Rev. 3:20). Those who receive him hospitably are promised unimaginable hospitality in return (cf. John 1:12). Christ pledges to open his Father’s house to them (cf. John 14:2). He offers his own life as the guarantee that they will join him as his honored guests and friends (cf. John 15:15). As hospitality scholar Christine Pohl notes, John Chrysostom preached to the early church that while we offer Christ meager hospitality, he offers us lavish, infinite hospitality in return:

We receive Jesus into our homes, but he receives us into the kingdom of his Father; in responding to a hungry person, we take away Jesus’ hunger, but he takes away our sins; we see him a stranger and he makes us citizens of heaven; we give him bread, but he gives us an entire kingdom to inherit and possess…

In Chrysostom’s quote, we catch a glimpse of the “guises” in which Christ comes:

    • In Hebrews 13:2, we learn that Christ often comes in the form of a stranger, so how we receive strangers is how we receive Christ: “Do not forget to show hospitality to strangers, for by so doing some people have shown hospitality to angels without knowing it.”
    • Last month we studied the parable of the sheep and the goats in Matthew 25:31-46. In that parable we learned that Christ comes in the form of the brother without food, drink, clothing, shelter, health, or freedom. So how we receive these in the flesh is how we receive Christ in the spirit.
    • In Acts 9:1-4, we read the story of the Apostle Paul, who was first Saul the persecutor of Christians:

1 Meanwhile, Saul was still breathing out murderous threats against the Lord’s disciples. He went to the high priest 2 and asked him for letters to the synagogues in Damascus, so that if he found any there who belonged to the Way, whether men or women, he might take them as prisoners to Jerusalem. 3 As he neared Damascus on his journey, suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him. 4 He fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?”

In 1 Corinthians 12:27, we learn that when a person receives Christ, they become a part of his body. So when Saul is persecuting Christians, Jesus doesn’t say, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute Christians?” He says, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?”

Sum it up and say: Receiving Christ happens first in the body and subsequently, as a result, in the spirit. We receive Christ by receiving his messengers, strangers, and the least of his brothers in the flesh.

Have you received Christ in the body, not only in the spirit?

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Why the Private, Personal “Sinner’s Prayer” is Completely Unbiblical

Part IV of our series on Opening Your Home

Becoming a Christian is often described in terms of hospitality—e.g., “accepting” Christ or “opening your heart” to Christ. We read in Revelation 3:20, “Behold, I stand at the door and knock,” and we add in the words, “at the door of your heart.”

The whole transaction is described as a private, personal experience—the “sinner’s prayer.” Here’s a sample version from www.sinner-prayer.com:

“Lord Jesus, I know that I am a sinner. I believe you died for my sins and rose again. Please forgive me of my sins. I am trusting you, and you alone, to take me to Heaven when I die. Thank you for saving me. In the name of Jesus I pray, Amen.”

In fact, people praying this kind of “sinner’s prayer” are often told to pray it “with every head bowed and every eye closed” so that the individual can focus completely on what is happening inside.

The problem is, such a concept is absolutely, completely, emphatically unbiblical. Nowhere in the Scripture is accepting Christ portrayed as something that happens privately, in your heart.

Remember the spirit/soul/body diagram? In the Bible, the way that you receive Christ into your spirit…is to receive him bodily. We receive Christ by hosting him and those who he sends in the real, live, flesh and blood world. (Remember: Christianity is a physical religion!) The Bible makes clear that if we do not accept Christ “in the flesh,” we cannot accept him “in the spirit.”

If we wanted to do a biblical “sinner’s prayer,” we’d do it something like this: We’d shake the person and tell them to keep their eyes open and say to them, “Now, stay awake! Be ready! You do not know the hour or the day he is coming. Stay awake! Be ready! For the Lord will be visiting you soon!” And through the Scriptures we’d show them the “guises” the Lord most often travels in, and the messengers he most often sends in his name, and we’d say: “Now keep an eye out for such, for to receive them is to receive the Lord personally. The Lord will be coming to you soon; be ready to receive him!”

In other words, receiving Christ is a physical act of hospitality that changes you spiritually, not a spiritual act of will that changes you spiritually.

Last week we talked about prevenient grace—how God surrounds his creatures moment by moment with his love, wooing them and creating within them the capacity to respond to him even through their spirits are dead and enslaved to sin. Well, the grace of justification is an extension of that prevenient grace. Christ comes to us “from the outside in,” and we are enabled to receive him, in real life, in the real world.

That’s what happened at Christmas: Christ came in the flesh! He didn’t come into the world through the spirit, but through the body. And it is the consistent witness of Scripture that this is the way Christ still comes to us today.

Are you awake and ready for the Lord’s visit today? You sure?


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