A LYDIA PLACE

A LYDIA PLACE
She was baptized along with other members of her household, and she asked us to be her guests.  “If you agree that I am faithful to the Lord,” she said, “come and stay at my home.”  And she urged us until we did.  Acts 16:15
“Be my guests,” said Lydia to Paul and Silas.  Lydia “urged” them–in other words, she wouldn’t take no for an answer.  So Paul and Silas accepted her offer of gracious hospitality.
Hospitality has been defined as “the love of strangers,” and all through Christian history, the homes of believers have been the places where both strangers and friends have gathered for worship, friendship, healing, and help.  Paul told the Roman Christians to practice hospitality (Romans 12:13); and Paul honored Gaius, the Roman whose hospitality he and the church enjoyed  (16:23).  On the island of Malta after a shipwreck, Publius, “the chief official of the island,” welcomed Paul, Luke, and their companions to his home and fed them for three days (Acts 28:7). Paul  healed Publius’ father while he was there, and a stream of blessing began on the island (28:8-10).
If nonbelievers, like Publius, and brand-new believers, like Lydia, welcomed strangers hospitably, then how much more should we, who have known the Lord for much longer, show hospitality?  The problem often lies in western busyness and fractured, scattered families.  The words, “Come and stay with me,” are seldom heard.
                                        Jill Briscoe

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