“Hi, my name is Gus. My mom sent me down to welcome
you to the neighborhood.” He was around five years old and had loving parents
who would become great neighbors and who still live down the block today.
That was 32 years ago in August 1985.
Over the years we watched Gus grow up, get married,
and eventually have children who spend time at our house picking berries or
just stop by to talk. His oldest has the same gift of hospitality that his
father Gus has!
We would get another visitor, Nathan, who was around eight years old, would greet us a few days later. I first saw Nate when
every day he would bring his LARGE dog down to our house so that his LARGE dog
could do his daily duty in our front bushes. One day, I had enough, so I asked Nate to not do it and he
said nothing and walked away.
So, I grabbed a shovel, scooped up the dog’s
“present”, and brought it back to Nate’s house; and told Nate that his dog had
left something at my house. Nate was not receptive to me returning his dog’s
property. I left it on his lawn and went back home.
About five minutes later, I saw an elderly
gentleman walking down the block escorting Nate by the ear. It turned out to be
Nate’s grandfather who was helping his single mom raise him and his two
brothers.
When they arrived at our house, Nate was very
lovingly exhorted to apologize for what he had been doing for months even
before we had purchased the home.
Eventually he came to mean what he said because
when it would snow, he would occasionally shovel our walks and, when he was
doing lawn care, he aerated our lawn just to be nice, and ten years later he
purchased my pickup truck.
I am happy to report that almost every time that
Nate stops over at his mom’s house (and sees me outside) he either stops over
to say “hi” or shouts; “Hey Mr. Oestreich; hi!”
Nate (and his brothers) have turned out to be great
men; mom and grandpa (and eventually step-dad) did an excellent job raising
them.
“Welcome” in any language is a simple gift that
takes so little to say; but can have lasting effects on the hearer.
Webster defines it as: ‘to greet hospitably and to accept with courtesy or cordially’. ‘To
accept with pleasure the occurrence or presence of’
Because of the effect that it had on our lives when
we were the newbies on the block, Cathy and I try to be a “Gus” to new people
who move to our neighborhood. At the first sign of someone moving in we try to
make it a point to go over and say; “welcome” to them into our world.
At the church that we attend, we
have members who come from well over thirty different nations so you might hear
greetings like; “Karibu” (Swahili) or “svāgat” (Hindi)
or “akeyi” (Haitian) or
“bienvenidos” (Spanish) or “huānyíng
guānglín" (Mandarin) or “bienvenue”
(French) or “bine ai venit” (Romanian) or
“si argun naaf
gammachudha” (Ethiopian) or “sawatdee-krap” or “sawatdee-kahwhich”
(Thai)…
The Apostle Paul
exhorted the church in Rome to; “Therefore welcome one another as Christ has
welcomed you, for the glory of God.” (Romans 15:7 ESV)
The Greek word
translated there as ‘welcome’ means: to take to oneself, that is, use
(food), lead (aside), admit
(to friendship or hospitality)
Jesus exhorted us to
welcome people. He said in Matthew 25 that “When
the Son of Man comes in His glory, and all the angels with Him, then He
will sit on his glorious throne. Before Him will be gathered all
the nations, and He will separate people one from another as a shepherd
separates the sheep from the goats….” (see Matthew
25:31-46)
Jesus goes on Matthew
25 to say that part of how we are judged by God in the last day will be whether
we welcomed people in our lives… “I
was a stranger and you welcomed me…Truly, I say to you, as
you did it to one of the least of these My brothers, you did it to Me.”
Who are the people
that the Lord would want you to reach out to; to say, “Welcome” to? In your neighborhood,
place of employment, church, family, and even your own home?
Who are the least of
these that Jesus is calling you to reach out to today?
Who is God calling you
to be a ‘Gus” to and say; “bienvenidos!”
Scripture from English Standard Version (ESV) The Holy Bible, English Standard
Version. ESV® Permanent Text Edition® (2016). Copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing
ministry of Good News Publishers.
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