More Than Starbucks
A small group walking into a local Kansas City coffeehouse was greeted with the amazing smells of fresh roasted and brewed coffee. The bustling little coffeehouse, Thou Mayest, was populated with young professionals working on their computers at the coffee bar, little people sipping hot chocolate while barricaded in the corner on a couch by their mom, and people like me there to socialize. Places like this are common third places, a term popularized by Starbucks that represents where you want to go in addition to work and home.
The barista greeted one of the group by name and was introduced by name to the companions with him. Hospitality epitomized, especially in a place where food and drinks are served in a friendly and generous way to customers who are treated more as visitors and guests. I have had trouble with the timing of my Chemex brews and was treated to a spontaneous demonstration by one of the baristas after sharing my frustration with her. Do I want to go back? Absolutely!
Churches have been prodded to better practices of hospitality by Starbucks and other popular coffee houses. It is not uncommon to find coffee stations in the middle of the narthex, outside the church in sunny California, or in a complete coffee house located inside the church. Creating an inviting atmosphere through the senses and cultivation of friendship through coffee is not uncommon in churches today.
The early Christian practice of hospitality not only was extended to family and friends, but also to outsiders. Such openness to others offers an antidote to the fortress mentality or the “guns-and-fists mode of responding to threats of safety.” Growing churches are reclaiming this practice, not that it was ever lost, giving it more priority than it has received for generations. It has never been needed more.
Remember the two celebrity suicides that made national headlines in 2010? First, an actor named Andrew Koenig hanged himself after suffering from severe depression. Then Marie Osmond’s son jumped from his eighthfloor apartment after saying that his depression had left him feeling friendless. Suicides now outnumber homicides in the United States, and they are most common among the young and the old.
Christian hospitality is about more than coffee, more than creating a third place, and more than being helpful and friendly to the outsider. People need more even when they do not yet recognize it. “Hospitality is about connecting people to the community of faith in a deep and meaningful way. When people become part of a church they begin to develop relationships.”
Hospitality is life giving and life enriching. You may receive more blessings than you extend. After prayer and with wisdom this risk might prove to be one of your greatest investments.