There are words of Jesus that comfort us. There are some words that confront us.
In the Gospel of Matthew 25, Jesus is not offering a vague spiritual metaphor. He is describing the heart of the Kingdom. The Son of Man gathers the nations. The sheep are separated from the goats. The dividing line is startlingly simple: “I was hungry and you fed me… I was thirsty and you gave me a drink… I was a stranger and you welcomed me.”
The Greek word for stranger is xenos: meaning stranger, foreigner, outsider. It’s where we get words like xenophobia, which is fear of the stranger. Jesus says the Kingdom of God is revealed in how we respond to the xenos. How we respond to the stranger, the foreigner, the outsider impacts our inheritance…it impacts whether we will be sheep or goats.
In Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus teaches us that when we serve people on the margins, we are serving Him.: “When you did it to one of the least of these… you did it to me.”
In the ancient Near East, hospitality wasn’t optional kindness; it was a means of survival. There were no hotel chains, the inns of the day were notorious for being overcrowded and unsafe. An inn was a place to stay if you had no other options. There were no reliable public safety nets. Travelers depended on the mercy of strangers.
Israel’s law repeatedly commanded care for the foreigner because Israel knew what it meant to be foreign: Exodus 22:21 states, “Do not mistreat or oppress a foreigner, for you were foreigners in Egypt.” Deuteronomy 10:19 says, “You shall love the stranger, for you were strangers in Egypt.” Leviticus 19:34 teaches that, “The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt.”
By the first century, the Roman Empire was marked by sharp economic divides, mass displacement, and social suspicion. “Strangers” weren’t just travelers; they were refugees from war, labor migrants, the dispossessed poor, people hoping for a better future in a new land.
When Matthew’s community heard this teaching, they were a minority movement navigating hostility and exclusion. They knew what it felt like to be on the margins. And Jesus tells them: The test of faith is not correct doctrine alone. It is about embodied mercy.
From a United Methodist perspective, this fits squarely within our understanding of holiness. John Wesley insisted holiness is never merely personal, it is also social. Grace transforms hearts, but it also reshapes communities. The Kingdom we inherit is not a private afterlife; it is participation in God’s reign of justice and mercy now.
Hospitality in Scripture is not about entertaining friends. It is about disrupting social boundaries.
Romans 12:13 says, “Extend hospitality to strangers.” Some translations say. “pursue hospitality.”
Hebrews 13:2 reminds us, “Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for by doing that some have entertained angels without knowing it.”
That line always stops me. The person we don’t want to welcome may be an angel. Even if they aren’t, they are a human being created in the image of God. They are someone Jesus deeply and radically loves. Jesus teaches that the way we treat them is the way we treat Him! What would our world look like if we began to view and treat everyone around us like they might be an angel?
With all this talk of welcoming the stranger, let’s name the tension in the room. Strangers, foreigners, immigrants, whatever word we use, it’s a hot button issue in our nation. While it is indeed a political issue, for followers of Jesus it is not just a political issue. It is a spiritual issue. It is an issue of faith. Jesus teaches us that our response isn’t just about today, but it’s about our Kingdom inheritance.
As followers of Jesus, we can have differing views on immigration reform. Faithful Christians can disagree about border policy, visa systems, enforcement structures, and legislative solutions. Reasonable people can debate the complexities.
But here is where the Church must be clear: Regardless of immigration status, every person must be treated humanely.
We may differ politically about ICE policies or federal enforcement strategies. But as followers of Christ, we cannot be indifferent to family separations, inhumane detention conditions, racial profiling, or rhetoric that dehumanizes. We have people, not just in our city, but right here in our congregation, who even though they are US citizens are carrying their passports and paperwork because of their nation of origin, the color of their skin, the way they’ve seen citizens and immigrants alike being treated. The city of Fort Wayne is calling on clergy to have a faithful witness on behalf of the xenos among us when ICE eventually shows up in force.
Listen, I know is sounds political because it is in part political. But, listen, when the stranger is treated as less than human, the Church must remember Matthew 25 and Hebrews 13.
Jesus did not say, “I was a citizen and you welcomed me.” He said, “I was a stranger and you,” what? “Welcomed me.” The author of Hebrews said that stranger, that foreigner just might be angel.
Our primary citizenship is in the Kingdom of God. Jon Guerra wrote a song called “Citizens” that reminds us, “Truly you said we were equal; Everyone’s heart is deceitful; Everyone born is illegal; When love is the law of the land; Coming to you for the hungry; Eating the scraps of this country; Didn’t you swear you would feed them; Tell me you won’t make them go; I need to know there is justice; That it will roll in abundance; And that you’re building a city; Where we arrive as immigrants; And you call us citizens; And you welcome us as children home.”
Now let’s bring this closer to home. In downtown Fort Wayne, who is the stranger?
It may be the refugee family navigating a new language.
It may be the unhoused neighbor sleeping in the alley behind the church.
It may be the person battling addiction who feels shame every time they walk into a room.
It may be the LGBT person who wonders if church is safe for them.
It may be the recently released from incarceration neighbor trying to rebuild a life.
The stranger is not just someone crossing a border. The stranger is anyone who feels unseen, unwanted, or unsafe.
Hospitality is not simply opening a door. It is creating belonging. It’s easy to say, “All are welcome.” It’s harder to rearrange the furniture to make room. It’s harder to make sure that all are actually wanted and included.
Hospitality asks: Do our tables reflect the diversity of God’s Kingdom? Do our ministries offer dignity? Do we listen before we label? Do we create space for stories different from our own?
Again, Hebrews says some have entertained angels without knowing it. Imagine that. What if the person we’re tempted to avoid is carrying a message from God? What if the one who disrupts our comfort is the very one through whom Christ is coming to us? And even if they are not angels in disguise, they are bearers of the divine image and how we treat them matters deeply.
United Methodist theology reminds us that prevenient grace is at work in every person. Before we act, before we believe correctly, before we belong God’s grace is already there. Which means when we meet the stranger, we are not bringing God to them. God is already there ahead of us.
So what does this look like?
It may mean partnering with refugee ministries.
It may mean advocating for humane policies.
It may mean carrying Narcan and compassion.
It may mean saying to an LGBTQ neighbor, “You are not a project. You are beloved.”
It may mean looking someone in the eyes who others avoid.
Hospitality is not sentiment. It is practice. It is eye contact. It is shared meals. It is refusing dehumanizing language. It is standing beside those on the margins even when it costs us comfort.
In Matthew 25, the righteous are surprised. “Lord, when did we see you?” They weren’t strategizing righteousness. They weren’t winning arguments. They were simply practicing mercy until it became instinct. And Jesus says: That is what the Kingdom looks like.
So let me speak plainly. If fear is shaping how we see the stranger more than faith is, something is spiritually out of alignment. If political loyalty outweighs Kingdom loyalty, something is out of order. If we can worship Jesus on Sunday but ignore Him in the hungry, the detained, the displaced, the addicted, the excluded, then we have misunderstood the Gospel.
Because Jesus has so thoroughly identified Himself with the vulnerable that to turn away from them is to turn away from Him.
This is not about partisan platforms. It is about spiritual formation. The Church does not exist to mirror the anxieties of the culture. The Church exists to model the mercy of Christ.
Mercy is not weak. Mercy is disruptive. Mercy rearranges tables. Mercy crosses social, political, economic, relational borders. Mercy refuses to let fear have the final word.
We were strangers once…whether we were spiritually displaced, morally lost, unable to secure our own belonging. Jesus did not debate our worthiness. He welcomed us.
He crossed the infinite distance between heaven and earth. He entered our vulnerability. He made room at His table. He called us citizens of a Kingdom we did not build and could not earn.
Now we must do the same. Not because it is easy. Not because it is politically convenient. But because it is faithful to the way of Jesus.
I grew up singing a couple of songs that make me wonder why Christians can support anything other than open hearts, open minds and open doors. I guess I was just foolish enough to believe the songs we sang growing up in church. I guess I’m still foolish enough to believe, Maybe they’ll be familiar to you. “He’s got the whole world in His hands…(he’s got you and me sister/brother/everybody here)” and “Jesus loves the little children, all the children of the world (red, yellow, black, white).”
Let us be the kind of church where no refugee doubts their dignity. No unhoused neighbor doubts their humanity. No child doubts they are beloved. No addict doubts there is hope. No formerly incarcerated neighbor doubts they can begin again.
Let us be the kind of church that would rather err on the side of grace and mercy than on the side of exclusion. Because one day, according to Jesus, we will stand before the Son of Man. The question will not be, “Did you win the argument? Did you secure your comfort? Did you protect your tribe?”
The question will be, “Did you recognize Me in the hungry, in the stranger, in the least?”
May we live so awake, so courageous, so shaped by grace, that when that day comes, we will not be scrambling for explanations. We will simply recognize the face before us. Because we have been welcoming Him all along.