November 15, 2018


All Are Welcome

For you are not a God who is pleased with wickedness; with you, evil people are not welcome. – Psalm 5:4

She was pushing every one of my buttons. I struggled for patience. I wanted to be welcoming. I wanted to be inclusive. I wanted to be kind.

Later, I struggled with my own response to this woman. It was the first time I’d seen her at church. It was her first time in our Sunday school class. I am usually glad to have anyone join us. We have so many who have come from brokenness, myself included. All are welcome. So why did I respond so differently to this woman?

It took me much of the afternoon until I finally realized what it was. I was shocked. I usually pick up quickly on such things. My only excuse is that I wasn’t expecting to find it in church. I certainly wasn’t expecting to see it in a Sunday school classroom.

She was high. I don’t know her story. Her body could have been filled with prescription drugs. Or maybe it was something illegal. I don’t want to judge her based on the condition of her mouth, which is a signal for someone who has or was a meth addict. But her body language was so obviously that of someone who was on drugs.

My ability to read body language is both a blessing and a curse. It causes me to see the real meaning behind words. It helps me to understand when someone is hurting, even as they protest that they are fine. But it also causes me to see when someone isn’t being who they’re proclaiming to be.

I reminded myself again and again, in prayer and thought, that she is God’s child. God loves her just as much as He loves me and every other person in that class and in that church. But it’s so hard to come face to face with someone in the throes of addiction.

As I said, our class is filled with broken people. I’m sure that’s why someone led her to this class. We are a group of misfits, if you will. We are people who understand heartache and addiction and depression. We are a people who understand grief and being alone and that makes us more compassionate, more welcoming, more forgiving. People who have walked through a tough valley or two truly understand what it means to be saved by grace.

I struggled with this. How can I reject, even if only in my heart, someone God loves? My heart, of course, is where it matters. What does that say about me? What does that say about my faith? Do you understand what I’m saying? Have you been there? Have you struggled to love someone as Jesus does? Have you struggled to welcome someone who is in the throes of addiction?

This was different for me. I have gladly welcomed those who are homeless, even when their own choices led them to that place. I have opened my arms to those who are in recovery for addiction, for anger, for brokenness. But I seem to have no tolerance for someone who shows up, disrupts the class (and, yes, she was disruptive), and thinks it’s okay.

I don’t know if she’ll be back. I won’t turn her away if she comes. Jesus wouldn’t do that and I won’t either. But I will alert our security team, many of whom are also in law enforcement. I will make sure her movements are monitored. My first priority is to love like Jesus but that means making sure the children in our church are safe.

God welcomes us all. He loves every person, no matter what their circumstances. And, certainly, it’s okay to bring your brokenness to the body of Christ. But it’s not okay to be high on drugs. It’s not okay to show up drunk. If you need help, we’ll help you. We’ll love you. But we won’t enable you. We won’t tell you it’s okay to be disruptive because you’re too high to function.

There’s a time and place for everything. Church isn’t where you come to feed your addictions and pretend no one notices. It’s where we all come to heal. It’s your choice. But when you bring that into our midst, it becomes ours.

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