No More Perfect MomsSample
Hospitality is a term usually associated with how we treat guests in our homes. I like to think of it as how we treat friends and family both inside and outside our home. Hospitality is our opportunity to be Jesus to those around us.
We have to be careful with the concept of hospitality and the Perfection Infection clash, because unrealistic expectations can come into play here. Whether it’s hosting the extended family Thanksgiving dinner or just making our kids’ friends feel at home in our houses, our expectations can be set so high that we can only see our failures.. . .
Too often we talk ourselves right out of hospitality because we fear that our efforts won’t measure up. Measure up to what? That elusive “perfect picture” we have in our minds of what our houses need to look like, what kind of food we need to serve, or even how we want our kids to behave. One mom put it this way, “I don’t have people over because I don’t keep my house looking like a page out of Better Homes and Gardens. I am a clutter hound, and we have so much stuff. Everything seems to be in place at other moms’ houses, but never at mine!”
When I asked my Facebook friends what kept them from inviting someone over, the honest responses were overwhelming: “My house isn’t good enough.” “I’m not a ‘fancy’ cook.” “My home and belongings don’t measure up.” . . . One mom drew this equation: “It has to be perfect to have someone over + it’s never perfect = never having people over.” Wow, so many of us are afraid of something when it comes to extending hospitality! We allow our fears to control us and our expectations to paralyze us, which keeps us isolated and disconnected from the relationships we need the most.
I’m going to take a risk and maybe even step on our toes for a bit. Is our resistance to hospitality and allowing our fears to control us really an act of selfishness? Are we caring more about how we feel than how our hospitality may make the other person feel? One mom shared, “I was just invited over for the first time by someone I barely know, and I felt so thankful and honored. Just her invite is enough to make me feel a little special.”
Could we open ourselves up to the possibility of extending hospitality by thinking about how the invited person would feel rather than how we will feel? Can we stretch ourselves enough to face our fears and expand our network of friends? What if we started with a baby step of simply inviting someone over to let the kids play in the yard and share some lemonade? Or maybe just inviting another mom to meet you for a picnic at a park? That’s hospitality, too! It doesn’t always have to involve the house; hospitality is an extension of our hearts! Extend some of God’s love to someone else today! You have so much to offer!
Scripture
About this Plan
The "No More Perfect Moms 7-Day Devotional" will help you free yourself from unrealistic expectations as you learn to view yourself as God has made you. Each of the seven readings includes excerpts from the book "No More Perfect Moms" by Jill Savage (CEO, Hearts at Home) along with Bible verses that will encourage and edify you as a mom.
More