🥖 Sermon Notes – June 29, 2025
Series: Eating and Drinking [with the Lost]
Title: Radically Ordinary Hospitality
Text: Luke 19:1-10 & Luke 7:33-50
Big Idea: Rediscovering radically ordinary hospitality as the core practice of the church's mission, emotional health, and spiritual formation.
🌍 Series Recap: Community & Unity
  • Unity precedes community.
  • Real unity = doing life with people different from us.
  • Sermons mean little if we don’t live them out.
  • Community is about depth, not numbers (4–12 people, doing life together).
🍽️ Introduction: The Table > The Stage
  • Jesus’ primary ministry model: meals (not sermons).
  • Eating together = spiritual formation + gospel in action.
  • Meals are a symbol of inclusion and embodied grace.
📖 Luke 19:1–10 – Zacchaeus
  • Jesus sought out Zacchaeus, a corrupt tax collector.
  • In Jesus’ time, eating with someone = deep acceptance.
  • Challenge: Who are today’s “Zacchaeuses”?
    → How does it feel to imagine Jesus dining with someone we might reject?
📖 Luke 7:33–50 – The Woman Who Wept
  • A "sinful" woman (likely a sex worker) anoints Jesus.
  • Simon the Pharisee fails at basic hospitality.
  • Jesus redefines holiness by praising her love and faith.
  • Jesus: “Your sins are forgiven… your faith has saved you.”
     → True hospitality = love, forgiveness, and peace.
✝️ Jesus' Mission & Method
  • Mission: “The Son of Man came to seek and save the lost.” (Luke 19:10)
  • Method: “The Son of Man came eating and drinking…” (Luke 7:34)
  • Meals were how Jesus reached people — one table at a time.
  • Even Communion was shared around a table with food and drink.
❤️ Hospitality vs. Entertainment
Entertainment | Hospitality
Curated, exclusive | Ordinary, inclusive
Performance | Service
“You owe me” | Generous, expecting nothing
Event-based | Lifestyle
Social ladder focus | Justice for the poor (Luke 14)
  • Greek word for hospitality: Philoxenia = Love of the stranger
     (opposite of xenophobia).
🏡 New Testament Hospitality
  • Romans 12:13 – “Practice hospitality.”
  • 1 Peter 4:9 – “Offer hospitality without grumbling.”
  • Hebrews 13:2 – “Some have shown hospitality to angels…”
  • 1 Tim 3 & Titus 1 – Elders must be hospitable.
🔥 Application & Challenge
Hospitality = Ministry.
  • “Your table is a sacred place.” – Simon Carey Holt
  • Meals are Eucharistic moments where God’s love becomes real.
  • The early church grew not by power, but by shared meals.

🪑 Reflect & Respond:
  1. Who needs to experience God's welcome through your table?
  2. What one step can you take this week to practice radically ordinary hospitality?
  3. Do you treat meals as ministry opportunities?
  4. Is your kitchen a sacred space?

    Bottom Line:
    Jesus changed the world one meal at a time. So can we.

Additional Resources to Go Deeper!



Community Group Discussion Guide

Sermon Title: Radically Ordinary Hospitality
Series: Eating and Drinking [with the Lost]
Date: June 29, 2025
Text: Luke 19:1-10; Luke 7:33-50

Begin with prayer (5 minutes)

Gather together as a Community in a comfortable setting (around a table, on the couch, the floor of a living room, etc.). Have somebody lead a prayer asking the Holy Spirit to lead and guide your time together. 

Debrief the teaching in triads (10 minutes)

If you are in a Community of seven or more, divide into small groups of 3–4 people each(ideallysame gender). Spend a few minutes catching up on life, then talk through the following questions about the teaching. 

  1. Did you listen to the teaching? What did you think?
  2. Is eating and drinking with the lost a part of your day-to-day life? If not, are you open to it? 


Transition back to one large group (5 minutes) 

Ask a few questions about this week’s Practice:

  1. How does everybody feel about this new Practice?
  2. Does anybody have a story to share that would encourage the Community about this Practice? Perhaps you have an experience in which you followed Jesus’ example of eating and drinking with the lost and good things came of it?


Read this Overview

With each passing year, our culture becomes increasingly post-Christian. People are more hostile to the gospel of Jesus than ever before. And yet this is nothing new, since we know that Jesus himself faced anger and antagonism in his culture. But how did he overcome that? One meal at a time. In story after story, we read of Jesus eating and drinking with the lost. In doing so, he set a timeless practice into motion. This practice is what the New Testament writers go on to call “hospitality.”And while the practice of hospitality is directed at those inside and outside the church, the Greek word literally means“the love of a guest.” Hospitality is expressing the welcome of God the Father to all through tangible acts of love, ideally through giving food, shelter, and relationship.

Our Practice for the coming week is incredibly simple: follow Jesus’ example of eating and drinking with somebody who has yet to experience the Father’s welcome. And the beauty of this Practice is that anybody can do it. All it takes is a table.

Read over this coming week’s Practice before you call it a night (10 minutes)

Here’s the Practice for the coming week:

Exercise #1: Listening Prayer  

  • (If you can, get somewhere quiet for this one. If you are not able to, that’s ok.)
  • Invite the Holy Spirit to give shape to your imagination. Ask him to bring a name or face to mind for you to share a meal with in the coming week(s).
  • Contact that person and invite them to share a meal with you. 


Exercise #2: Share a Meal with Somebody

  • This next part is pretty straightforward – eat and drink with somebody! 
  • Ideally, open your home or apartment. If that doesn’t work, invite them to a third space (a restaurant, café, etc.)
  • This might be a great time to learn how to cook a few good meals. A quick search of the internet will yield loads of easy-to-prepare, super delicious meals. 
  • As you host the meal, think of creative ways to express the love and welcome of Jesus toward your guests.
  • During your time together, ask questions, listen, and don’t be afraid to share meaningful conversation. At the same time, view small talk as a form of hospitality, of creating room for the guest. Just focus on loving them, not on “selling them” on Jesus.
  • Pray for your guest before, during, and after your meal. Whatever you want to see God do in your life, pray into that. 


Work through these discussion questions (10-15 minutes) 

  1. Any thoughts, creative ideas, or feedback on this coming week’s Practice? 
  2. Is there anybody in your life who immediately comes to mind that you want to share a meal with? 


Close in prayer (10 minutes)


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