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A Direct Blessing From God Keith M. McFarren June 28, 2026 Matthew 10:40-42 There is a small metal sign that hangs above the door at the Copper Kettle Restaurant near New Castle, Indiana that reads: "Our success means serving you to your satisfaction." The entire staff of this little restaurant located just northeast of New Castle lives by that adage. When you go in you’re hungry but when you leave, you leave fed, filled, and very pleased with the little roadside restaurant. Molly, the "chief cook and bottle washer" smiles and says, "Everything good in my life comes together here: I have the gift of cooking, the perfect location, and a steady stream of hungry people. If that isn't a recipe for a successful restaurant, then I don't know what is." When Dan R. Dick, a writer for the magazine Discipleship Dateline, left the Copper Kettle, he left with one thought in mind: What is true for Molly is true for The United Methodist Church and all of its people. We have the gospel, which we could look at as being the good food, we have thousands of prime locations throughout the country; and we have a steady stream of spiritually hungering people. But there is one more element that brings all of this together, an element that ties all of this together to make it successful. What makes the Copper Kettle the success that it is, is the hospitality that is offered inside the four walls of this roadside restaurant. From the moment you enter, you have no doubt that the customer is important. All the attention turns to you as a customer and you soon know that your comfort and your satisfaction are the primary concerns of the entire staff. Business is good, the owners are happy and the people just keep coming back. The food is good, but you see, it’s all in the hospitality. It’s all in how we treat others. It’s all in where we put others in our life and where we put ourselves in relationship to those other people. That’s what Jesus meant this morning when he said that giving unselfish service to others will bring you great rewards. In the New Living Translation Bible, Jesus uses the word “welcome” –“Anyone who welcomes you is welcoming me, and anyone who welcomes me is welcoming the Father who sent me.” But there is a better word than “welcome.” People aren’t just “welcomed” as they come into the Copper Kettle. They aren’t just spoken to; they aren’t just shown a table and then made to wait for the waitress to come and take their order. There is more to the success of the Copper Kettle than just welcoming people. The King James Version and the New International Version of the Bible use the word “receive” instead of welcome. “He who receives you, receives me, and he who receives me receives the one who sent me.” “Anyone who receives a prophet” and “anyone who receives a righteous man will receive a righteous man’s reward. “Receive” is a word meaning “to admit” or “to accept” or “to take into one’s possession.” That’s what happens at the Copper Kettle. When you walk through the door you are more than just welcomed as a visitor, you are “received” by the entire staff. You are “taken in.” You are “accepted.” You become part of them and they want nothing more than to make you feel comfortable and to satisfy your wants and needs and to take care of you the best way they know how. It’s about hospitality. They, the workers at the restaurant, become the person with the cold water that Jesus was talking about this morning and we, as the customer entering the restaurant, become the person who is in need and receives that cup of cold water. Here’s something else about good hospitality. The person that really cares about good hospitality will give you as much cold water as you need. They won’t stop with just one cup. The person that cares about providing the type of hospitality that is described in our text is willing to give you as much water as you need until you are satisfied. How much we love God can be measured by how well we treat other people. The example Jesus gives us of giving a cup of cold water to a child is a perfect example of giving unselfish service to others because a small child usually won’t return the favor that we do for them. They are grateful for what you do for them but their minds aren’t developed enough to think that they should pay you back for what you did for them. As Christian’s we don’t expect a reward for what we do because what we are doing comes naturally. What we do comes straight from our heart with no strings attached. We are willing to "go that extra mile,” always willing to extend ourselves with a form of “radical hospitality” that shows others that we are here to serve, and not to be served. In the 17th Chapter of 1st Kings as Elijah was running for his life from King Ahab and his wife Jezebel, God told him to go to the town of Zarephath. Go to Zarephath and there will be a widow there who will feed you and take care of you. How strange, Elijah thought, to go to a poor widow for food right in the middle of a draught that God had created to punish Ahab and his people. After all it was always the poor people who ran out of food first during the time of a famine. But Elijah obeyed God and the first widow that he came upon was a Gentile, but she was a Gentile who believed in the Lord. She was a poor woman who had no bread and only a little flour and oil – enough only for herself and her son– but she willingly gave all that she had to Elijah. But she willingly baked a loaf of bread with what little oil and flour she had and gave it to Elijah. And because of her hospitality she reaped the reward of being guaranteed by God to have enough bread to last throughout the draught. God had rewarded her heartfelt hospitality by providing bread for her and her son as long as it was necessary because she had taken the time to help someone in dire need. The widow woman did more than just welcome Elijah. She “received” him. She went beyond giving just “a cup of cold water” to someone who needed it. She was willing to provide heartfelt hospitality to someone in need by giving him as much water as he needed. God knows of every good deed we do and don’t do as if he were the one receiving it. It may be small, that little touch of hospitality, but it’s as if God himself were the one receiving it. We all come from different social and economic backgrounds. But what Jesus tells us this morning affects all of us no matter where we are on the ladder of life – no matter if we are at the top of the ladder with everything we need in life financially and materialistically or if we are at the bottom of the ladder – struggling to make ends meet maybe even not knowing where our next meal will come from. Billy Graham circled the globe time and time again to become the most recognized evangelist of our time. While he was going all over the world, it was his little known wife Ruth who was always behind the scenes staying at home raising their 5 children and taking care of things on the home front. Billy Graham was known throughout the world but it was Ruth Graham who was in charge of the family. Ruth Graham gladly stayed in the background as a supporting cast and ran the show at the Graham household and she was happy doing it. Billy Graham always said that, next to God, Ruth provided the greatest support for him and his ministry and without her love and patience and caring he would have never gotten as far in life as he did. Ruth Graham was serving God by giving her husband a “cup of cold water.” That is what God called her to do and she was more than happy to provide not only for him but for others who came to their home. God placed her there as a servant and being a woman of God she accepted God’s task and did what he asked of her. There are so many different people throughout the world, people who shoulder public and political responsibility on a daily basis. And those same people will tell you that they could have never survived the daily pressure and daily demands of the job or of life itself if it had not been for the love and the care and sacrifice of someone at home – someone who was never in the public eye – someone who preferred to remain in the background. Someone who only cared about handing out cold cups of water to others. Not everyone wants to be in the forefront and stand out before the world, and not everyone needs to be, and yet Jesus tells us that because of the way they receive others, because of their heartfelt hospitality these are the people who will receive God’s greatest reward. The good news in all of this is that the circumstances in our life do not limit our potential rewards. We don’t have to be a well known person. We don’t have to be 100% healthy. We don’t have to be rich. We don’t have to be handsome or beautiful. We don't have to be a prophet to receive a prophet's reward; we only have to show heartfelt hospitality to others. We don't have to be a great evangelist to receive a great evangelist's reward; we only have to offer our hospitality. "Whoever gives one of these little one’s a drink of cold water will not lose his reward.” The smallest gift to the littlest disciple will bring God’s biggest reward. Just as God knows and cares about every hair on our head, God also knows and cares about every generous act that we commit. These generous acts toward others are counted as acts toward Jesus -- and acts toward Jesus are also counted as acts toward God. So you see, there is a direct line of blessing from the littlest disciple…all the way to God and back again. The beauty of our text this morning is that it focuses on the simple things. The world will always need its great leaders and politicians. The world will always need people who offer shining examples of sainthood. The world will always need great teachers and people whose names have become household words. But the kingdom of God will also always need people who offer themselves and their hospitality. Jesus and the church will always need the behind the scenes people, those people who are willing to work behind the scenes doing the simple things… keeping a family intact, making a house a home, making a business run smoothly, or helping a church reach out to its visitors and to the rest of the world. Jesus and the Church will always need those whose hearts are filled with Christian love, people who are willing to reach out and receive others with Christian hospitality…offering something as simple and refreshing as a cold cup of water. |
