One year my (then) young sons made their dad an apron for Father’s Day. Using a fabric pen, I outlined their hand prints onto the pocket of the apron and they each filled in their print. Andrew insisted that we were making a bib for Daddy. He was remembering his bibs that fit like backward, sleeveless shirts. The apron we were decorating did look like that wrap-around bib!
The bib and the apron both protect the clothing by adding a layer of protection. But there is a significant difference in the cultural connotations of bibs and aprons. A bib is worn by someone who is being fed, being served; an apron is worn by one who is the servant. A bib is donned by the consumer; an apron, by one who produces and provides. Wearing a bib is a necessary precursor to fitting into an apron.
The juxtaposition of the apron and bib is apt for the Church in this ever-changing time. As we mature in faith, we move from wearing a bib to donning an apron. As children, we are fed and nourished in the faith, guided and mentored on the journey by those who have walked their own spiritual path. We grow out of our constant need for the bib as we learn to feed ourselves and share in the work of feeding others. We don the apron of service and hospitality as the result of having been fed, nurtured, and growing by the faith community.
Hospitality is an important part of the culture of the scripture:
- Remember the three men who came to Abraham under the oaks of Mamre – Sarah had to cook for them a meal from scratch while the men waited.
- Remember the men of Sodom who were destroyed for their lack of hospitality?
- Remember Jesus’ words “I came not to be served but to serve.”
As we grow in faith and character, we become the hosts who wear the apron and allow the guest to determine how they are to be treated. Being a Christian requires us to give up the bib and don the apron.
Barbara Brown Taylor wrote, “To be where God is -- to follow Jesus -- means going beyond the limits of our own comfort and safety. It means receiving our lives as gifts instead of guarding them as our own possessions. It means sharing the life we have been given instead of bottling it for our own consumption.” (Barbara Brown Taylor, Seeds of Heaven: Sermons on the Gospel of Matthew. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press. 2004. p. 81)
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I wonder if in the Church, we continue to wear the bib as consumers of church programs and
services, expectant that we will be waited upon by others. I wonder if there were more apron-wearing servants, would we be able to nurture and grow more seekers toward full belonging? I wonder if the shortage of leadership in churches is a reflection of continuing need to be spoon fed.
Friends, it is time for the Church of Jesus Christ to take off our bibs and put on our aprons.
- It is time for us to live trusting the God who keeps promises, and to do the work of hospitality for people who need the Good News and who need God’s assurance that they need not be afraid.
- It is time we lived the Gospel of God’s abundance and shared in that grace.
- It is time we stopped expecting everything to be our way and seek the comfort of those who need God’s abundance and hospitality to be shown to them
- It is time we stop catering to the needs of those who are here and start serving those who most need to hear and experience God’s promises for the first time.
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