Every parish has visitors, but not every visit is the same. Are your visitors having a positive experience? Will they come back? Do they feel welcomed? How is our hospitality to these visitors?
Think of the last time you visited another parish for the first time. Did you know where to park? Did you find your way around easily? Did you feel welcomed? Were you a bit nervous? What was positive about the experience and what was negative?
Many Catholic disciples are able to look beyond the negatives in a parish, because they are insiders who understand the reality of the Eucharist. But, most outsiders to our parishes are unable to do the same and they may focus on the externals we may gloss over. The challenge for us is to see our parishes through the eyes of our visitors, so we can be more welcoming to them.
In this way, we can better see the unspoken cultural norms that pervade our parishes. Some of these norms are unhealthy to hospitality.
Therefore, we need to explore how we can be more hospitable and the primary reason why is that it is commanded by Jesus! God wants us to welcome the stranger and tells us this again and again in Sacred Scripture:
- “The stranger who sojourns with you shall be to you as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself; for you were strangers in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.” -Lev 19:34
- Jesus identifies himself with those who are strangers to us - “I was a stranger and you welcomed me” -Matt 25:35
- “Contribute to the needs of the saints, practice hospitality.” -Rom 12:13
- “Practice hospitality ungrudgingly to one another.” -1 Peter 4:9
- “Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.” -Heb 13:2
- Our Christian witness is reflected in how we treat one another - “By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” -John 13:35
- Paul was explicit in 1 Tim 3:2 and Titus 1:7-8 about how a Bishop is supposed to be hospitable.
I doubt anyone would want their parish to be less hospitable, yet in examining what we need to change, let us first think of the reasons someone may come to your parish who has not come regularly beforehand:
These people will see things differently than we do. I worked for a campus ministry parish that had a business class do a project on our parish. They visited over the course of a week and wrote down their observations. It was a very enlightening exercise for our staff, because they saw things we didn't (many are now on the list below). A parish "secret shopper" who reports back to the leadership will tell you more than you imagined.
In thinking about our visitors, remember that each person has a unique reason why they are coming to your parish. What every one of them wants is to feel valued and welcomed. In thinking about visitors, let us not forget that at many parishes we have regular attendees who may also have attended for years without anyone greeting them. What a sad state of affairs. So, let us do our part - here are some tips on how we can improve.
16 Tips To Improving Your Parish Hospitality
Remember, the point isn’t just to be hospitable for the sake of hospitality, but to show the love of God, as a community, to others.