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Use Group Events to Love Others

By Sam Riviera
1 Comment

Use Group Events to Love Others

group eventIn the previous posts in this series about getting to know our neighbors (sign up below to receive all the posts by email), we discussed first getting acquainted with our neighbors and then building relationships with them. Once we have built relationships with at least some of our neighbors, weโ€™re ready to move on to the next step, group events. Even though it is tempting to skip getting acquainted and building relationships and go straight to a group event, such as a backyard barbecue, we have discovered that the group events always function more smoothly when we know and have already established a relationship with everyone we invite to the event.

Group Events

Group events are great opportunities for neighbors to get to know each other better, both those we already know, as well as those we barely know (even though those people may live just half a block away) or donโ€™t know at all. Through group events we will discover new things about each other, including shared interests. We often discover that neighbors we assumed were unfriendly are actually very friendly.

When weโ€™re planning the event, we try to make sure that everyone we invite knows someone else in the group in addition to my wife and me. Since we know everyone in the group, we introduce people to anyone they donโ€™t know. Since everyone already knows someone, the people they know also introduce them to other people. Conversations that begin at group events are often continued in the days and years ahead.

Our First Neighborhood Group Event

My leg was in a non-walking cast. I was unable to help clean the house or to prepare most of the food that would be necessary for a New Yearโ€™s Eve party. But our neighbor was terminally ill with cancer and this would be her last New Yearโ€™s Eve. We agreed that if she could come for even ten minutes, weโ€™d have a party. She said she would come. Then we invited more neighbors.

My wife cleaned. I made a shopping list. We went to Costco (me in a wheelchair) and bought take-and-bake pizza, salad, hummus, a cheese log, crackers, cheese trays, sparkling cider and champagne. We came home and I made cheesecake and persimmon pudding.

Everyone we invited came, fourteen in all, including our sick friend. She looked fabulous (it was her โ€œbest dayโ€ between chemo treatments). We talked. We swapped stories. They stayed (even our sick friend stayed almost three hours). We toasted each other. Oh yes, we ate, but the food was not the centerpiece of the event. Spending time together was.

That was a special night, and everyone there understood that. After the event, everyone said they wanted to do it again, and those present who do not live in the neighborhood asked to be invited to the next event. Some people called us later and asked for each other’s phone numbers. New relationships were begun and old ones strengthened.

Our Second Neighborhood Group Event โ€“ Cinco de Mayo Party

Over the course of throwing group events, we have discovered that people love theme parties, especially those centered around holidays. Since we live near the border, we love to celebrate Cinco de Mayo (5th of May). We invited a group of neighbors to a Cinco de Mayo party on Sunday May 1, which was the day our community celebrated Fiesta/Cinco de Mayo.

We made enchiladas and rice, provided drinks and asked everyone to bring a side dish or dessert that went with the theme. Bringing something to share makes people feel more involved and relieves them from feeling obligated to return the invitation. Sixteen people and lots of food arrived around 4:30.

Neighbors met neighbors they barely knew or didnโ€™t know, and reconnected with those they already knew. Half of the group had come to the first event on New Yearโ€™s Eve, and half had not. One of the โ€œnewโ€ people had never been involved in any neighborhood activity. Everyone (except my wife and I) met at least three or four neighbors they had not known previously.

Bin Laden and Group Events

We ate and everyone talked and talked. We were still sitting and talking when one man received a phone call telling him the president was about to make an announcement concerning Bin Laden. We turned on the television. After the presidentโ€™s speech, someone asked, โ€œDo you remember where you were when you heard the news about Kennedy? Now weโ€™ll remember where we were when we heard the news about Bin Laden.โ€

group eventsNear the end of the evening, my wife and I proposed a โ€œblock partyโ€ for the 4th of July. Everyone liked the idea. The neighborhood is really getting into this. We now have two co-chairs and people from other streets in the neighborhood are asking if they can come. Weโ€™re inviting everyone on our street, and those people may invite anyone else from the neighborhood, as well as their friends and relatives. We have not seen this much enthusiasm since we moved here. We may get 30 or 300. Weโ€™re passing out โ€œSave The Dateโ€ flyers today and tomorrow.

We Like Each Other

Our neighbors did not want to leave. They love spending time with each other. The party finally broke up around 9:00. Two people asked us if they could come back later โ€œjust to talk.โ€

What is it we are doing?

We are building community in our community.

We are not asking them to “join our community” at church. Instead, we focus on nurturing the community where they already live – in their very own neighborhood.

People are talking to people they thought they didnโ€™t like. People are meeting neighbors a few houses away who they didnโ€™t know and neighbors are spending more time talking with each other. Neighbors who didnโ€™t attend either of the first two group events have told us that theyโ€™ve heard about the events, would like to come to our next event and are looking forward to the July 4th block/neighborhood party.

In the next post weโ€™ll discuss some pitfalls to avoid when getting to know our neighbors, and then will conclude this series with โ€œLoving Without an Agenda.โ€

Until then, have you hosted any group events? What did you do, and what was the reaction and response from your neighbors? Leave a comment below!

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God is Redeeming Church, Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, evangelism, group events, looks like Jesus, love, love like Jesus, neighbors, Sam Riviera

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7 Ways to Build Friendships With Your Neighbors – Part 2

By Sam Riviera
6 Comments

7 Ways to Build Friendships With Your Neighbors – Part 2

love your neighborThis post contains three more ways to develop friendships with your neighbors. In a previous post, we looked at the first four,ย which included remembering their names, offering a helping hand, working towards a common goal, and paying attention. ⇦ Click here invite others to read this helpful post!

5. Keep Their Secrets

Would you like to know whose sister has been on national news for weeks? Whose family is Mafia? Who is an undercover secret government agent? Who is having an affair with a neighbor? Who is very rich, but lives simply? Who is gay? Who hates their neighbor? Who sunbathes nude in their backyard?

We have discovered that people tell us their secrets because they trust us. Are the secrets I mentioned above our neighborโ€™s secrets or the secrets of other people we know, or have known? Or am I making up these โ€œsecretsโ€? โ€“ Weโ€™re not telling.

Passing around this kind of information makes for juicy gossip and broken relationships. Donโ€™t give in to the temptation to tell what you know, except in the rare instance where you have come across a crime such as child abuse, spousal abuse, or drug dealing. In those cases, consult an attorney or trusted police officer for professional assistance.

Paying attention to what is happening in peopleโ€™s lives, whether it be an escaped dog, a broken water pipe, or sick family member offers opportunities to not only help them, but to also build relationships with them. When they trust us enough to tell us their secrets, being trustworthy and not sharing the information with others further builds and cements our relationships.

6. Weep With Those Who Weep

Whether our spouse left us or a family member has a serious illness or has died, wouldnโ€™t it be nice if Jesus could show up in person and spend time with us? Perhaps He does, in the person of His followers. Can we be that person for not only our family, but also for our neighbors?

love your neighborWhen we learned that our neighborโ€™s cancer had returned, we started spending time with her. When she told us that she wanted watermelon, we found a store that had watermelon in January. When she couldnโ€™t keep down any food we made her lots of batches of โ€œpear pudding,โ€ the only thing she could keep down. We looked at her pictures with her and her husband โ€“ the church where they married, vacations they had taken, and other pictures from her life. We prayed with them. We tried to answer their questions about God. We sat by her bedside the night before she died. We hugged her every time we saw her. We cried with her, and then again with her husband after she passed.

This is a painful part of life, but if we only want to be with people in their joy and happiness, but not in their grief and sorrow, we can never truly develop friendships with others. True relationships require that at we weep with those who weep.

7. Celebrate!

When we were kids, Halloween was our chance to wear a costume and get a bag of candy. My brother and I patrolled the local grocery stores and farmerโ€™s markets looking for the perfect pumpkin for a Jack-O-Lantern. I remember buying a sixty pound pumpkin the October I was fourteen, carrying it over a mile to my house and carving it with my brotherโ€™s help. It was almost as big as my brother. We loved Halloween!

Even as adults we can enjoy Halloween. We carve a pumpkin, turn on the porch light and station ourselves outside our front door with a big bowl of candy. Where we live, most of the children who come to our door are neighborhood children, accompanied by parents. A friendly greeting, a handful of candy and introducing ourselves to parents we donโ€™t know is a great way to get to know our neighbors. Next Halloween we plan to set up a fire pit on the driveway, surrounded by chairs and a table with chili, cider and plates of cookies, in addition to a bowl of candy.

People love parties centered around holidays โ€“ New Yearโ€™s Eve, Cinco de Mayo, Memorial Day, Fourth of July, and Labor Day. As a former wedding planner, party planner and caterer, Iโ€™ve planned lots of parties. When we finish this โ€œGetting To Know Our Neighborsโ€ series, weโ€™ll look at some ideas for planning a great party.

Weโ€™ve been looking at ways to build relationships with our neighbors after becoming acquainted with them. Weโ€™ve looked at remembering their names, helping them, working toward common goals, paying attention to what is going on in their lives, keeping their secrets, sharing their sorrows, and celebrating together.

In future posts we will look at moving those relationships to yet another level through group events, will discuss pitfalls to avoid and will discuss loving without an agenda.

Do you want to share Jesus with your neighbors?

There's more to it than inviting them to church...

Fill out the form below to receive several emails about how to get to know your neighbors and love them like Jesus.

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God is Redeeming Church, Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, evangelism, looks like Jesus, love like Jesus, loving neighbors, neighbors, Sam Riviera, Theology of the Church

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7 Ways to Build Friendships with Your Neighbors – Part 1

By Sam Riviera
1 Comment

7 Ways to Build Friendships with Your Neighbors – Part 1

The first step to building friendships with your neighbors is to break the ice with them and simply get to know them. We talked about this in a previous post. But once you have gotten to know your neighbors, you can begin building friendships with them.

get to know the neighborsThere are numerous ways of doing this, but let me mention just seven that have worked well for my wife and I as we seek to build relationships in our neighborhood. This post will contain the first four, and the next post in this series will contain the final three. โ‡ฆ Click here invite others to read this helpful post!

1. Remember Their Name

People love it when you remember their name. Yet most of us find it difficult to remember peopleโ€™s names.

We have found that writing down the names of people we have met and a brief note about them, such as โ€œFrank and Jill โ€“ Bobโ€™s neighbor,โ€ helps us remember their names. The next time we see Frank and Jill, we try to call them by name.

This almost always makes a positive impression on Frank and Jill, and further reinforces their names in our memories. It is OK with most people if we forget their name to ask them a second time, especially when it has been weeks or months since the last time we saw them.

2. Offer a Helping Hand

When neighbors are out of town, we often watch their houses, water their plants, and feed their pets. Sometimes we offer to dog sit at our house. We love dogs, and they love us. (We never tell the owners about the lasagna we fed to their dog, and we feign ignorance when they comment that Spot looks well-fed.)

We have helped neighbors with minor home repairs. We have helped them prepare food for their special occasions, and have picked up items for them when we went shopping. We especially try to help neighbors who are in crisis (such as a family member is very ill), or people who cannot afford to hire the work done (such as widows on a fixed income).

3. Work Towards a Common Goal

Many people want to help someone in need, but have grown weary of appeals for money. Most people, however, love to respond to a local or neighborhood need. When one neighborโ€™s wife was terminally ill, as neighbors discovered her needs, they helped with food, running errands, visits, and flowers.

When we visit neighborhood garage sales as the sales are winding down (usually just before lunchtime), we look for blankets, coats, sweaters, and similar items that we deliver to a local homeless shelter. When we mention what we plan to do with the items, people often donate the items or sell them very reasonably.

Last winter during a severe winter storm, we spent a weekend gathering warm clothing and similar supplies and taking them to the winter homeless center for distribution to people sleeping out in the open. Neighbors donated items and even purchased new items to help our cityโ€™s homeless people weather the storm.

4.ย Pay Attention

Occasionally something is happening to a neighbor that is out of the ordinary. They may need help, and may not even know they need help. Several times we have walked past neighbors houses and their gate was open, which allowed their dog to escape when the owners were not home. If we notice this, we go look for the dog, sometimes with the help of another neighbor and put the dog back in the yard. If we cannot catch the dog, we try to reach the dogโ€™s owner to report that the dog has escaped so the owner can return home to catch the dog.

neighborsOn other occasions we walked by neighbor’s houses and saw water running out of the house from under the garage door or front door. This indicates a broken water pipe indoors and a flooded house. After determining that no one is home, we try to find a neighbor with a large wrench so we can turn the water off at the street, or I run home to find such a wrench. After the water is off, we try to contact a neighbor who can reach the homeowner so they can return home to start the massive cleanup. At least three times the homeowners have later told me that our quick action saved them thousands of dollars in damages and prevented them from having to move out of the house while it was being repaired.

Sometimes we notice changes in peopleโ€™s routines that signal something is wrong in the household. We always ask what is wrong. Twice in recent years we have been told that a spouse had cancer. We asked if the sick person was allowed visitors and soon we knew the sick person and the family very well. We count it one of lifeโ€™s privileges to walk with people through the last years, months and days of their lives. I will write more on this in a later post.

So these are four of the things we do as we seek to build friendships with our neighbors. We will look at three more next time, but for now, have you done any of these sorts of things with your neighbors? Tell us about your similar experiences in the comment section below.

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God is Redeeming Church, Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, looks like Jesus, love like Jesus, neighbors, Sam Riviera, Theology of the Church

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5 Simple Ways to Break the Ice with Your Neighbors

By Sam Riviera
5 Comments

5 Simple Ways to Break the Ice with Your Neighbors

As I mentioned in the a previous post, most of us do not know many of our neighbors.ย We assume theyโ€™re unfriendly. Otherwise, they would have introduced themselves.

Or could it be that we have neglected to introduce ourselves? Perhaps most of our neighbors know each other, and somehow weโ€™ve been left out. Hmmmm! Shouldnโ€™t we at least check this out?

But how should we go about it?

How do we actually get to meet some neighbors and find out what is going on in our neighborhood?

Getting to know your neighbors begins with taking walks in the neighborhood.

walking the neighborhood

Even though many neighborhoods often appear to have no people, the people are there.

But when do they come out of their houses and into the street? We have discovered that many people like to take a short walk, clean out their car or do something in their front yard at the end of a nice day. Just about anytime Saturday, Sunday afternoons and early evenings are usually the best times to find people in front of their houses or in the street.

If weโ€™re going to meet them, we have to be out there also. Our solution? We walk around the neighborhood (and the two adjoining neighborhoods) at the times when we know weโ€™ll find people out of their houses.

As you walk the neighborhood, there are numerous things you can do to break the ice in getting to know your neighbors. Here are five:

1. Give Compliments

As you walk, maybe you see someone standing in their yard, looking at their new landscape job, paint job, car, or whatever. What should you say? People love sincere compliments… so give them a compliment!

Say โ€œWe love your new landscape jobโ€ (or whatever it is). โ€œIt looks so nice.โ€ Then ask โ€œDid you design it?โ€ (or paint it or do the work). Most people smile, say thank you, then introduce themselves and ask us who we are.

If you have been going on walks for a while, they may say, โ€œI see you walking all the time,โ€ and then proceed to tell you all about whatever it was you complimented them on. Sometimes they may invite you into their garage, backyard, or house to show you what theyโ€™ve done.

2. Take a Friendly Dog

take a dog walk neighboodAnother great icebreaker is to take a friendly dog along as you walk the neighborhood.

Our dog died a few years ago, but we have discovered that several neighbors have dogs that rarely get walked. The neighbors and especially the dogs are delighted when we offer to take the dog along on one of our walks. In addition to doing something nice for one neighbor, it gives us an opportunity to meet more neighbors.

Lots of people like dogs, and if you take yours (or a neighbor’s), they may stop you to ask questions about the dog you’re walking. We have even had people see us out of their window, come out of their front door and ask us how many dogs we own, which always ends up in all of us getting to know each other.

3. Garage sales

Some people who never seem to come outside their doors will occasionally decide to clean out their garage and have a garage sale. When they put their stuff on their driveway and sidewalk for sale, this is a great time for you to go talk with them.

Where we live, garage sales are usually done on a Saturday morning on the driveway. Since weโ€™re not really looking for things to buy, we wait until the serious garage sale crowd has thinned out, and walk to the sale. We make a comment, such as โ€œWhat a nice day for a garage sale!โ€ then add that we live nearby. The homeowners or renters then usually comment that they frequently see us walking and ask us questions. (What happened to your dog? How many dogs do you have? How many miles do you walk every day?) With few exceptions, they introduce themselves and we introduce ourselves.

4. Trash Pickup

neighborhood trash pickupSome neighborhoods have trash that builds up in various empty lots or along the sides of the streets. As you walk, carry a garbage bag to collect any stray garbage lying around. This not only helps improve the appearance of your neighborhood and cleans up the environment, but is another way to break the ice with your neighbors.

Two or three times throughout the year my wife and I take some garbage bags and โ€œtrash pickersโ€ (long-handled โ€œgrabbersโ€ that can be purchased for ten to twenty dollars at swap meets or Wal-Mart) and pick up trash in the street and on the sidewalks in the neighborhood. We do it on Saturdays or Sundays. Some people thank us, and some offer us a drink. Some ask us where we buy the pickers. We have met several people when picking up trash that we had never seen previously.

5. Handing out Flyers

When something of community interest is happening, we volunteer to hand out flyers in our neighborhood. If you want to maintain good relationships with your neighbors, you probably should not hand out political or religious flyers. These are almost never welcome.

Also, do not hand out flyers for sales events.ย 

But invitations to community events and parties are often good ways to meet neighbors. People like to be invited to parties.

This could be the city festival, art walk, community fair, and so on. As you do this, try to be very respectful of other peopleโ€™s property. Never cut across the lawn, jump over a fence, post a flyer on their car, or place it in their mailbox. It is generally best to hand out flyers only on weekend afternoons, when many people are home. As we walk up their front sidewalk, it is common for people to meet us at the door, and often they initiate a conversation with us.

This is by no means an exhaustive list of icebreakers. There are many others. In the next post, we will look at some ideas for taking our relationships with neighbors we have met a step further.

Do you want to share Jesus with your neighbors?

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Fill out the form below to receive several emails about how to get to know your neighbors and love them like Jesus.

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God is Redeeming Church, Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, looks like Jesus, love like Jesus, neighbors, Sam Riviera, Theology of the Church

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How to Get to Know Your Neighbors

By Sam Riviera
11 Comments

How to Get to Know Your Neighbors

neighborsDo you want to get to know your neighbors? Do you want to share with them the love of Jesus? Let me share with you what has worked for us …

My wife and I know most of the people in our neighborhood and in the two adjoining neighborhoods, a total of about three hundred homes. Several neighbors have told us that we know more neighbors than anyone else in the neighborhood, and asked us how that happened, since many of our neighbors have lived here longer than we have.

Follow Jesus to Your Neighbor’s House

We enjoy getting to know neighbors. It may appear to come natural to us, but we make it an intentional part of following Jesus.

In this series I will discuss some of the methods that have worked for us in getting to know our neighbors, how we move some of the relationships beyond just being acquainted, and what weโ€™re doing now to move those relationships to yet another level.

Living in Neighborly Isolation

Most of us drive home from work, push the button on our remote garage door opener, pull into the garage, close the garage door, and go into the house. If we emerge from the house that evening, we may go only to our backyard, possibly to play with our children, or to grill something on our outdoor grill. The next morning, we raise the garage door, back out, and wave to a neighbor as we pull away from our house.

If we hire a lawn service, we may rarely spend any time in our front yard. If weโ€™re lucky, we may know the people who live next to us, but probably donโ€™t know most of the people who live two or three houses away from ours. We may notice a house with an unkempt yard, or the house with several broken-down cars parked in front. But we donโ€™t know the people who live there, and assume theyโ€™re probably lazy.

Many of us find our friends and build relationships at work, church, or among relatives. When we have a party, those are the people we invite. When the party runs a little late on a warm summer evening when all of our neighbors have their windows open, and our guests are laughing and singing and some neighbor calls the police to complain, weโ€™re offended. We silently make a vow to get even with every neighbor who does anything to annoy us. We have our rights and have to stand up for them! Right?

Thatโ€™s what Jesus would do, right? Didnโ€™t He throw the moneylenders out of the temple, His temple? If Jesus could display His righteous anger, shouldnโ€™t it be OK for us to do the same?

Loving Your Neighbors Like Jesus

We have discovered there is another way, a way that not only doesnโ€™t get the neighbors upset with us and us mad at the neighbors, but a way that looks a whole lot more like Jesus.

This โ€œother wayโ€ begins with getting to know our neighbors.

Let me show you how we have come to know our neighbors, and how you can too.

If you truly want to live out the Gospel of Jesus Christ, it begins by getting to know your neighbors.

What are some easy, practical ways to do that? Weโ€™ll look at some of those ways in the series of posts on getting to know your neighbors. Sign up to receive them all for free by filling out the form below.

As you receive these emails, you will discover that there are better ways to love your neighbors than by passing out Bible tracts or inviting them to church. Sign up below to see how.

Do you want to share Jesus with your neighbors?

There's more to it than inviting them to church...

Fill out the form below to receive several emails about how to get to know your neighbors and love them like Jesus.

(Note: If you are a member of RedeemingGod.com, login and then revisit this page to update your membership.)

God is Featured, Redeeming Church, Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: Discipleship, looks like Jesus, love like Jesus, neighbors, Sam Riviera

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