The Often-Overlooked Anybodies--July 3, 2026
[Jesus said:] "Whoever welcomes a prophet in the name of a prophet will receive a prophet’s reward, and whoever welcomes a righteous person in the name of a righteous person will receive the reward of the righteous, and whoever gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones in the name of a disciple—truly I tell you, none of these will lose their reward.” (Matthew 10:41-42)
It's a beautiful but surprising collection of people you find gathered at God's table. It's not so much the folks from the covers of magazines, the celebrities on the red carpet, the tycoons on the Forbes 500 list, or the big names carved into marble or put up in obnoxious gold letters, but more the often-overlooked anybodies who care about speaking the truth, doing right by their neighbors, and simple acts of kindness. Like Kurt Vonnegut put it, "You meet saints everywhere. They can be anywhere. They are people behaving decently in an indecent society."
Rarely do those sorts of people make headlines or become famous, but Jesus says that he is building a community of people learning to see--and to welcome--those kinds of unsung saints. And he also seems to know that the wider world may not see the worth or beauty of these blessedly ordinary people, but that God certainly does.
These few verses from Matthew 10 might sound familiar, since many of us heard them in worship this past Sunday. Jesus has been preparing his disciples for going out into the surrounding towns and villages where he is sending them, basically, to be his representatives all around: they will do what he does and speak his same message. They'll heal people, cast out evil spirits, raise the dead, relieve illness, and announce Jesus' message that "the Reign of God has come near." And even though he has warned them that there will be some places they might not be welcomed or well-received, there will definitely be others who receive them with open arms. Those will be the people who realize that when they are welcoming Jesus' disciples, they are really opening their homes to Jesus himself, and to the God who sent him. And then Jesus goes on, here in today's verses, to describe an even broader welcome: there are indeed people who will recognize the truth-telling prophets who come across their path, and they will listen. There will be people who take notice when other do the right thing and act for justice in the world around them--and they will open their doors to such decent people doing decent things in the world. There will be folks who will show compassion and hospitality as simple as a cup of cold water, simply because they recognize that they are in the presence of someone God has sent into their lives. The world may not think much of any of these people, but Jesus insists that God does... and God keeps opening the eyes of folks to recognize them, too.
That's how we have to hear this business about "rewards"--whether for "prophets" or "the righteous" or even those coming "in the name of a disciple;" the world may not see any of these people as worthy of noting, but God sees, and God will be sure to honor and care for them all. Prophets, after all, were not often well-received by their initial listeners, and in the Bible at least, the prophets were often rejected, insulted, run out of town, or even killed because they spoke truth to power and made the complacent uncomfortable. The same is true about those who are truly committed to doing "justice" or "righteousness" (one word means both in Greek): often, those who do what is right and call out wrongdoing around them get labeled "divisive" or "disagreeable" or "troublemaking." Jesus, of course, also famously announced "blessing" on "those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake," which tells us that Jesus certainly knew that the world does not always applaud the folks who care about justice. And yet Jesus also is confident that God still sees... and vindicates the ones who are dismissed or harassed by the world for speaking up against bullies or doing what is right but unpopular. In fact, God's goodness overflows so abundantly that even the ones who welcome a prophet will be regarded as prophets themselves in God's eyes. Even those who just offer a cup of water to another person as an act of kindness to a disciple of Jesus will be honored, Jesus says. The wider world may look on such people as nobodies being welcomed by other nobodies, but Jesus says that God sees differently, and treasures them all.
And so you end up here with a glimpse of a different kind of community at the center of Jesus' vision. He's not interested in establishing some exclusive country club for the Big Deals and Important People, but rather in gathering folks who would be otherwise ignored, dismissed, or excluded by the world. Jesus is interested in creating a found family in which we listen to prophets and pay attention to the ones committed to decency even when it is costly, a beloved community in which we take the time and make the effort to extend basic kindnesses to one another without obsessing over "what we will get in return." Such a community will always be attuned to interests wider than just "Me and My Group First," because it will be willing to listen to those prophets who help them see the people on the outside who have been overlooked, and it will be willing to see the example of those who do what is right even when it is inconvenient. And in the company of such people, we will be changed. We will become more like Jesus, and at the very same time more fully who we were meant to be all along.
Honestly, that kind of life in community seems pretty compelling to me. Jesus is teaching us how to be such a saintly people, in Kurt Vonnegut's sense--who try to be "decent people in indecent times," who tell difficult truths even when it makes them into gadflies, who do the right thing when nobody is looking, and who gladly open their tables to strangers without worrying about getting paid back. If that kind of life seems compelling to you, too, I've got good news for you. This is what Jesus has brought us into.
Lord Jesus, shape us into people who reflect your goodness by placing us alongside others you are shaping, too.






