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Renewal is a Christ-centered, student-led creation care network that focuses on living in right relationship with God. It strives to inspire, connect, and equip students in their stewardship work on Christian college campuses. Together through prayer, service, and action it aims to expand the creation care movement and support the initiatives that are already happening. As followers of Christ, its members seek to follow His example of love by taking care of everything that He so lovingly created--the earth and each other.
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As the days get warmer and longer and summer begins to seep into our skin, we can’t help but be beguiled by a particularly sweet summer fantasy: the idea of reclining on a porch swing with a good book in one hand and a lemonade in the other.
Why do I call this picture of contentment a fantasy? Well, porch swings generally hang on front porches—and the front porch is an architectural detail that many of our homes lack.
Indeed, the importance of the front porch has been diminished by the technology- and efficiency-obsessed culture we live in today. There is much in that culture that threatens our fundamental humanity with busyness, anonymity, and industrialization. But there is much about the front porch that is human.
According to The American Porch: An Informal History of an Informal Place by Michael Dolan, the concept of the front porch—that sometimes loved, sometimes neglected icon of the American neighborhood—arose in a number of cultures (think of the Greek Parthenon or the porticos of the Roman Empire). But in the 1600s it traveled to the New World on the backs of African slaves who survived the journey across the Atlantic and, upon setting foot on land, were instructed to build their own houses. They built what they had known in Africa: small dwellings fronted by a roofed outdoor area to provide cool shade during the day’s hottest hours and to be a social space that bridged public and private worlds.
This intermediary social nature of the porch is its strongest asset. The porch is a physical space that is both personal to its owner and hospitable to guests and strangers. It is a threshold of community: a place neither of anonymity nor of complete intimacy. It is a place where new connections are wrought and old connections are strengthened. One can be invited onto a front porch even as a passerby; it provides opportunities for welcoming the stranger.
Contrast the front porch with the back deck, an architectural feature that arose in American neighborhoods in the 1970s. The back deck is purely private, a sanctuary into which only the friends and relatives of the deck owner are admitted. Dolan describes the growing popularity of back deck construction thus:
“Decks got smoother, bigger, and more complex. Backyards started to look like adult Jungle Gyms. Ever-larger jerry-rigged 3-D grids rose behind kraal-like stockade walls that went up overnight in eight-foot sections, prefabricated privacy (or was it spite?) fences that made a backyard into a mystery zone (What were they doing in there?) … The deck became the prime real-world architectural element of the Me Decade.”
I’ll wager that more of us live in homes with back decks than with front porches. My home certainly fits that description. We have a large stoop (and, of course, a back deck), but it’s a little small for hosting a gathering of friends, and it has no roof to shield us from the elements (the original African concept of a cool respite is nowhere to be found).
But the true confession is this: My husband and I don’t use it often because it is an awkward interface between our neighbors and us. We live in a perfectly walkable neighborhood, and lots of folks pass by as we read on the front steps or putter around in the flowerpots, but at best we offer a shy “hello” to each other. What I really want to say is, “This is not only our space. We see you, you see us, and we want to welcome you into a very human space of interaction and maybe, if we’re lucky, friendship.” But we’re fairly new to the area, and shouting that across the front lawn might be overdoing it.
I’m pretty sure we’re not alone in our hesitancy to embrace the awkwardness of our front stoop. It’s difficult to regenerate a front-porch culture in a country that has largely abandoned the physical front porch in favor of air conditioning and television, and, again according to Dolan, in response to perceived stranger-danger and the general fear and suspicion that characterizes much of our post World War world.
So where do we find porch-like spaces of hospitality and welcome? Where do we re-create the neighborhood gathering culture that formed around the front porch?
In many cases we drive away from our homes and neighborhoods to gather with already familiar friends in more neutral territory than an individual’s or family’s residence, pocketing ourselves away in coffee shops or restaurants. These gathering spaces build community to an extent, but they are not homes. They lack the hospitality and personality of a front porch, and demand none of the admittedly awkward, but still crucial, aspects of reaching out and drawing in that comprise a heartfelt welcome. A front porch is immediate and visible to neighbors, fostering interaction that is spontaneous—not planned—and allowing a community to come together in a space in a casual way.
Additionally, while reinvigorating a front-porch culture might strengthen a Christian ethic of hospitality and welcome, it also encourages more living en plein air. Walking, gardening, and letting our children play outdoors all become more attractive activities when we know there are eyes on the street (part of writer and urban activist Jane Jacobs’ prescription for safe and healthy cities). We get more exercise and less television when we discover that hanging out with our neighbors is enjoyable, and that walking to a nearby porch for a drink and some conversation is easier and more fulfilling than driving to a coffee shop. We learn more about our local topography and ecology along the way to the neighbor’s porch. We take responsibility for each other: We discover who in our community is in need of prayer, a good meal, or help with a month’s rent. Maybe we even realize that our local streetscape is dangerous, and we gather as a community to give it sidewalks, pedestrian refuge islands, or stop signs so that we can gather together more safely.
It turns out that a front porch is more than a quaint architectural bauble hanging from the front of a house. And even if we don’t have front porches to lounge on this summer, we can extend the front porch mindset of neighborhood and community a long way out into society.
Kendra Langdon Juskus is managing editor for Flourish.

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