Church Blog
The Great Friend
I think the first time I understood that Jesus really cared about “me” and wanted to have a relationship or friendship with me was after my husband Jim died. I had remarried and had a brand-new baby and two older kids. I’d been a Christian about eight years and was living “my life.” And gradually I began to drift away not focusing on Jesus or His Word. Just going to church while doing my thing. It took about two years of me doing that when I came to the realization that I felt totally alone and had no one in my life I could call a friend, or that even cared about me, outside of my family.
I felt completely empty and alone...
A Biblical Theology of Friendship
Loving sacrificially can be one of the hardest things a Christian is called to do, but it is also one of the most rewarding. For a little sixth grader, my first encounter with sacrificial love was going over and sitting with the new girl in our class at lunch instead of sitting with my best friends. I was uncomfortable, but God called me out to do it. In doing so, I gained an awesome new friend and my faith in the Lord grew. The Lord calls us to sacrificial love like Jesus to cultivate friendship with Him. And in a weird way, when we follow Jesus’ call to sacrificially love our friends like Jesus, we become closer to Jesus ourselves…
Cultivating Friendship
If you have spent any prolonged amount of time with me, then you know that I can be a very sarcastic person. This may not necessarily be a bad thing, but it definitely can be if it gets in the way of genuinely encouraging friends toward godliness. There is no doubt that encouragement is important for friendships. Although it may be awkward at first, it is entirely needed for building a good friendship. Friendship is very important, but knowing that does little good if we do not know how to develop good, Godly friendships. In this chapter pastor Hunter gives several practical tools for “ Cultivating Friendship” …
A Friend Who Is as Your Own Soul
My father worked for the U.S. Forest Service during my growing up years. As a result, he was transferred often. The twelfth move landed us in Oregon City when I was in 6th grade. I was at an age when friends were important, and I missed friends from the previous community where we had lived. Additionally, since I was the new kid, I was teased and bullied without mercy. One day walking home from school I happened to see a scuffle taking place between an acquaintance’s younger brother and another boy. Without touching either boy I was able to talk them out of the tiff and send them on their way. The next day the “acquaintance” told me never to touch his brother again. I explained I had not, and that each had gone their own way without even fighting. At that point he beat me up and, apparently believing me to be a low learner, warned again to never touch his brother again. The peacemaker needed a friend…
“Friendship: The Greatest of Worldly Goods”
“Choose your friends wisely because they will either make you or break you.” This is the way my high school Sunday school teacher ended every lesson. As I look back over my 51 years of life, her words have proved invaluable. The people I hung out with are the people I became like. Habits, interests, and patterns of speech were shaped by those closest to me, the people I called friends…
“The Edenic Ache”
Once, as I laid in tall grass somewhere in the Georgia wilderness, loneliness really struck me. I felt it press down upon me like a heavy blanket soaked through with cold water. I was on watch during a field training exercises that I participated in while I was in Army Basic Training on what was then called Fort Benning. I knew I had several hours ahead of me trying desperately to stay awake, and as I battled complete exhaustion and fear of being caught sleeping, I felt totally isolated. Even though I was surrounded by a company numbering more than a hundred men, I felt very alone. But when we returned from the field training several days later, letters from home had arrived. All of us, young men who had been training in combat with such bravado, spent an hour sitting on bunks or hunched in wall lockers, weeping as we read the words of friends and family. We were aching for the companionship of our loved ones. As it turns out, all of us have this similar aching need for deep relationship.
“Forgotten Friendship”
Forgotten Friendship is a fitting title to begin this book on Made for Friendship. It is no surprise to all of us in the modern Western world to realize the depth of our friendships may be lacking. Hunter opens with the universal agreement among all people about the need and great joy found in friendships, but that we often don’t talk about it or we devote little time to exploring this subject…
“Made For Friendship”
I am so excited to start the book Made for Friendship which focuses on something I love—friendship. I love the friends I have. I love making new friends. I love all the different kinds of friendships I have—I think we need a diversity of friends and types of friendships. And I love helping others make friends. All that to say, I love this topic, and I will be praying that the friendships in our church grow because of this summer series…