John 15:9-17
So I don’t want to brag
or anything, but I have over 900 friends…On Facebook that is. Admittedly I
haven’t actually met all of them in person and I have a tough time remembering
how exactly I know a large portion of them. Some of them get on my nerves so
much that I’ve opted to hide their posts, but they are all my friends in the
official Facebook sense of the word.
But how many of them
would I call in the middle of the night to confide in about an ongoing personal
struggle? That number would be considerably smaller. Those kind of friendships
are harder to come by.
There are more ways to
connect than ever, but authentic connection often eludes us. We may have lots
of acquaintances, but perhaps especially as we get older, it is difficult to
develop real and lasting friendships. Many people who are even living in the
midst of densely populated cities with a thousand Facebook friends still
struggle with deep loneliness. Our Gospel message today is good news indeed for
the lonely and friendless. Even if we don’t have a single friend in this world,
Jesus Christ, the Son of God, has called us his friends. This is truly
remarkable.
The great philosopher Aristotle
famously claimed that there could be no friendship between mortals and gods.
Friendship, he said, can only exist between equals. What can mortals possibly
have in common with a god? He wrote, “When one partner is quite separated from
the other, as in the case of divinity, the friendship can remain no longer.”
Aristotle was writing
from a pagan perspective generations before Christ. He could not envision the
incarnation of Jesus in which God took on flesh and lived a mortal life. The
impossible fact that God calls us friends is only possible because he became
one of us. God has bridged the gap in
Christ. Without in any way diminishing his divinity, God the Son has drawn near
to us on a human level. Not only did he share in every way our human condition,
but he has also raised us up with Christ to be partakers of his divine nature. Because
God and man are joined together and reconciled in Christ, we are more than
servants, we are friends.
The difference between a
servant and a friend is that a servant does his master’s will in order to earn
his love and favor. Friends serve one another out of a mutual love for one
another. Their works are an expression of the love that they already enjoy. They
are not out to earn it.
The work of a servant is
an external obligation of an inferior to a superior. The work of a friend is an
inner expression of gratitude and affection.
By nature there is an
absolute inequality between man and God. Under God’s law we are obliged to obey
God as our creator and Lord. We are justly deserving his judgement if we
disobey him. God has no such obligation to us that we can presume upon. God is
in heaven and we are on earth. This is why in Islam, for instance, it is
considered the height of arrogance to speak of God in intimate and familiar
terms.
By grace, however, God
chose us for fellowship with him. This is a unique characteristic of
friendship. It is chosen. A servant’s relationship to his master is dictated by
the requirements of hierarchy. Even siblings may have certain duties to one
another because of their close relationship, but (parents you know this) no one
can force them to be friends, that they must choose!
Christ has called us
friends. Will we accept his friendship and walk in his love? What does it mean
to be friends with Christ?
Many human friendships
originate in gratitude for a kindness shown. When I was new on the job you
invited me to lunch and made me feel comfortable. When my lawn mower broke you
leant me yours. Accepting the friendship of Christ means first expressing our
gratitude for the great kindness and generosity he has shown us by saving us
from sin and death at great personal sacrifice.
In order for friendship
to grow there must be admiration. Accepting the friendship of Christ means
admiring his character and wonderful attributes and seeing them as worthy of
imitation.
Friendship also means
that we delight in the company of the other. We look for opportunities to spend
time together and make it a priority. Friendship with Christ therefore means
entering into his presence with joy and thanksgiving. We do not see prayer or
worship as a duty or a chore but as a privilege.
Friends share their most
intimate hopes and desires. They trust one another with all of their struggles.
A true friend is one who will always lend a sympathetic ear and offer you
support in your time of need. Friendship with Christ means turning to him in our
time of need and pouring out our hearts to him in prayer. It also means that we
are always looking out for ways in which we can be a service and support to
him. In his divine all-sufficiency Christ does not need our help, but he
nevertheless delights to allow us to serve him as co-laborers in his mission.
God has let us in on his
plans. Jesus says, “I have called you friends, because I have made known to you
everything that I have heard from my Father.” In 1 Corinthians Saint Paul
explains how we have been privileged to be shown even the depths of God. He
writes this, “For who knows a person’s thoughts except the spirit of that
person, which is in him? So also no one comprehends the thoughts of God except
the Spirit of God” (1 Cornithians 2:11-12). God has shared with us his own
Spirit so that we can understand his plan for us and be empowered to be his
agents in the world.
Friends have common goals
and common concerns. Christ desires that we share with him a passion for his
Father’s glory and the Kingdom. Friendship with Christ means that we make his
concerns our own. Finally, it means that we love the things that he loves. We
love God’s word and God’s law at least in part because Christ loved them.
Because they were valuable to him they are also valuable to us. Christ loved
the poor and the marginalized and so we too should love them.
Christ said that we must
love one another as he has loved us. The friends of Christ are our friends as
well and so we love our fellow Christians. This is how the world will know we
are his disciples, if we love one another.
In a world so desperate
for authentic relationships, the real love and fellowship that Christ calls us
to have for one another will make the world notice. True friendship is meant to
serve as a sign and symbol to the world of the love of God in Christ.
One such friendship is
described in the Bible between King David and Jonathan. The soul of Jonathan we are told was bound to
the soul of David and he loved him as his own soul. He made a covenant with David
and handed over to him everything that he had. He was faithful to David to the
very end. What a beautiful picture this is of the bond that exists between
Christ and the believer! Our soul has been bound to Christ forever and he loves
us as his own soul. Everything we have, our whole heart, soul, and mind, is not
enough to repay what he has given us. He has given to us an unfathomably
precious gift, his body, blood, soul and divinity.
He himself has shown us
true love and friendship. He himself fulfilled his own words, “No one has
greater love than this, to lay down one's life for one's friends.” Dear friends,
let us love one another as he has loved us.
No comments:
Post a Comment