Friday, March 6, 2015

Friends




FRIENDS

 

First of nine devotions in Lenten Intense Series from Isaiah 73:1-12 

Genesis 2:18a:  “The LORD God said, ‘It is not good for the man to be alone.’”

John 15:13-15:  “Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends.  You are My friends if you do what I command.  I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master’s business.  Instead, I have called you friends, for everything I learned from My father, I have made known to you.”

 

            Jesus still calls believers friends when we do what He commands.  As God’s kids, we acknowledge our relationship as brothers and sisters in Christ.

            Everyone can classify the people in one’s life as either friend or acquaintance.  Facebook uses these groups to its advantage, urging people to officially “friend” another publically on the Internet.  And just as easily, can “unfriend” that person.  Today, people brag, “I have over five hundred friends on Facebook!”

            It’s easy.  As soon as someone requests another to be “friend,” Facebook offers that person a list of the requested person’s friends to request being “friend” too.  The list grows with each new “friend” offering up their friends for the requester to “friend” them, as well.  New “friends” usually don’t even know one another!  This quickly builds one’s “friend” circle.

            If we’re honest, real friends can be counted on one hand.  True friends focus on the quality of friendships, rather than the number of friends.  Not everyone we call “friend” will lend us money, listen to our problems, or tell us when we’re wrong.

            Real friends must love one another sacrificially, serving one another gladly.  They value the other’s needs, desires and personal wants higher than their own.  Agape [a-GOP-aa] love describes sacrificial and unconditional love for a brother or sister (in Christ). 

            This mutual loving relationship is what God intended for all His kids.

            This is how we hope Jesus’ original disciples loved one another.  Surly, they loved Jesus, whom Isaiah 53:2 describes: “He grew up before him like a slender shoot, like a root out of dry ground.  He had no beauty or majesty to attract us to Him, nothing in His appearance that we should desire Him.”

            The disciples’ love for Jesus would soon be tested.

            Jesus knew beforehand that Judas would betray Him with a kiss.  Yet when Judas arrived in Gethsemane with armed soldiers, Jesus greeted him with, “Friend, do what you came for.”  (Matthew 26:49-50).


            That’s intense!

Take Home Nugget

            Only when believers model Christ’s love for one another can we commit to and motivate our friends’ spiritual growth.  This commitment allows love, forgiveness and joy to free-flow between friends.  

Count each day as lost that is not used in loving and serving friends.

J.D. Griffith

          



                               Written for http://www.Biblestudyforkids.com


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What an honor it is to meet you!
My background is a life time of worship, but seriously following Jesus came with age. Spiritual maturity is a leap of faith. Sometimes we don’t know what we’re missing until living on the edge of God’s leading. My life of self sufficiency ended abruptly when losing my job as an analytical chemist after being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Now living on the edge of God’s leading has become a way of life that I wouldn’t trade for anything else.
Surrendering one’s will to the Lord can be scary. Why did I wait so long to do it? Diving into an intimate relation with the sovereign God of creation is the most secure position in the universe. Will you share your experience with me? Will you let me give you my testimony? May I introduce you to the Jesus I know?