InterVarsity's StudentSoul.org

Published on: November 1st, 2006

What is a true friend?

Published in: Connected
What is a true friend?
Article tools
Share this

Most of us can name several people we call friends, and some would name quite a few. Others might count their friends on just a few fingers. We have a lot of acquaintances, but friends are fewer. A friend is someone we can hang out with, have fun with and depend on. The Bible has a lot to say about friendship, but it’s different from what we might expect.

Joe O’Day, author of The Art of Friendship, writes, “Our preoccupation is usually with having friends. The Bible’s focus is on being a friend.”

David and Jonathan

O’Day goes on to tell about King David’s friendship with Jonathan. He concludes, “Another person who went the distance for his friend was Jonathan. His friendship with David is one of the most outstanding and moving stories in all of Scripture, perhaps in all of literature. . . . Few are the people blessed enough to know a committed friendship such as Jonathan’s. David calls Jonathan his brother, reminiscent of the verses from Proverbs. Jonathan was closer to David than a brother. He was closer than a wife. Such analogies speak deeply of commitment, for the fundamental bond between brother and brother, or husband and wife, is commitment. Commitment is the word that unlocks the real meaning of friendship.” You can read about David and Jonathan starting in 1 Samuel 19 and on into chapter 20. Reading this will introduce you to the potential of deep, caring friendship.

Friends, acquaintances and MySpace

Paul Grant, editor and writer for Urbana.org, grew up in Switzerland, where the term “friend” is held in such high regard that most people only call a couple of people their friends. He points out that while Urbana 06 on MySpace has well over 300 friends, the idea of “friend” in Switzerland and “friend” on MySpace are miles apart.

“On MySpace,” says Paul, “the term ‘friend’ is a technical term, really a ‘contact.’ You have the right to send your friends a message, but the use is hardly relational. Of course a friend is more suggestive and appealing than a contact. If you’re in middle school you can boast of the number of ‘friends’ you have and also rank them. Kids slam each other all the time by how they rank their friends’ pictures. I know of some who will not even be friends with someone who has under 200 friends.”

In the U.S., says Paul, we tend to confuse friends and acquaintances. “We find it cold to say acquaintance or colleague or even comrade, which we associate with communism. People in other parts of the world don’t hesitate to differentiate those they merely know and those they’d count as friends.”

“By the way,” says Paul, “if anyone wants to be my friend on MySpace, feel free to add me.” (You can find Paul here. Hey, we’re happy to be part of Web culture!)

A true friend is . . .

“What is a friend? A single soul in two bodies.” — Aristotle

You can have a lot of acquaintances, but only a few people will become your best friends. These are kindred spirits, much like David and Jonathan mentioned in the main article, whose souls were “knit together.” Friendships like this will endure, even though the intensity of the friendship will ebb and flow over time.

One of the dangers in this kind of friendship is co-dependency. The sheer delight of having such a friend can also create weighty expectations in the relationship. A good question for friends to ask regularly is, “Are we truly seeking the other person’s highest good?”

“A true friend stabs you in the front.” — Oscar Wilde

Leave it to Oscar Wilde to lay out an important truth with such wry humor. A true friend is one who helps you see the truth, even if it hurts. This doesn’t mean we can go around stabbing our friends with hurtful words. Rather, it means being up front with friends about important issues, raising gentle questions with tact and love, never gossiping or putting them down to others behind their backs.

“I do not wish to treat friendships daintily, but with the roughest courage. When they are real, they are not glass threads or frost-work, but the solidest thing we know.” — Ralph Waldo Emerson

Real friendships don’t just happen, and they aren’t maintenance free. Ask yourself and your friend questions like these:

  • “How would you describe our friendship?”
  • “What is God doing in each of us, separately and together?”
  • “How can we help each other become all God wants us to be?”

Seeking another person’s highest good: that’s being a true friend.


153 out of 197 found this article helpful.

Helpful?
 
footer image
© 2009 InterVarsity Christian Fellowship/USA ®  |  Privacy Policy
Questions about the website? Contact webservant@intervarsity.org
Member of the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students

Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability
Site Index