DIVINE FRIENDSHIP (Part I)
There is a praise chorus that I love,
not just because of its beautiful melody or rhythmic cadence, but rather for the sheer power and synergy of its lyrics. The
song is entitled “I Am a Friend of God” by Israel Houghton and Michael Gungor.
Who
am I that YOU are mindful of me?
That YOU hear me when I call?
Is it true that YOU are thinking of me?
How YOU love me…it’s amazing…
It’s amazing!
I Am a Friend of GOD…
I Am a Friend of GOD…
I Am a Friend of GOD…
HE calls me Friend!
What an artful and robust reminder of our relational intimacy with the Creator of Heaven and earth! Approaching the endpoint of his 3½ year public ministry, Jesus Christ made a life-changing announcement to his disciples (and, thankfully, it included us): “No longer do I call you servants, for a servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you FRIENDS, for all things that I heard from My Father I have made known to you.” (John 15:15) Wow!
That YOU hear me when I call?
Is it true that YOU are thinking of me?
How YOU love me…it’s amazing…
It’s amazing!
I Am a Friend of GOD…
I Am a Friend of GOD…
I Am a Friend of GOD…
HE calls me Friend!
What an artful and robust reminder of our relational intimacy with the Creator of Heaven and earth! Approaching the endpoint of his 3½ year public ministry, Jesus Christ made a life-changing announcement to his disciples (and, thankfully, it included us): “No longer do I call you servants, for a servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you FRIENDS, for all things that I heard from My Father I have made known to you.” (John 15:15) Wow!
Christ’s affirmation suggests that friendship is a living stream in which
both parties are revered, renewed, replenished and refreshed. Implicit in His statement is the theological
concept of mutuality, i.e. there
are shared rights and responsibilities that derive from (and accrue to) the
crucial covenant partnership of friendship.
Typically, we believers mentally
frame our friendship with God as a one-way mirror through which GOD faithfully
sees and supplies our needs. However, if
the relationship is to be mutually fulfilling and authentic, would it not
require a bilateral investment of love, integrity, communication, obligation
and accountability by all parties?
It reminds me of the story of two men who were
stranded on a deserted island.
A voyaging ship was tragically
wrecked during a powerful storm and only two men were able to swim ashore to a
tiny uninhabited island. The two
survivors were very good friends, and not knowing what else to do, they agreed
that they had no other recourse but to ask God for help. However, to find out whose prayer was more
powerful, they agreed to divide the territory between them and stay on opposite
sides of the island.
It seemed like the most important
item to pray for would be food. The
first man did so, and sure enough, the next morning, he spied a fruit-bearing
tree growing on his side of the island.
He was able to dine on its delicious fruit, while the other man’s parcel
of land remained barren.
After a week or so, the first man
was lonely and he decided to pray for a wife.
The next day, another ship was wrecked, and the only survivor was a
woman who, of course, swam to his side of the island. On the other side of the island, there was
nothing.
Soon the first man prayed for a
house, some clothes and more food. The
next day, supernaturally, all of these were given to him. However, the second man still had nothing.
Finally, the first man prayed for a
ship, so that he and his lovely bride could leave the island. In the morning, he found a ship docked on his
side of the island. The first man
boarded the ship and decided to leave the second man behind on the island. He considered the other man unworthy to
receive God’s blessings, since obviously none of his prayers had been answered.
As the ship was about to leave, the
first man heard a voice from Heaven booming, “Why are you leaving your
companion on the island?” The first man
answered, “My blessings are mine alone, since I was the one who prayed for
them. His prayers were all unanswered,
so he does not deserve anything.”
“You are mistaken!” the voice from
on high summarily rebuked him. “He had
only one prayer, which I answered. If
not for that one prayer from your friend, you would not have received any of My
blessings.”
“Tell me,” the first man asked the
voice, “What did he pray for that I should owe him anything?”
The voice from Heaven whispered, “He
prayed that all your prayers would be answered.”
When I first read this story, my
imagination conjured up a rather unlikely scenario: ME being personally
marooned on a desert island with GOD, Himself.
As I mentally re-envisioned and reconfigured the story, the peculiar
picture of God and me alone on an island stirred an important question: ‘What am I doing here-and-now to validate the mutuality of the covenant with my Creator?’ In
other words, is my relationship with The
Lord completely self-serving, and thus all about ME, or am I bringing
something to the table to assist in building God’s Kingdom, as He constantly
showers benefits and blessings upon me?
Please mentally insert yourself in the story and prayerfully ponder. Stay tuned…more to come tomorrow!
Sisters and brothers, be continually
blessed, and please (above all else) MAKE SURE YOU ARE READY TO MEET OUR SOON
COMING KING. Maranatha!
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