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Why Friendship Is The Least Talked About Relationship In Church

When was the last time you heard a sermon about friendship?

Most churches have regular teaching on marriage and dating. Not to mention a good deal to say on parenting, family, work and community. But have you ever noticed that we put friendship way down the priority list?

It’s almost as though we think it’s too childish for us to tackle. You’ll hear about it in Sunday School and youth group, and then we think we’ve got it covered for life. As Kevin DeYoung said once, “Friendship is the most important, least talked about relationship in the church.”

Only recently has it struck me how strange this is.

Friendships are important regardless of our age or stage. But we don’t discuss in how to navigate these, or why they’re important.

We talk in general terms about “community”, “discipleship” and “spurring each other on” as a church, but we don’t seem to tackle friendship head on.

As I think about it more, the church could become so much stronger if it talked more about friendship. Here’s why I think so.

Friends make our lives happier, but we don’t always stop and think about their significance for how we grow and change.

If you read Proverbs, you’ll see a snapshot of how important friendships are. Our companions can help us get wiser (Proverbs 13:20), support us in tough times (Proverbs 17:17) and give us honesty that’s caring (Proverbs 27:5-6). But we need to choose them carefully, or we can become more like them than we should (Proverbs 12:26). Equally, good friends can help us hit new heights, since “as iron sharpens iron, so a friend sharpens a friend” (Proverbs 27:17).

Actually, we are told more than once that friendships have the power to build us up or tear us down.

Friendship is an important place to show Christ to others, whether they’re Christian or not. It’s also a place where we let our hair down, which can bring out our best (like celebrating wins in life) or our worst (like falling to peer pressure). How we conduct our friendships is part of our whole life ministry, not just what we do to blow off steam when we’re not busy.

In the past few months, I took an inventory of how I tackle friendships, and there was plenty to consider. Am I prioritising catch-ups, or do they come second to everything else in life? Do I pursue friendships with new people, or am I missing opportunities? Do I give as much as I take? Can I honestly say I’m helping my friends in their faith?

CS Lewis commented that

… in modern Christian writings… I see few of the old warnings about … the Choice of Friends.

And he’s still right. We don’t need to over-spiritualise our friendship life, but equally, I wonder if we stop to think about it much at all.

Even when we do think about it, friendship is confusing to many Christians.

Like anyone, Christians can have rocky periods with friends, and this is the time when the confusion emerges. We ask ourselves if we have too many Christian friends, or too many non-Christian ones. We ask whether it’s ever okay to cut off a toxic friendship (aren’t we supposed to love people regardless?).

We want to know how to stick by a friend even when it hurts or we disagree with their choices.

Married Christians wring their hands about friendships with the opposite sex. Mentors or small group leaders want to know what discipleship and friendship look like, and how do you negotiate a grey area between the two.

A friend of mine told me about how she thought she had made a new older Christian friend, only to discover that this person didn’t think of it as a friendship, but as a mentorship. After a while, the mentorship ended, the relationship was over, and my friend felt terrible.

Just as we think about what we want out of romantic relationships ahead of being in one, we can encourage each other to think about friendships in a proactive way.

How much better would we be when things get tough!

Talking about friendship also acknowledges that there are important adult relationships that aren’t marriage.

Churches put a lot of emphasis on marriage and dating in their teaching. They’re not necessarily wrong: the majority of people will be married in their congregation, or will be married one day.

But in practice, this can be destructive. We focus so much on finding “the one” that friendship is never really a priority. As one writer commented:

What’s the average church-goer’s greater perceived felt needs if he or she is single? Friendship or dating? Dating. What about the perceived felt need of the married couple? Improving friendships or improving their marriage? Marriage.

When you look at the Bible, you see a bigger picture. Friendships changed the lives of people like David and Jonathan, or Elijah and Elisha, or (!) in Jesus and his disciples. In fact, Jesus calls us his “friends” that he laid his life down for.

Singleness is praised in the Bible, and “two are better than one” may be quoted at weddings but says nothing about romance.

Not everyone gets married. Everyone needs deep, healthy friendships.

So I’d love to see friendship elevated, because it’s biblical and it’s important. Single people need to hear that God cares about their relationships – whether those relationships are romantic or platonic.

Married people can’t depend only on their partner for their friendship needs. They need their networks.

And that’s not even mentioning how important this can be for the number of other Christians who aren’t in a romantic relationship.

Think of the person who’s chosen to live celibate. The LGBTI person. Widows. Single missionaries. The divorcee. The minister who’s decided singleness will help him pursue God better.

It doesn’t take much – it can be as simple as starting a conversation with our church friends. Take a moment to think about how your friends help you. Track how friendship appears in the Bible. You could start up a conversation with your small group about what friendship gives us, whether we’re married or not.

Let’s flip the script on the forgotten subject of friendships.

  1. Alie Kennedy says:

    Plus you cannot have a dating/marriage relationship before venturing in into friendship relationship first

  2. Nick Hansen says:

    It is especially important to remember friends when it comes to grief. So much focus is on the family and partners of the deceased that the loss of a friend can often be overlooked. This was the subject of a column on Letting go of your friends by my friend and Catholic priest Fathner Gerard Dowling. He described friendship as “something extremely precious, a profound togetherness between two people who don’t need to possess each other nor to use each other but are simply there for each other”. The article was especially timely for me in the mid 1990s and I really appreciated the fact that a Christian writer spoke so glowingly of the importance of friendship. Thanks Cheryl for ading another Christian-based perspective on this amazingly important issue of friendship.

  3. Pingback:Friendship: the least talked about relationship in the church – twenty-six letters « Reformed faith salsa style

  4. Terry Newnham says:

    You could have written a lot more about this; but that may be too much for a single article.

    There are different types of friends. Different levels of trust. Why is it typical for a person to have 3-4 friends in a given place ? Jesus had 3 closet friends within his 12.

    Maybe we are in need of a good book about friendship AND some good sermons in church.

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