JESUS’ FRIENDS
Ever
wonder about Jesus’ social life? Today our churches spend a great deal of time
focusing on the social life of their members. We have it all. We schedule
internal events ranging from baseball to basketball to bowling to hiking and to
every form of in-home hobby or activity known to man. We have cookouts, camping
trips, and even organize our own carnivals. But should we? I am not saying any
of these are right or wrong in and of themselves, but I do want to ask that one
basic question, “Should we be planning them with the saved or lost? Should they
be social or evangelistic?
One
of the most common arguments in favor of this type of church event is the
evangelistic outreach that it has the potential to foster. Then I trust that
every one of these events opens or closes with a clear presentation of the
gospel and an opportunity to receive Christ as savior. When I ask people if
they have lost friends they can invite, they always, without fail, respond
positively. But, why do we have lost friends? We may well know people who are
not saved, but we should not have friends who are lost, Amos 3:3 “Can two walk
together, except they be agreed?”
If
we agree with the unsaved, would it be that they have raised their moral
standards or that we have lowered ours? Will the lost remain friends with us if
we witness to them regularly? And if we do not witness to them then how can we
say we care about them enough to be friends? “Wait” you say. “Jesus was the
friend of sinners.” I don’t believe that. Listen closely to Matt 11:19 “The Son
of man came eating and drinking, and they say, Behold a man gluttonous, and a
winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinners. But wisdom is justified of her
children” (also Luke 7:34). Notice “they say” or in Luke “you say” but it is
not stated as a fact. It is stated by others as an insult. Was he also a
‘winebibber’? Then neither was he hanging out with sinners. However, he did
reach out to them. At virtually every outdoor meeting he was preaching to the
lost. He said to evangelize but he never said to socialize.
His
private hours, those times when he was not standing on a hillside or seashore
preaching, when he was not feeding thousands, were filled with the solitude and
friendship of godly men. When he was resting after preaching to thousands, he
and his disciples (not his unsaved neighbors) got into a boat to find privacy.
Space will not allow me to reproduce the many examples that can be listed here.
Suffice to say, Jesus is never seen ‘fellowshipping’ with the lost. The lost
are all around him during his sermons or when miracles were being worked.
However, all of his non-preaching time is spent alone in prayer or with his
disciples, those who were of like mind. So why is so much of our social time
spent with the lost?
The
most common excuse for fellowshipping with the lost is evangelism. The example
Jesus gave us is far different than what so many of us are doing today. If
Jesus is alone with the lost, he is preaching to them. Is that true of us? If
Jesus is alone and away from the crowds, he is alone with godly friends. Is
that true of us? If we evangelize the lost, they will get saved or irritated.
If our lost friends get saved, we are no longer fellowshipping with the lost
but with the saved. However, if they get irritated, they will pull away from
us. The fact that they are still our friends today is evidence that we are not
evangelizing at all, we are placating instead because we fear losing their
friendship. Risk losing their friendship today by offering them salvation.
The
Bible makes it very clear. We must choose our friends. James 4:4 “Ye adulterers
and adulteresses, know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with
God? Whosoever therefore will be a friend of the world is the enemy of God.”
Jesus had friends, godly friends. What kind of friends are we cultivating? Do
we love them enough to win them to Christ? Or, are we content to watch them
face the final judgment of God knowing we could have won them to Christ if we
were not so afraid of losing their friendship here…today?
If
we follow Jesus’ example, we will only have unsaved friends here very briefly.
Either they will get saved or they will turn away from us.
Maybe we should end each of our meetings with lost friends
the same way Jesus did so frequently, by saying "Go and sin no more."
But telling friends to stop sinning might turn them against us.
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