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Friendship Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 25, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Time and time again friendship has been the force determining the course of history.
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After making his historic stand before the Diet Of Worms where
he defied the church and refused to recant, Martin Luther started
for home. He had stirred up a hornet's nest of opposition, and plots
were made against his life. As Luther's carriage entered a narrow
pass, ideal for an ambush, it was suddenly surrounded by 5
horsemen, who were masked and armed. They forced Luther to get
down, and they threw a cloak over him. They put him on an extra
horse and disappeared into the forest. Silently they took Luther to
the Castle of Wortburg, which was hidden high in the mountains.
There he discovered that he was in the hands of friends.
Frederic the Elector had Luther kidnapped in order to protect him
from his enemies who would certainly have killed him. This single
act of friendship changed the course of history and played a major
role in the success of the reformation. It was while hiding in that
castle that Luther translated the Bible into the German language.
He did much other writing also that influenced the thinking of the
masses.
Time and time again friendship has been the force determining
the course of history. We see it in the great friendship of David and
Jonathan in the Old Testament. Jonathan loved David even more
than his own father Saul. He defended and protected David when
Saul was out to kill him. When Jonathan died in battle David
wrote in great sorrow in II Sam. 1:26, "I am distressed for you my
brother Jonathan, very pleasant have you been to me, your love to
me was wonderful passing the love of women." David is saying that
friendship love can be a greater pleasure than erotic love, and we
will see the importance of this later even in marriage.
This also has tremendous implications for singles, for it is
saying that the sexual relationship is not the highest relationship of
two people. Jesus never had a mate, but He did have friends, and
this is potentially a higher level of love. Friendship can be a higher
level than any other relationship. Abraham is called the friend of
God, and there is no way to top that. The Bible puts friendship on a
very high level, and sometimes even above family ties. Even pagan
authors recognize this as true to life. Euripides wrote, "A friend
welded into our life is more to us than twice 5000 kinsman, one in
blood." Engel the German said, "Blood relationship is sweet, but
how much sweeter are alliances of the soul?"
Similar statements can be found from every land and people
from ancient times to the present. Emerson said, "A friend may
well be reckoned the masterpiece of nature." We are designed by
God to be social beings, and so there is a hunger in all people for
friends. And ancient Jewish proverb said, "Friends, though they be
as Job's friends, or else death." The Russian poet Dimitriev wrote,
"I've been seeking a friend! There's none below. The world must
soon to ruin go." I do not exaggerate when I say I could go on for
hours just quoting the praises of friendship from philosophers and
poets from around the world. We would expect that Jesus would
have something to say about such an important subject, and we find
this to be the case. In fact, Jesus is unsurpassed in His exaltation of
friendship. He raised it to the highest possible level by making it a
relationship that can be had between God and man. In Christ God
becomes our friend. We have the testimony of Christ's enemies to
support this, for they called Him a friend of sinners. They meant it
as slam, but it is, in fact, a compliment, for had He not been a friend
of sinners He would have been a friend of no one, for all have
sinned and come short of the glory of God.
Jesus was a friend to the friendless, and you see Him
befriending those sinners and victims of sin that the Pharisees
shunned. They would toss coins to them and give them advice, and
even pray for this scum of the earth around them, but to befriend
them was a definite no no. And to eat with them was unheard of.
That is how they thought they knew Jesus was not divine, for had
He really been deity He would have known to have better taste than
to eat with an befriends with such sinners. Listen to this testimony
from the great Jewish scholar Montefiore. He is looking at Jesus
from a non-Christian point of view:
"The rabbis attached no less value to repentance than Jesus.
They sang its praises and its efficacy in a thousand tones...
They too welcomed the sinner in his repentance. But to seek