Summary: Jesus used the principle of understanding our weaknesses but trusting our possibilities in order to transform people-pleasers into persons of integrity, ambition into selfless commitment, and immaturity into responsibility.

History is full of stories of betrayal. Those who look like

friends sometimes turn on you. Friendship means nothing to

people who are bent on preserving privileges or feeding

ambitions. Some of us have friends who would sell us for

even less than Judas’ thirty pieces of silver if they could!

And some of us would cash in our friendships for next to

nothing.

Personally, I wish I could get at least ten cents on the dollar

for everything I have loaned out over the years. Everything

from cash to books to power tools has been loaned out to

friends. And if it came back at all, it was damaged or used

up. I let a friend use my saber saw; I thought he knew what

he was doing. But he used that little delicate saw to cut

down a heavy metal pole, and burned it right up. He then

avoided me for several weeks. You know what that feels

like? That feels like a personal betrayal. That feels like a

blatant misuse of friendship. It wasn’t about the tool. It was

about being a friend and expecting friendly treatment. But

what we get, too many times, is betrayal.

Nothing stings quite as much as betrayal by those closest to

you. If you have enemies, you can understand that they are

trying to hurt you. At least they are flying the enemy flag and

you know what’s going on. But to be hurt by your friends –

that stings! As the old saying goes, “With friends like mine,

who needs enemies?!”

Jesus had His share of enemies. As He approached

Jerusalem, there was a coalition pursuing Him. Some of

them were actively on His case, like the Pharisees, who

hated His spiritual freedom, and like the priests, who felt

threatened by His disdain for their religious niceties. Jesus

had some obvious enemies. And Jesus had some less

obvious enemies, too, like the political zealots, disappointed

that He had not led an uprising against Rome; and like the

Romans themselves, who were frankly indifferent about

another crazy candidate for Messiah. Jesus had powerful

enemies, both up front and behind the scenes.

But the most dangerous enemies Jesus had were among His

friends! The most dangerous people around Him were those

in His inner circle of disciples. They didn’t sound like

betrayers. No one saw their ulterior motives. They looked

like friends, good and true. And yet, with friends like Peter,

James, and John, who needs enemies? The closer we get

to some people, the more dangerous they become. Like the

French marshal said when faced with the plots of King Louis

XIV, “I can defend myself from my enemies; [I need

somebody to] defend me from my friends.”

Jesus knew how to deal with His friends. He knew how to

transform the weaknesses of His friends into strengths. He

knew how to take their insecurities and turn them into

loyalties. He understood how to turn His friends’ issues into

magnificent possibilities. Jesus did it by getting real with His

friends. Jesus got real with Peter and with James and with

John. What they were on that night in Gethsemane is not

the half of what they became, because Jesus got real with

His friends.

I want you to notice that there was one fundamental principle

that Jesus followed in getting real with His friends: He both

understood them and He trusted them. He understood how

weak and untrustworthy they were, but He trusted them

anyway. He trusted them, even though it would hurt Him and

send Him to a cross. He said, “The spirit indeed is willing,

but the flesh is weak.” That means that He understood them

for what they were, but He loved them for what they could

become. Jesus got real with His friends, and transformed

them.

Let’s follow those friends. Let’s find out where they were

coming from that night in the garden. And let’s discover

where Jesus took them when He got real with His friends.

I

There’s Peter, for one. Novelist Lloyd Douglas dubbed him

“the big fisherman”. “Big” is right. Everything about Peter

was larger than life. When Jesus first called Peter, he

immediately left his fishing net to follow. When he learned

about his mother-in-law’s illness, at once Peter took Jesus to

her bedside. When Jesus went off by Himself to rest and

pray, it was Peter who went looking for the Master, not

content to be quiet. This is a Type A personality: get it done,

do it now, say what you feel, don’t stop to look inside, blab,

blab, blah! Just do! I want this done yesterday! Do you

know anybody like that?

But Jesus got real with Peter. Jesus loved him, but Jesus

also understood him. When Peter blurted out the

confession, “You are the Christ, the Son of the Highest,” and

then followed it with the pronouncement that he would never

let anything happen to Jesus, Jesus faced him down with,

“Get behind me, Satan!” Jesus got real with Peter, and had

to do it again and again .. warning him that he would deny

three times in one night, telling him that if he did not accept

the gift of cleansing he could not be a part of the movement.

Again and again, Jesus forced His way through Peter’s

bluster and bravado and made him face himself.

Do you have any friends like Peter? People who talk a great

game but who seldom deliver the goods? People who

promise the world but give you only cold checks when

payday comes? Do you have any friends like Peter, who

cannot tell you “No”? If you ask them to help you, they are

so eager to please. Peters are people-pleasing persons who

plumb have a passion to pacify! But they are not there when

the going gets tough. It feels like a betrayal, doesn’t it? It

feels as though they led you down the primrose path and

dropped you off in oblivion.

So what do you say to these people-pleasing friends of

yours? How do you handle them when they fail to deliver on

their promises and back off from their high-sounding

commitments? I don’t know about you, but I can hear myself

now: “Oh, that’s all right. I know you wanted to help. These

things happen. I understand. It’s all right. Don’t worry about

it.” That’s what I say. But of course what I mean is more

like, “You rat. I can never depend on you. You have a big

mouth, but nothing ever works out.” What I really mean is,

“You betrayed me.” So why didn’t I say that? Why didn’t I

confront the “promises, promises” personality and tell him

exactly what is wrong? Because I too am a people-pleaser.

I too mess up by promising more than I am prepared to

deliver. I too can be full of hot air, hiding a cold heart. I don’t

tell the truth to my Peter friends because I am just like them!

But Jesus does. Jesus is, you see, the most authentic

person who ever lived. He IS truth. And He tells the truth.

“Get behind me .. you will deny .. you will have no part in

me”. Jesus got real with Peter. Jesus forced Peter to look

at himself. I submit to you that if we were to learn to speak

the truth, in love, to one another, we could shape lives and

we could grow authentic people. Look what happened to

Peter. Peter became the prince of the apostles. Peter stood

in front of the Temple not many months hence, and preached

the crucified Lord. Peter stood with a Roman centurion and

told a prejudiced public that God was no respecter of

persons. Peter became a man of his word and a person of

integrity. How? Because Jesus got real with Peter.

Because Jesus understood that the flesh was weak, but

trusted Peter, believing that his spirit was willing. Jesus

forced Peter to face himself.

If you have a Peter friend, a blustery, bragging, promise-

everything friend, speak the truth in love. Tell that friend you

know better. And though he splutter his protests now, he will

love you later, for you will make him into a man of his word.

Get real with Peter.

II

But let’s get on with our census. That little crowd that

surrounds Jesus in the high moments of his career. In

addition to Peter, there are the sons of Zebedee, brothers,

James the older and John the younger.

We don’t see a whole lot of James, on his own. He is always

paired with his brother John, or else the middle one of the

trio, Peter-James-John. It’s almost as if he is hidden

between the bookends of the noisy Peter and the whimpering

John. James says little, but he is always there. He looks like

a dependable friend. He looks like the person who is always

where he ought to be. The one who shows up whenever

people are supposed to show up. You have a church

meeting; James is there. You assign a task; James does it.

And yet, you wonder, just what is going on inside that

cranium? He says so little; he does not stand out. Is there

more to James than just the steady draft horse that plods

along and gets it done?

One day James breaks out. One day the hidden agenda

pops out. Fronted for by his mother, propped up by his little

brother, James asks when is he going to get his reward?

When can he expect to sit on the right hand of the Lord?

James – and although the Bible story makes it about both

James and John, I am putting the focus on James, because

he is the older, and no doubt set the tone for his younger

brother – James, it turns out, has been harboring secret

ambitions. He is in this friendship thing with Jesus for

himself. He wants first place in the coming Kingdom. My

mental picture of James is of a passive-aggressive person,

who looks so wonderfully agreeable until he drops a bomb on

you! Ambitious – silent for a while, but then wham!

Do you have ambitious friends? Who is there in your circle

of acquaintances who, if you are in some social gathering,

acts as though you don’t exist if there is some ranking

government official around or some prominent business

connection? Who do you know at your school who suddenly

becomes another person when she is around the

cheerleaders and the football team?

My parents used to get so irritated; we’d be in some

fellowship gathering at our church, when I was growing up,

and the pastor would be making his way around, greeting

people – and just as he would be about to speak to us, out of

the corner of his eye he would see the banker who was

always the moderator or the car dealer who was generally

the deacon chairman, and off he would go to hob-nob with

the folks whose favor he most needed. Or at least it seemed

that way to my parents. But now watch: it might not have

been about the pastor’s ambition. It could have been about

their ambition; it could have been about their need to be

associated with somebody prominent. Because, after all, the

key issue is our neediness, isn’t it? The key issue is that

ambitious people are needy people; we want prominence

because we need to be reassured that we are somebody.

We want to be around important people because we

somehow believe that greatness rubs off.

Oh, I know about this. We pastors – do you know what we

do when we get together? We let it drop that so-and-so is a

member of MY church .. as if that somehow made us better.

Let me rehearse a bit, because tomorrow I’m going to a DC

Baptist pastors’ meeting – and I will be looking for some

reason to mention that I have an army general in my church;

and a children’s home executive; and a federal health bureau

chief; and the assistant administrator of another agency – do

you see? Hey, if they know I am around these prominent

people they might think I am somebody! Ambition!

Poor James – so ambitious he rubs up against Jesus and

asks for the best place in the Kingdom. But again,

remember what Jesus does. Jesus gets real with His

friends. Jesus, the most authentic person who ever lived,

Jesus who understands that the flesh is weak, but loves us

and trusts that the spirit is willing – Jesus just probes. Jesus

asks James a gentle but firm question, “Are you able?” “You

do not understand what you are asking. Are you able to

drink the cup that I am about to drink?” And when James

and his tagalong brother say that they are able, Jesus is

again understanding but firm: “You will indeed drink my cup –

but to sit at my right hand – this is for those whom God will

give it.” In other words, James, you do not understand what

you are asking for. You do not admit your own ambition.

You do not see that you are my friend for your own selfish

purposes. But you will see. You will learn. Jesus simply lets

him think about it. He does not lecture, he does not rant and

rave, he does not put James down. He gently requires

James to look at his own heart, study his own motives, and

then count the cost.

Do you have a friend like James, who is just using you until

the next best thing comes along? Do you have a friend like

James, who is always looking to be out front, who loves the

limelight? Then just probe. Ask questions. Teach him to

examine his own heart. And you may discover that in his

own way, when the moment is right, he will come through for

you. He will be your friend in the clutch, if instead of

lecturing you probe, if instead of accusing you encourage.

In the Book of Acts, after the resurrection of Jesus, we read

one and only one thing about James – and that was that he

became the first of the twelve to die for Christ. James died

at the hands of King Herod; and I cannot help but imagine

that it was not because James was promoting James, but

because James was preaching Jesus. James became what

James really wanted to become – a standup man. Because

Jesus got real with James. Because Jesus understood him

and yet trusted him. Jesus understood the weakness of his

flesh, but loved the willingness of his spirit, and it changed

him. Jesus got real with His friend James.

III

But we are not quite finished yet. Not only is there big

bluster Peter, transformed into the prince of the apostles

when Jesus got real with him; and not only is there jaundiced

James, transformed into a loyal witness when Jesus got real

with him; but there is also John -- young, tender, John. The

disciple whom Jesus loved is what he is called in the book

which bears his name, the Gospel of John. Slight and

fragile, young John. Does he too betray Jesus? And does

Jesus have to get real with John too?

Do you have any friends who are immature? Do you know

someone who is likely to jump at the next thing before he has

finished what he is supposed to be doing? Do you have

friends whose attention span is about twelve minutes long?

They say that today’s generation is so conditioned by

television that they don’t stay with anything that lasts longer

than the space between commercial breaks! Do you have

any friends who just cannot stay put? Friends like John, who

said to Jesus once, “Teacher, we saw someone casting out

demons in your name, and we tried to stop him.” Impulsive,

not well thought out, in a hurry. Friends like John, who broke

the troubled silence in the Upper Room and popped the

question that was on everyone’s mind, asking which of them

would be the betrayer. John could hold his mouth, does

what he wants to do when he wants to do it. Immature.

Anybody got a friend like that?

I hope you do. I hope you have some immature friends. If

you have no immature friends, then it means you haven’t

bothered to make friends with young people. It means you

haven’t taken the time to go beyond the quick-witted banter

and really hear what their hearts are saying. I hope you have

some immature friends, because if you learn from Jesus,

who got real with John, you will know how to work with young

people.

Once again, now, how did Jesus get real with His friends?

He got real with His friends by understanding the weakness

of their flesh, but at the same time loving and trusting the

willingness of their spirits. What did He say? “The spirit

indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak.” That’s the principle

that Jesus used with Peter. That’s the principle that Jesus

used with James. And that’s the principle that Jesus uses

again with John. Jesus got real with John by trusting John

with significant things to do. Instead of complaining about

John’s youth and inexperience, Jesus gave John important

things to do. From the cross, Jesus entrusted his mother’s

welfare to John. A little later, the risen Jesus singled John

out for special prominence. Jesus shaped John by trusting

him in spite of his immaturity.

If you have a young and immature friend, do not deny him

real responsibilities. Give him something to do that matters.

One of my students at the University of Kentucky came to a

recommitment point in his life. So he went to his pastor to

see what he could do for the Kingdom; the pastor looked at

him and saw nothing more than a nineteen-year-old wet-

behind-the-ears kid, and said, “Well, maybe we could mow

the grass more often.” My young student was crushed; in his

impulsiveness he had asked to do something for the Lord but

was given nothing but a brush-off. Jesus would not have

done that. Jesus would have understood that he might be

young and unfinished; but Jesus would have loved his willing

spirit and would have given him something real to do. Jesus

always got real with His friends.

Conclusion

Jesus always gets real with His friends. Aren’t you glad?

Aren’t you glad that He understands? For we are a mess,

aren’t we? He understands; but He keeps on loving us.

Even when we are Peter and our promises outstrip the truth,

He loves us enough to confront us. Even when we are

James and our ambition blinds us, He loves us enough to

probe at us. And even when we are John and reach for

more than we can handle, He loves us enough to entrust

with something to do. I’m so glad that Jesus gets real with

us.

For if Jesus had not gotten real with me, I’d still be posing as

an academic bum instead of getting down and dirty with real

people. If Jesus had not gotten real with me, I’d still be

wishing I was in some prominent pulpit with plaudits and

praise instead of just loving a branch of Zion that blooms

right here. If Jesus had not gotten real with me, I’d still be

running after some new trick or sampling some new treat

instead of telling the old, old story of Jesus and His love.

Think of it! Jesus just might make something of us, because

Jesus gets real with His friends!