Friday, December 19, 2014

Friends for a Lifetime

Why are we resistant to intimate friendship?

Our resistance to intimate friendship may have a variety of sources.  Many claim that they have not time for such frivolous / extraneous connections as friends.  Their lives are quite full with work, family, volunteer opportunities, household tasks.  Others find the entanglements of friendship to be a risk not worth taking.  One may be quite social while not maintaining a few intimate connections with peers.

I hear people (myself included) bemoaning the fact that they are bad a relationships in much the same way one might say they are bad at math.  Blaming self for relational failure, they avoid the risk of failing yet again.  There are also many who feel they have been burned repeatedly in the past and do not want to open themselves to the risk of such pain again.

I have recently read treatments of the great challenges in having any permanence in friendship while building and maintaining a family and/or a career.  Both career and family appear to be the higher priorities to the exclusion of a deeply committed / permanent friendship.  Yes, of course, there are work friends and church friends.  There are the friends who are parents of your children’s friends.  There are the old friends from college or high school.  People readily say there are “friends for a season” as if permanence is neither possible nor desirable.  Families with young children curtail their social lives and circle the wagons exclusively around family, their children’s routines, and possibly other families in their same stage of life.  Friendship is luxurious and there isn’t time for such frivolity.

Married couples are heard to complain of not being able to find couple friends with whom both are compatible.  Singles are in the midst of the dating scene or, as they age, can become socially isolated due to a failure to participate in a perceived societal norm of marriage and children.  They are out of step and alone.

While many may complain of the challenges in developing friendships during the teen and young adult years, those times in life bring great availability and ease of bonding.  Adulthood finds individuals with increasingly complex and competing priorities and the baggage of failed relationships.  There is a lack of time, and, frequently, a seeming lack of desire to choose intimate non-sexual companions for the road.

Psychologists claim the benefits of alonetime on marriage.  But, what of the benefits to married folks for friendship (not simply extended family)?  Family is predestined.  Friends are freely chosen.  The mate was chosen initially but marriage brings a commitment of legality and permanence (despite the availability of divorce).  Friends are free to come and go from one another’s lives.  There can be great beauty, health, benefit, and value in choosing to commit to one’s friend(s) for a lifetime.

How do we treat the individual or the involvement (work, hobby, belief) to which we intend to keep for a lifetime verses that which we believe is “only for a season”?  Our investment is more serious; our maintenance more diligent; our care more tender.  So should it be with covenant friendship.

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