Non-optional Friendship
by Mike Yaconelli
Do you have any friends? Really close friends? Friends for life?
I came to a startling revelation a few months ago. I dont
have any friends. I dont. I have a lot of acquaintances but,
other than my wife, I really have no close friends.
Ive had some friends in the past, but not many. Eventually
something happenednothing sinister, just somethinglike
moving, having a baby, changing jobs, building a home, going back
to school, changing churches; nothing bad or wrong, just something
that happened and, the next thing I knew, another friendship slowly
eroded.
Now dont get me wrong, there are half a dozen guys who I
consider to be close, caring people and who I always look forward
to being with. They are people with whom, on occasion, I have shared
my guts...and I would again. They are people who know how to have
fun, who accept me as I amno pretense, no persona to maintainjust
simple, meaningful relationships.
But a close friend? Nope. Not one.
You are probably wondering why. I have been wondering why for a
long time. After some very painful soul-searching, I think I have
discovered the reasons.
I am too busy. I am gone too much, travel too much, speak too much,
and work too much. I have done an excellent job of convincing the
people around me that I am too busytoo busy doing the very
important work that I am doingto have any time for friendships.
In other words, I have "snowed" everyone around me. I
have convinced them to buy into the myth of my busy-ness to such
a degree that the possibility of my being their friend (or them
being mine) never enters their mind. Thats what people like
me do. We hide behind the walls of our busy-ness so that we dont
have to worry about anyone wanting to be our friend. You see, people
dont want to impose. They dont want to rob my wife and
me of the very few moments we have together, so they enable us by
staying away from us so that we can be even busier.
This week I am speaking in England, next week New York, the week
after that Hawaii, then Australia, then Dallas, then Vancouver.
And then I come home for a few days...exhausted, jet lagged, useless
to everyone around me while my body and mind adjust to the new and
unfamiliar surroundingsmy home. I spend a day with my wife
and kids getting reacquainted, and all the while Im anxious
to get to the phone messages and correspondence that have fallen
way behind. Im home, but Im not home. I am present,
but I am not really present. And then one morning I wake up and
realize that I am alone. Very alone. I realize I need to do something
about all of this, then I race to catch the plane for my next trip
and vow to change when I get home. But I never do.
When will it occur to those of us who are in the ministry, who
are in the public eye, that we cannot keep doing this? We cannot
keep hiding behind our busy schedules. We cannot keep acting like
we have no choice because without us the world will fall apart.
Instead of the world falling apart, we fall apart...or our
families, or our kids, or our congregations fall apart.
Ill never forget a statement Janis Joplin once made after
a big concert: "Ive just made love to 25,000 people and
Im going home alone."
Let me speak as bluntly as I possibly can to all of us, including
myself: If we are too busy to have friends, we are much too busy.
If we are too busy to have time for our families, kids, or neighbors,
we are much too busy. Most of us in the ministry are lone rangers,
isolated from everyone, separated by our "fame" and our
giftedness. We have surrounded ourselves with employees whose job
is to keep the peons away from us. No wonder so many ministers crack
up. No wonder so many ministers end up having affairs, or end up
using their churches as a place to pad their pocketbooks and/or
build monuments to themselves.
Friendship is not an option for Christians.
Jesus disciples were friends, not groupies...even Judas.
Lets get real. Lets quit being so busy. Take a sabbatical.
Take the time required to build the kind of friendships that will
last. After all, thats what Jesus did. He wasnt so busy
that He didnt take time to make friends first, then disciples.
He only had three years. Isnt that one of the great parts
of the Good News? The God of the UniverseWho should be fairly
busy Himselfwants to be our friend.
Instead of building a ministry to thousands, maybe we ought to
build a friendship with one. Instead of speaking 200 times a year,
maybe we ought to listen to our children and our spouse. Maybe we
should be known not for how many converts we make or radio
stations we acquire or crusades we hold. Maybe we should be
known as someone who knows how to have friends.
I have decided to make some friends.
It will mean I have to stay home. It will mean I have to spend
time with someone doing absolutely nothing. It will mean I have
to work at something that is not easy for me. But I am not worried.
My friend Jesus is willing to help.
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