These friends say exactly what you want
them to say. They do exactly what you want them to do. To put it
bluntly, they are groupies, not friends. Groupies think their respective
group, player, etc. hung the moon. The person they admire could
open-hand slap an old lady on a cane, and a groupie would find some way
to justify it.
These friends don’t really love you.
They are infatuated with something you have. Popularity. Looks.
Athleticism. But they aren’t concerned with pointing you to God and
challenging you to be the best man or woman you can be.
Friends who love you and want you to succeed point out flaws.
Friends who love you and want you to succeed will point out your inconsistencies.
They don’t enjoy doing this. But, with
love and grace, they step into difficult conversations because they
can’t bear to watch you continue down a path that might lead to
destruction.
2) The “not that serious about God” friend
You know these friends. They usually go
to worship on Sunday. They might go on a foreign mission trip. But
they
never give God their lives. These friends are lukewarm. They think God
is OK with having some of the pie.
These friends are toxic because they
model a dangerous approach to Christian living. The approach that says
status quo Christianity is OK. There is no reason to be a Jesus freak.
Jesus freaks don’t enjoy life. So go to worship on Sunday. Read the
Bible occasionally. But leave a piece of the pie for yourself.
And the moment you try to go “all in” for God, you will meet fierce resistance. Believe me. I have been there.
Several times in my teenage and early
adult years, I wanted to go all in for God. But my friends weren’t
there. And they saw my attempt to go all in as a threat to our Friday
and Saturday nights. So, I heard statements like these:
“Are you really going to stop partying,
getting drunk, etc.? You know there is no way you will stick to it. In
two weeks, you will be back to your old self.”
And my friends were right. After a few weeks, I was back to my old self.
As long as “not that serious about God”
friends are close enough to you to ask these questions, you will never
give your full allegiance to God.
3) The “no ambition” friend
Our greatest fear should not be of failure but of succeeding at things in life that don’t really matter. Francis Chan
These friends have ambition. But only toward things that don’t matter. Like completing two seasons of their favorite Netflix show in one day. If you mention Xbox, movies, the opposite sex, or the game plan for Friday and Saturday night, these friends perk up like the time I poured water on my roommate when he was sleeping.
But if you mention serving in the
community, studying for a test or attending a Bible study, you might as
well be talking to a brick wall.
Surround yourself with people who want
to make the world a better place. Surround yourself with people who want
to do well in areas that matter.
You were created in the image of God.
This means you were created to learn, grow and give. You were created to
make the world a better place and do things with excellence. Surround
yourself with people who get this … and practice it.
4) The “attention must be on me” friend
Spotlight on me. All. The.Time. Do you have friends like this?
These friends are plagued with jealousy
and bitterness. They are extremely insecure. And here’s the big one …
their lives are plagued with drama. They live a real life soap opera.
And most of these friends have no idea why drama always follows them.
Here’s why.
These friends sell their souls to the
gods of attention and spotlight. These gods are ruthless. They require
everything. And the gods of attention and spotlight kick you to the curb
for their next victim once they destroy your worth and value.
These friends are toxic because they are
always takers. They take your energy. They take your joy. They take
your time. And they will never celebrate your successes. They can’t. The
gods of spotlight and attention won’t allow them to celebrate you. It
means they take a backseat.
True friends are givers. They celebrate
you. They are ok with taking a back seat to you. They listen to you.
Surround yourself with givers.
5) The “everyone else is doing it” friend
If I had a nickel for every time I heard (or spoke) this phrase as a teenager and young adult, I would be writing this post from an oversized yacht in the Pacific. The “everyone else is doing it” friend justifies every action. Nothing is their fault.
“Yeah, I was doing that, but Jill made me do it.”
“Johnny actually sent the text, I just wrote it. So, it’s really his fault.”
You get the idea? Not only do these
friends refuse to accept responsibility for their actions, they also
refuse to stand for anything. They go with the flow. They roll with the
crowd. They are influenced heavily by peer pressure. If the crowd is
doing it, they are doing it.
Here’s why these friends are toxic. As
they follow the crowd, they will encourage you to do so as well. As they
refuse to take accept responsibility for their actions, they will
encourage you to do so as well.
You need friends who are confident in
their identity. They are content in Christ. They are steadfast in their
convictions. Because even if you are the strong one, it only takes one
moment of weakness for this friend to take you down a road you never
intended to travel.
6) The “sees the worst in everything” friend
We live in a world where cynicism is the
default posture of the majority. It’s rare to find someone who looks at
the world through a positive lens. Even Christian leaders and preachers
(myself included, at times) present God as an angry cynic who can’t
wait to destroy the world.
God’s default posture is optimism. Your friends should see the world through God’s lens.
But this is not God’s default posture.
He looks at the world through the lens of restoration, redemption, and
hope. You can’t look at the world through this lens unless you have an
optimistic worldview.
Negative people are exhausting. They
drain your life and enthusiasm. They leave you feeling like the world,
in general, and your life, in particular, are hopeless.
If you have friendships that drive you
deeper into cynicism and hopelessness, it’s time to consider ending the
relationship. The world is how you see it. You can choose to see good.
You can choose to see bad. Your friends should choose the former because
your friends love Jesus.
Find those friends. And cling to them.
7) The “doesn’t know how to forgive” friend
These friends make a list of every
person who disses them, shames them or shows them up. And they check it
twice. They spend a lot of their time and energy seeking revenge. They
wade in a pool of bitterness and resentment, drowning out any notion of
forgiveness and grace.
“If Jesus was in my shoes, he would do the same thing!” This is a typical response from these friends.
These friends are cool with you … until
you do something to belittle them. Then you go on the hit list with
everyone else. Grace has a short leash. Oh, they want God to extend them
grace, but they don’t believe God expects them to extend the same level
of grace and forgiveness.
Find friends who model forgiveness and
refuse to build a wall of bitterness over their heart. This is a rare
virtue in our culture. So, if you find someone modeling gospel-centered
forgiveness, hang on to them.
These words aren’t a call to cut ties
with every friend who exhibits any of these qualities. Instead, I hope
and pray you will seriously consider the people you allow to shape your
life. The perfect friend doesn’t exist, but we shouldn’t settle when it
comes to friendships. Too much is at stake.
I think about the friends in my life the
night I hit bottom and the friends in my life today. When I sit down
with friends today, we aren’t talking about the hottest girl, the latest
gossip or how drunk we were last weekend. We talk about stuff that
matters. And that almost always includes Jesus. My friends today
challenge me to love my wife more intimately, love my kids more
passionately and love God more fully.
Choose your friends wisely. They will impact who you are in the present and who you will become in the future.
by Frank Powell
Credit:Sunday Adelaja
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