Video: Relationships: Can you do more with 5 $1 bills or 500 pennies?
We often use the wrong words to define relationships. Take Facebook for example. I have 4,993 âfriendsâ as of the date Iâm writing this post. Statisticians and sociologists and people who study these kinds of things say that I can- at most- manage 200 relationships at once. And thatâs just relationships, not real friendships.
That means that, clearly, I canât manage 4,773 of the relationships on any level at all. Yet these are my âfriends.â
You may have noticed the same trend in your profile. You have all of these people to whom youâre connected. But who are they, really?
Now, Iâm not arguing we should go on an âunfriendingâ rampage. Iâm simply stating the obvious: just because someone is labeled a âfriendâ doesnât mean they are. It just means, well⌠they have a label. A title. Not a role, but a titleâŚ
What are friends, really?
Solomon, the wisest guy who ever lived (you know, the guy who saw two women arguing about who the baby belonged to, so he suggested, âCut the baby in half!â in 1 King 3:16-28?) described friends in the following manner >>>
- Friends stick with you when things get tough- âA friend loves at all times, and a brother is born for a time of adversityâ (Proverbs 17:17 NIV).
- Because we need others and because tough times DO inevitably come, fair weather friends arenât helpful to have- âOne who has unreliable friends soon comes to ruin, but there is a friend who sticks closer than a brotherâ (Proverbs 18:24 NIV).
- Weâre reminded NOT to be fair weathered friends; others rely on us in the same way we rely on them- âDo not forsake your own friend or your father's friend⌠Better is a friend who is near than a brother far awayâ (Proverbs 27:10 edited).
- Much of the âtough stuffâ we face in life is actually our own fault. We reap what we sow. Also, we cause some of the tough stuff others face. So, Solomon reminds us to have friends that can tell us what we NEED to hear, not just what we WANT to hear- âFaithful are the wounds of a friend; profuse are the kisses of an enemyâ (Proverbs 27:6).
- And, of course, because conflict is part of any relationship (read: tension), we want people who can weather it⌠and endure with grace. So, Solomon is clear- âDonât make friends with people who have hot, violent tempers. You might learn their habits and not be able to changeâ (Proverbs 22:24-25).
Those are just a few ways in which Solomon describes friends. In reality, you canât have too many people like that in your life. It simply requires too much of a commitment and energy- if youâre going to be a good friend AND have some good friends.
You already have too many friends?
A professor of mine from seminary recounted his brief teaching stint in Asia to our class one day. He sought to get to know some of his colleagues, so he asked another professor with whom he was working if they might like to go to dinner with him and his wife.
âLet me think about it?â the man politely replied.
My professor was somewhat confused- theyâd gotten along extremely well around the school. It seemed like they could genuinely be⌠well⌠friends.
A few days later that professor gave him his answer: âWe canât do it,â he said. âMy wife and I discussed it. We already have enough friends.â
âEnough? You canât have too many right?â
At least thatâs how one of the gas in my classroom responded to the story. He was just voicing what we were all thinking. Do you really cut people off? Do you really have less friends intentionally?
Especially in a culture that moves towards âmore is betterâ in every area of life.
Especially in an environment of unbridled accumulation.
âHe was taking the offer of friendship seriously,â our professor told us. âHe was incredibly gracious around the school, he wasnât awkward in the least. He was kind and showed me around the school, helped me navigate my way through a different country...
âBut he and his wife, in large part because of their heritage and cultural, understand that real friendship is a commitment.â Then- âNo, itâs more like a covenant, a pledge...
âIf youâre going to do it right, you canât have that many true friends.â
I think we get it. We understand the concept.
I mean, if I offered you five brand new $1 bills or 500 shiny pennies which would you take?
I donât like carrying change around in my pocket. My kids know they can find it in the âash trayâ of our car, so they swipe it for gum balls and video games.
I have a jar in the corner of my bedroom where I drop pocket change. Every few years, I let my boys dump it and roll it. They can keep whatever is there.
Surprisingly, thereâs always $30, $40, even $50âŚ
In other words, the change still has enormous value. It has the same value as the paper versions of the currency. You carry both differently, though.
All people have value. The same value. Thatâs not the issue here- even though, understandably, people sometimes want to make it one when I argue that maybe we should have fewer friends with deeper connections and then call the other relationships what they are- great acquaintances that add immense value to our lives.
You see, like the Asian professor knew, you canât carry hundreds of deep friendships anymore than you can carry hundreds of copper pennies in your front pocket.
Blurred lines
My guess is that after reading a few of the verses above from Solomon- which, really, just brush the surface of what true friendship is likeâŚ
⌠then after reading the analogy of the money (same value, just two different ways of carrying)âŚ
⌠you probably think something like this: âGeez⌠if thatâs what true friends are like, IT REALLY IS difficult to actually maintain too many of them⌠a lot is required.â
Youâre right. Friendship is a lot of "give." A lot of itâŚ
(The flip-side is that it's also a lot of "take," a massive amount of benefit.)
I think we inherently know this, though. And we know that our âfriendsâ on Facebook, for the most part, arenât really friends. This doesnât mean Facebook is bad- it's an amazing tool for connection, right?!- or that most of those people donât contribute to our wellbeing in some sense. It just means that surface-level connections of any kind donât match the description of friendship Solomon starts sketching in Proverbs.
Because of this, we actually change peopleâs titles- even though their roles havenât changed at all.
We refer to acquaintances and even âpseudo-acquaintancesâ as friends, right? I mean, how many times have you met someone in real life and then had that awkward exchange that goes something like, âHey, I think weâre friends online⌠arenât we?!â
You see, weâre âfriendsâ online but we donât even know how to interact in person. Thatâs clearly NOT friendship. Thatâs acquaintance-ship.
So, we come up with a new name for REAL friends- the kind that match the actual description we see outlined in the Bible. The term âfriendâ doesnât do the relationship justice, because weâve diluted the word so much, so we refer to these people as FAMILY.
Yet theyâre not really family. Family is a group of people related by blood or marriage or legal contract (i.e., adoption). Family isnât friend AND friend isnât acquaintance.
You see how confusingly weird this can all get? The language has become blurred, such that we donât really know how to categorize people anymore.
We lean, now, towards having many and shallow relationships rather than having fewer & deeper interactions.
How many friends did Jesus have, anyway?
Jesus came for the entire world. He loves the entire world (John 3:16). Read the biographies about Him that were written by four radically different menâŚ
- Matthew was a thoughtful, methodical former tax collector- a bean counter, who would love spreadsheets and charts
- Mark was an impulsive youngster- one who might change his plans on a momentâs notice (the âmillennialâ of the Bible)
- Luke was a traveler and a healer- a physician who seemed to be more comfortable hanging out with Indiana Jones than peers from the AMA
- John was imaginative- an ethereal philosopher who could match wits with the greatest minds of his day
⌠these men ALL say Jesus served everyone. In fact, the more broken the person was, the more likely Jesus was to extend Himself to them. The more theyâd been shunned and ostracized, the more He seemed to go out of His way to pull them close to HimâŚ
He empowered everyone who came to Him. Why? Because everyone has value. Immense, immeasurable value.
Nonetheless, Jesus spent most of this time with 12 men and a handful of women that traveled with them (see Luke 8:1-2). It was to this group that He said things like, âNo longer do I call you servants, for a servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all things that I heard from My Father I have made known to youâ (John 15:15).
It was this group- not the masses- that He took the Garden of Gethsemane, knowing that He was about to be betrayed.
Even beyond this, He routinely pulled away to invest in three (i.e., Mark 9:1-2).
The problem with many, shallow relationships instead of fewer, deeper ones
Notice the chart below (it comes from the Advance presentation / book- hence, the page numbers):
Iâve outlined three types of relationships-
- Family
- Friends
- Fans
Let me be blunt. Most of us gravitate towards âfanâ relationships. That is, many times we donât want friends, we want fans.
Hereâs the problem with them: These are one-way relationships whereby people offer praise and admiration to you, but donât require anything from you. Friends, on the other hand, do. So do family members. Both of those categories are âgive and take.â Sometimes, you soak up; others time you put out.
As well, fan relationships are easy; friends and family relationships are not.
Why? Precisely because of what we just mentioned. Friends and family require something of you. They insist that youâre present. That you contribute. That you continue talking and walking in grace and honor EVEN AFTER the stage lights are off.
A lot of people on Facebook who regularly like, share, and comment on your highlight reel (thatâs what we share online, right, not the ârealâ stuff, but a sanitized version of the real PLUS the greatest twist of the good, correct?) arenât friends. Itâs not a two-way relationship.
Theyâre fans. Itâs one way.
You may think they âget you,â that they understandâŚ
You may be tempted to soak your much needed praise and affirmation from them alone (we all need a big dose of positivity, so nothing wrong with getting that EXCEPT, well, when we get our affirmation from âfar awayâ places, weâre less likely to interact up close at home in such a way that we garner it there.
Why does this matter?
First, it matters because you canât build a âwhoâ with people that arenât legitimately close to you- in a two-way relationship. Your âwhoâ is your âinner circleâ- not the people who live on the perimeter of your life, regardless of how many texts, tweets, or PM exchanges you have with them.
In other words, fan relationships can never take the place of friendship. These relationships will come up short every time.
Second, fan relationships canât bring the correction we need, those tough conversations that can only happen in the midst of trusted friendships that enable to us become the people weâre created and designed to be.
The importance of friendship for leaders
For those of us who lead at any level, this is incredibly important. You see, at some point youâre going to find more and more success in life. And, when you do, youâll have a stage, youâll have some power, and/or youâll have a position of influence.
Iâve noticed this about success: it amplifies who you already are. Suddenly, every great thing- and every flaw- gets just a bit louder.
Iâve got a friend named Scott. No, let me label it the right way. Heâs an acquaintance whoâs cell number I have. I can call him if I have a business question or need something, but heâs not in my inner circle and Iâm not in is.
He and his wife have had some amazing business success. They used to be $100,000-plus in debt; now they generate far more than that each month. Theyâre huge givers.
Turns out, they always been generous. When youâre a $100,000 in debt, no one really sees the generosity, though, because you donât have that much to give. That characteristic was still there, though⌠they were still giving, it just happened to be a struggle to give a lot less...
You see, their success didnât create the generosity, it simply magnified it. It gave it a bigger stage to shine.
Incidentally, Scott has long hair. And a huge beard. He looks like Chewbacca with clothes on.
Most employers would think that his beard and his hair are not appropriate for most professional jobs. Now, heâs successful, though, and he doesnât have those constraints. So, his choice of grooming has gotten amplified. It was always there, this desire to look more like Grizzly Adams than a "suit." Success has simply amplified the grit that was always there.
By the way, in the pic below, that's Scott on the left. The guy on the right, Jay... one of the great leaders. Authentic. Transparent. Pure. What you see is what you get.
And though he's more straight-laced than the more ragged model on the left, when I see him I think of integrity.
Even if and when it's hard.
Even if it does against the norm.
Even if it costs him.
Success didn't create that for him- it simply amplified the honor that was already there.
We often toss phrases around like this: âSuccess changed them.â
Letâs be real. Success doesnât change us. As in Scottâs case- and in Jay's, success simply allows what was beneath the surface to become visible.
Sometimes, the stuff that gets amplified for us is âbadâ stuff, though. The character flaws. The pride. The not-paying-attention to our family while we chase bigger goals.
Our blind spotsâŚ
Thatâs why we need people- friends- who can help us become the people weâre destined to become. Itâs those friends that continue calling out the best- like the generosity, and the gifts, and the abilities. Itâs those friends, too, who knock off the rough stuff.
Multi-layered
So whoâs in your inner circle? Or, to say it another way, who is on âyour bus,â that analogy we use to describe those closest to you?
Well, look at the graphic hereâŚ
Notice that some of your family members will never be fans (they will never be proud of what youâre doing- or even like you!). Some of them wonât be friends (sometimes this is because of time and distance, sometimes this is because of hurt and pain).
Notice, too, that all of the people in your inner circle ARE fans (they cheer you on) AND theyâre friends. Some of them are familyâŚ
__________________________
What should you watch / read next?
Check out the post on the bus- on having the right people in your inner circle: https://www.overflowfaith.com/blog/who-s-on-the-bus
Read the post about the rubber band- and how the tension of the best relationships pulls us to being the people weâre designed to be: https://www.overflowfaith.com/blog/the-rubber-band-relationship-thingamajig-from-advance-another-illustration-showing-you-how-relationships-make-you-the-best-version-of-you
The Daily
Grace-infused e-votionals full of hope + practical wisdom delivered to your inbox early every morning.