How to be a Good Friend

by | Apr 2, 2012 | Spiritual Life | 0 comments

Biblical wisdom is the best advice. Ahead of tonight’s study on how the lordship of Christ affects our relationships, here’s a look at four qualities of a good friend we find in Proverbs (from Derek Kidner’s Commentary):

  1. Constancy is his first feature. Fair-weather friends are many in Proverbs (e.g. 14:20; 19:4; 6, 7), but ‘there is a friend that sticketh closer than a brother’ (18:24), and ‘loveth at all times’ (17:17). In case the reader should think only of the friendship he hopes to receive, he is urged to give this kind of loyalty (27:10), especially to the old friend of the family who may easily be dropped in the search for new company, but whose staunchness would stand any test.
  2. Candour. ‘Faithful are the wounds of a friend’ (27:6); for ‘a man that flattereth his friend spreadeth a net for his feet’ (29:5). David shirked his duty to Adonijah his son (‘he had not displeased him at any time in saying, Why hast thou done so?’ 1 Kings 1:6), and it cost that son his life. But any thanks that a friend gets for this service are likely to be delayed: he must be prepared to wait till ‘afterwards’ (28:23).
  3. Counsel. Two sayings in chapter 27 give the two sides to this: the cheering effect of fellowship (27:9, see note; as when Jonathan strengthened David’s hand in the Lord, 1 Sam. 23:16), and the healthy clash of personalities or views (27:17). A true friendship should have both elements, the reassuring and the bracing.
  4. Tact: respect for another’s feelings; refusal to trade on his affection. The examples in Proverbs are of all-too-familiar lapses: outstaying one’s welcome (or forcing one’s friendship on a person), 25:17; being hearty at the wrong time, when it is unwelcome (27:14) or even cruel (25:20); and not knowing when a joke has gone far enough (26:18,19).

p.s. “candour” is a good word to know…