10 Things I've learned about Friendship
| 1 | Take Inventory. Am I open to friendship? What barriers must be removed? What has blocked relationships in my life? |
| 2 | Take The Initiative. Don’t wait for others to take the first step. |
| 3 | Focus on others. Show an interest in them, but don’t pressure them to respond. Be committed to their best interests (Phil 2: 1-7) |
| 4 | Be transparent. If you want real friends, you have to be willing to share about yourself. James says, “Confess your sins to one another, so that you may be healed” (James 5:16, NASB). |
| 5 | Accept others. Let them be who they are. Allow for differences. Don’t write a script for how they must respond. |
| 6 | Pay the price. Invest time. Christ and the 12 disciples were together constantly. Stick close in adversity. (see Prov. 18:24) |
| 7 | Avoid emotional dependency. In the bonds of true friendship, each person maintains his own identity. |
| 8 | Eliminate competition. Get rid of the male one-up contests. Your goal is to build your friend, not inflate your own ego. |
| 9 | Care enough to counsel or confront. “Faithful are the wounds of a friend”. (Prov. 27:6). “A man’s counsel is sweet to his friend.” (Prov. 27:9). |
| 10 | Know your own boundaries. Recognize when someone is asking too much of you. Respect your own limitations of time and personal space. |
Reprinted with permission from New Man, (o/ 201. copyright Strang Communications Co., USA. All rights reserved. Visit New Man’s Web site at www.newmanmagazine.com
