Everton Park Presbyterian Reformed Church

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Covenant Friendship

June 12, 2015 by CFIT

Recently I read Tim Challies‚ review of the book Spiritual Friendship by Wesley Hill. Wesley Hill is single and laments how hard it is to form good Christian friendships that last. Part of the problem is that we live in an increasingly mobile society; people regularly ‚move on‚ even when they don‚t move away. Tim Challies asks, ‘Have you ever had a friendship that entered into irrevocable decline because your friend just up and moved away? Have you ever had a friendship that ended over matters of convenience or preference? My guess is that most of us have experienced something like this at one time or another. And I wonder if this is an inevitable part of friendship, or whether it may just be a sign that we take friendship too lightly.‘

Wesley Hill notes how, for some, friendship is ‘based, above all, on personal preference’; and that in ‚preserving its voluntary character‚ it becomes ‘vulnerable at every point to dissolution if one of the friends grows tired of or burdened by the relationship.’ He goes on to wonder whether we shouldn’t ‘consider friendship more along the lines of how we think of marriage’, i.e. ‘as more stable, permanent, and binding than we often do‚ should we begin to consider at least some of our friends as, in large measure, tantamount to family?’  This will not sit well with today’s individualistic focus in society; as Hill notes: ‘If your deepest fulfilment is found in personal autonomy, then friendship is more of a liability than an asset.’

Challies makes an interesting observation regarding our focus as churches. He asks, ‘Have Protestants, with all our emphasis on marriage and family, neglected friendship?‘ This is a good point. Those who are happily married can be blissfully unaware of the deep pain and loneliness that single people (unmarried, widowed, divorced) or those unhappily married can feel. Challies comments: ‘We all know that the strength of marriage is its bond, the commitment of one spouse to another through any and every circumstance, ’til death do us part. Is it possible that our friendships remain insignificant because they require so much less and can be dissolved on a whim?‘

Is there room for a form of ‚covenant friendship‚ that would provide stability in a relationship similar to that in a happy marriage? The answer to that question is, ‘yes’. It is called covenant church membership. Covenant church membership (where it operates as it should) provides ‘covenant friendship’ for all who are part of that church family. We covenant to ‘serve in and contribute joyfully to the worship and work of [our church] to the best of our ability.‘ Also, ‘to love each brother or sister in Christ [in our church]; and to encourage and pray for them in their Christian walk and witness.‘

Can it be that single people are lonelier today because so many churches have given up on covenant membership? While those of us who are in churches that have covenant membership need to take it more seriously? Covenant membership means covenant friendship; it means we don‚t give up on each other when we get irritated or let down, or ‘get a better offer elsewhere‘‚ we are there for each other no matter what (Colossians 3:12-15, 1 John 3:18). Let us continually renew our vows to be faithful to God. But also, to one another. Let us recommit to covenant friendship in the family of our church.

Filed Under: Blogs by Ken Tagged With: church, church membership, commitment, covenant membership, friendship, loneliness, Love, Marriage

Focus on Marriage Series

May 27, 2012 by Tim

Marriage is under threat within Australia and elsewhere in the world. The biblical standard of marriage is being diluted through ‘life partners’, ‘de-facto relationships’, ‘divorce’ and more recently ‘gay marriage’.As a Focus on Marriage, we provided two talks exploring different aspects of marriage and our necessary responses as Christians to the prevailing world views.

1. Gay Marriage

Same-sex attraction is a real experience for some people, and not just because they just decided to become ‘gay’ one day. sometimes it’s something they’ve struggled with for many years.

From a Christian perspective, every person is valuable and created ‘in the image of God’ whether they struggle with same-sex attraction or not. This incredible concept applies to all human beings regarless of their struggles. A married person struggling with unfaithfulness still has great value and deserves the support from our ultimate guide to divorce mediation, same as does a single person wrestling with the appeal of ‘casual sex’.

But does that mean we should do whatever initially appears to make us happy? What are the consequences? If we do choose to make our own rules, what does this mean for the direction of our society and our children’s future?

Mark explored this vital topic in our Saturday Evening Event in April, in a public forum on ‘Gay Marriage’.

2. The Mega-Secret that Makes a Marriage

What is the biblical basis for marriage? What is required to have a fulfilling and God honouring marriage? Ken explored this important topic as a Sunday morning worship address on the “Mega Secret that Makes a Marriage”.

Filed Under: Sermon Blogs Tagged With: 2012, Homosexuality, Ken Stebbins, Mark Paterson, Marriage, SNM

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