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Making Friends Forever

Love Worth Finding / Adrian Rogers
The Truth Network Radio
June 11, 2025 4:00 am

Making Friends Forever

Love Worth Finding / Adrian Rogers

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June 11, 2025 4:00 am

The importance of building and maintaining genuine friendships, as taught by the Bible, is discussed in this message. The speaker emphasizes the need for acceptance, acknowledgment, appreciation, affirmation, and empathy in friendships, and shares practical ways to build and maintain these relationships, including being vulnerable, showing hospitality, and being a friend to those who need it most.

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Pastor, teacher, and author Adrian Rogers has introduced people all over the world to the love of Jesus Christ and has impacted untold numbers of lives by presenting profound truth simply stated. Thanks for joining us for this message.

Here's Adrian Rogers. A brother is born for adversity. A friend loveth at all times. One of the greatest and deepest needs of human hearts is for friendship. We have a longing for someone who knows us and loves us and accepts us. Somebody with whom we can share. Somebody who understands our deepest needs, our hurts, our fears, our wants.

Our victories. We need friends. And to say that you don't need a friend would be to deny your humanity. So, I want to talk to you today about how to make friends. Making friends forever.

I want to show you how that can be one of the greatest ministries you can ever do in the name of Jesus and for the glory of Jesus Christ. Now, think with me for a moment about the marks of friendship. Why is a friend anyway? Let me give you what I consider to be three marks of friendship.

There are many more, but these stand out in my mind. First of all, as I've already said, a friend is somebody who shares. A friend loveth at all times. There was an English publication that ran a contest for a definition of friendship.

And there were some wonderful definitions. One of them was a friend is somebody who multiplies our joys. And divides our grief.

Isn't that beautiful? A friend multiplies our joys. A friend divides our grief.

Another one. A friend is somebody who understands our silence. We don't have to be talking for a friend to really understand who we are.

Sometimes just being there. But here's the one that won the prize in this English publication for a definition of a friend. A friend is someone who comes in when the whole world goes out. That is a friend. And folks, we need friends. We need friends who will strengthen us with their prayers. We need friends who will bless us with their love.

We need friends who will encourage us with their hope. A friend is somebody who is wise enough to leave you alone when you want to be alone. A friend is there to help you to celebrate when there's something to celebrate. And a friend is a cause of celebration when there's nothing else to celebrate. Just celebrating the presence of your friend.

So put it down. A friend is somebody who shares. He loveth at all times. But secondly, a friend is somebody who sharpens. Proverbs 27 and verse 17.

Listen to it. Iron sharpeneth iron. So a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend. Do you know what a good friend will do? A good friend will put a keen edge on your life. A good friend will sharpen you but a false friend will blunt and dull your life. Our English word friend relates to the word freedom because really a friend is somebody who sets you free to be all that you can be. He puts the keen edge, the sharp edge on your life.

A friend is somebody who encourages you, who knows how to speak the word that will draw you out. And lead you on. Somebody has written these words.

He says, I love you for not closing your ears to the discord in me but adding to the music in me by worshipful listening. You have done it without a touch, without a word, without a sign. You have done it just by being yourself. Perhaps this is what being a friend means most of all.

That's a wonderful, wonderful thought. I have friends who make me a better person. I have friends who sharpen me. Of course, my best friend is who?

Jesus. He's a friend that sticketh closer than a brother. And he's a friend that just sharpens me by his constant presence with me. But you know, I have another friend and thank God I'm married to her.

You know, it's a wonderful thing when you can be married to a friend. But I can say beyond the shadow of any doubt, without any stammer, stutter, apology, that I'm a better person because of Joyce. And I have other friends that when I'm in the presence of these people, they sharpen me. Bobby Lewis over here always encourages me. When I'm around Bobby, I just after having been with Bobby, I feel lifted up. The same is true with these gentlemen over here.

Scotty and Jim, they are friends. You have friends like that. A friend sharpens you. He puts the keen edge on your life.

And let me tell you something. Let me tell you another way that he sharpens you. Not constantly encouraging you, but challenging you and confronting you when you've done wrong. Look in Proverbs chapter 27 in verse six. The Bible says there, faithful are the wounds of a friend.

Do you see that? Fateful are the wounds of a friend, but the kisses of an enemy are deceitful. A friend will love you enough to confront you when you've done wrong. Fateful are the wounds of a friend, but the kisses of an enemy are deceitful. Do you know what the kisses of an enemy are? That's flattery. Now we have a lot of people who love to flatter us, but flattery is a lot like perfume.

You can sniff it, but don't swallow it. Do you know the difference between the flatterer and the hypocrite? They're first cousins, but the hypocrite will say behind your back what he will not say to your face. The flatterer says to your face what he won't say behind your back. That's the kisses of an enemy are deceitful. Fateful are the wounds of a friend.

Thank God for those who love us enough to put their arms around our shoulders and tell us when there's something that needs to be corrected. A friend sharpens. I'll tell you what else a real friend does. He sticks. He sticks.

If you want to know who your real friends are, make a mistake. Make a mistake, but a real friend is a man who stays with you. Now the Bible says in Proverbs 18, verse 24, there's a friend that sticketh closer than a brother. He sticks.

He stays. And one of the things one of the great admonitions about friendship is found in Proverbs chapter 27 and verse 10. Thine own friend and thy father's friend forsake not. Don't forsake a friend. Thine own friend and thy father's friend forsake not. Remember that definition of friendship? A friend is somebody who walks in when the whole world walks out.

Not a fair weather friend who jumps on board when the sun is shining or steps off, but gets overboard or steps off when the rough time comes. Charles Colson was called the hatchet man in Richard Nixon's cabinet. A brilliant lawyer. He was somehow wrapped up in the Watergate mess that caused Richard Nixon to lose his presidency and to resign and disgrace before impeachment. He was a good guy, especially on the campuses. And people hated the Watergate debacle.

And they hated that coterie of friends that were there in that inner workings of the White House. But through all of that, Charles Colson came to know the Lord Jesus Christ as his personal savior and Lord. He spent some time in prison.

He came out of prison and wrote a book called Born Again. And in that book, he began to lecture some. And he was speaking to a group of students in a Western university. They were very hostile. Hostile toward Nixon and hostile to anybody that had a part in the Watergate thing. And after Charles Colson spoke, they began to bombard him with questions.

And the questions got sharper and sharper and more hostile. He read a criticism that Henry Kissinger had made of Richard Nixon. A very biting, hard, vitriolic criticism of Richard Nixon. And then that student said, Mr. Colson, I want to know, do you agree with what Mr. Kissinger has said? Colson in his book said he scanned the audience. He knew that every ear was listening to hear what he would say.

It was one of those moments. He thoughtfully replied, and here's what he said. We all know Mr. Nixon's negative qualities. He has been dissected in the press like no one in history. I could tell you his good points. But I don't believe that I could persuade you to accept them. But what it comes down to is no identity. I don't go along with Henry Kissinger's comments.

Mr. Nixon is my friend, and I don't turn my back on my friends. When he said that, in this university, there was a moment. He said he thought the roof would fall in. There was a moment of silence.

Nobody knew how they would respond. They stood on their feet like one man and gave Charles Colson a thunderous applause. An ovation. Even hostile students like that could appreciate loyalty to a friend. Mr. Nixon is my friend, and I will not turn my back on my friends. A friend is somebody who shares. A friend is somebody who sticks. And if you've got some friends, thank God for them. We all have a lot of acquaintances, but thank God for friends.

Now, those are the marks of friendship. How do you make friends? Let's talk about the making of friends. You say, I want a friendship. I want some friends. Well, let me tell you that friendships are built. They don't happen overnight. They're not like toadstools. They're more like oak trees.

I'm not making a friend. I'm going to give them to you in a moment. But all five of these secrets come out of one great principle, and that principle was given by the Lord Jesus Christ. Not pop psychology, but deep, deep truth.

It's found in Luke chapter six and verse 31. It is the principle. Now, there are five secrets that come out of that principle. As a matter of fact, there was a man named Dale Carnegie who wrote a book, How to Win Friends and Influence People. And I don't know whether you agree with all of Dale Carnegie or not. Certainly, he was not writing by divine inspiration like the writers of the Scriptures, but he said one thing in that book that is absolutely true in my estimation.

Here it is. You can make more friends in two months by becoming interested in others than you can in two years by trying to get other people interested in you. So many of us are so self-centered, are we not? Jesus said, as you would that men should do to you. Do you also likewise to them? What are these five secrets?

Number one, people want to be accepted. Jesus called his disciples friends. Were they perfect?

They were a motley crew. But Jesus opened his arms, his heart, his love, his mind. He accepted them. I've told you before, Jesus does not change us so he can love us.

He loves us so he can change us. We are accepted by the grace of God and we ought to accept others by the grace of God. Acceptance, that's the first one of these five secrets. Number two, people want to be acknowledged. If you accept somebody, you've got to acknowledge them. You've got to know that they're there.

The road to the heart is often through the ear. We need to pay attention to people. When people speak, when they're around us, give them your full attention.

Give them your eye contact. Don't be like that husband who said, I'm concerned about my wife. She always goes around the house talking to herself. And his friend says, does she know she's doing it? He said, no, she thinks I'm listening to her.

I can say this that that husband wasn't much of a friend. Did you know that active listening is a God-like quality? It's a God-like quality. Psalm 34 verse 15, the eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous and his ears are open unto their cry.

Do you know what that means? God's eyes and God's ears are on you. God's eyes and God's ears are on you. If you want people to know you, love you, appreciate you, put your eyes on them, open your ears to them and you'll be like God.

The psalmist said in Psalm 16 verse one, I love the Lord because he has heard my voice and my supplication. When you acknowledge a person, do you know what you're saying to that person? You are important to me. People need acceptance. They need to be acknowledged. The third thing they need, they need to be appreciated.

Find something in somebody that you can compliment and appreciate. Psychologist William James said the deepest principle in human nature is the craving to be appreciated. When I walked out of the house this morning, my wife said to me just as I was leaving, sweetheart, I'm proud of you. I liked it.

I liked it. People want to be appreciated. Mark Twain said that he could live three weeks on a compliment. You'll find in the Bible when the apostle Paul, he had a lot of problems he had to deal with with people in the Bible and he wrote those epistles, but almost every time before he was about to jump on them for something wrong that they'd done, he would say some word of appreciation or some word of commendation. Appreciation, learn to appreciate people. People want to be accepted. They want to be acknowledged. They want to be appreciated and they want to be affirmed. We live in a negative world.

Do you know why people have difficulty doing these first three things? Because they themselves have such a negative self-interest. They have a negative self-image. We have a problem of teenage suicides.

Many of these teenage suicides are with teenage kids who need to be affirmed. They need to be loved. They have a negative self-image. They are the victims of constant put-downs and live in a fearful society. They feel they cannot cope. They feel they're not appreciated. Therefore, they're not affirmed. Many of them have the idea, well, I'm nobody on campus. My parents don't appreciate me. They never affirm me. But if I'm dead, maybe there'll be some tears shed for me at the high school.

Maybe then somehow I will be the subject of somebody's sympathy and affirmation. Now, people want to be affirmed. The Bible says, a hypocrite with his mouth destroyeth his neighbor, but through knowledge shall the just be delivered.

And that's been paraphrased, evil words destroy, godly skill rebuilds. And people want to be assured. I mean by that, they want empathy. They want understanding.

The Bible says in the book of Romans chapter 12 verse 15, we're to rejoice with those that rejoice and weep with them that weep. I'm going to tell you something. When people are going through heartache and tears and problems, they're not primarily interested in your answers to their problems. They're not primarily interested in your solutions, your cures. I'll tell you what they will be interested in. If you'll sit down and cry with them a little bit.

Just assure them that you care, that you know a gentle touch, a tender hand. Now, we've talked to you about the marks of true friendship. We've talked to you about the making of true friends. Let me talk to you about the maintenance of a friendship. Because you see, when you build a friendship, you've got to maintain it.

It's got to be maintained. Remember our text, a friend loveth at all times and a brother is born for adversity. Adversity. Friendships are difficult to maintain.

Don't have too many of them. Now, Proverbs 18 verse 24, one translation gives it this way. He who would have friends must show himself friendly.

But the New American Standard renders it this way. A man of many friends will come to ruin. I thought, well, how could they say that? He who would have friends must show himself friendly. A man of many friends will come to ruin. Doesn't even sound like the same verse. But you think about it.

It's just the same thing rendered a different way. I prefer he who would have friends must show himself friendly. But what it means is this. Don't have more friends than you can show yourself friendly to. I don't get overextended with your friendships.

You have a lot of acquaintances. But genuine friends are costly. They cost time.

They cost effort. There's an investment. A friend is born. A brother is born for adversity. And you've got to maintain your friendship.

It's costly, but it's worth it. Love at all is to be vulnerable. Love anything and your heart will certainly be wrung and possibly broken. If you want to make sure of keeping your heart intact, you must give your heart to no one. Wrap it carefully with hobbies and little luxuries.

Avoid all entanglements. Lock it safe in a casket of your own selfishness. There it will not be broken. It will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. What's he saying?

He's saying, hey, it'll cost you. Parents who have children that they love have had their hearts broken by those children. You've had your heart broken by your husband, by your wife, by friends.

That will happen. But you've got to maintain that friendship. We're in changing a friend. Friends can bring personal, social, emotional, and financial demands upon you. But you've got to maintain your friendship.

Now here's the last thing I want to say. We've talked to you about the marks of a friendship. We've talked to you about the making of a friendship.

We've talked to you about the maintenance of a friendship. I want to speak to you about the ministry of a friendship. The ministry of a friendship. Now let me tell you what the Lord Jesus Christ did with his friendship. The Lord Jesus ministered to us.

Look if you will in John chapter 15 and verse 13. Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends. Ye are my friends if you do whatsoever I command you. Now the Lord Jesus Christ here is talking about his ministry, laying down his life for his friends. Now what we are calling this program that we're introducing to you today and what I call this message is making friends, not for a lifetime, but making friends forever. Jesus was a friend of sinners.

That's why they crucified him. There are lost people out there who need the love and the friendship of Jesus Christ and we are now his body and we're now to be reaching out to this community that is perishing for love and for friendship. Now let me give you some practical ways, some practical ways that we can do this as a congregation. Number one, we as the leaders, and I'm talking about Sunday school teachers, I'm talking about deacons, I'm talking about staff, I'm talking about committee personnel. We need to set the tone and the atmosphere. We need ourselves to be approachable and real.

Not simply numbers, but as names, memorize names. Number two, we as a church, and I'm talking to all of us now, we need to learn how to greet people. We need to learn how to greet people, to shake hands. Do you know how to shake hands? I mean not one of those cold, clammy kind of things. Man, I hate those. And not one of those bone crushers that'll put you on your knees.

Some little ladies have arthritis and so forth. Give a good, warm handshake and a friendly touch. Give everybody who comes into this church when you meet them a look, a word, and a touch. A look, a smile upon your face, a word, good morning, a touch, just a hand on the shoulder. I'm not talking about being overly aggressive in touching people, but people want to be met up close. We want to influence our church. Listen, it's far more important that we do it up close. It's more important to influence people than it is to impress them.

This place is impressive just coming in here because it's so big. Put it on your face. Learn to smile. Learn to laugh. Laugh is music. Laughter is. Learn to laugh at yourself.

You've got a lot to laugh about. We as a church need to watch our first impressions when people come in here. They need to be aligned in the first 12 minutes whether they're going to feel at home and whether they're going to like a church or whether they're not. The first 12 minutes when they come here. Sometimes it starts on the parking lot, but it certainly starts when they come in these doors. I don't want them to meet an usher who looks like an advanced agent for the undertaker. They need to be warmly welcomed in our church. They need to get on these grounds.

I want to ask you a question. Who is more important to an airline, the president of the airline, the pilot, or the person who writes the ticket and the steward in the airplane? Well, obviously. The president and the pilot are more important than the person who writes the ticket or the steward. Now, I'm not trying to put the ticket writer or the steward down. But where do you get your biggest impression about that airline?

Most of you never see the pilot and you will never know or meet the president. Is that right? Where do you get your impression of that airline? You walk up there and if that person who writes the ticket is horsey with you or pays no attention to you or the steward pays no attention to you, you say, I don't like this airline.

Is that not right? The president of the church will get an impression of this church. It doesn't matter who the pastor is.

It doesn't matter what goes on behind the scenes in the deacons meetings. We're the people and first impressions are so very, very important. So therefore, what we need to do is to be an easy place to be around. This place is big. It's intimidating to some people.

Did you know that? I have a lot of people say, hey, we made up our mind we were not going to go to Bellevue because it's so big. You ever heard anybody say that?

Well, you know what they say? They say, we came and we got hooked. Why do you think it gets big? Because people are having the needs met. Because people are loving and there's a Bellevue spirit. It is the first impression that is so very, very important.

Now you're at home here, but you think about the stranger who's coming for the first time. Many of them don't even understand Christ. They don't understand Baptist, especially. They don't know who we are, what we do. They think we jump pews and handle snakes. They don't know what we do.

They're scared to death. Suppose, suppose you went to a Buddhist temple for the first time. What would you be doing? You say, all these folks are watching me. I'm going to be doing the wrong thing. I'm not going to be swinging incense when I ought to. You don't know what you're supposed to do. Now folks, don't take it for granted that everybody else is just like you, that they understand what you understand. Take the fear element out.

Don't justify gentleness, winsomeness, love. Don't embarrass guests. Don't do it in your Sunday school class. Do you know what the three biggest fears that people have, social fears? Number one is a gathering with strangers. Number two, making a speech. Number three, answering a personal question in public.

Why do we do an average Sunday school class? They get in a bunch of strangers. We say, well, stand up. Tell us who you are.

Tell us about this or that. We think we're being friendly. We are scaring them to death. I'm telling you today, people don't want to say anything.

They want to sing anything. They don't want to sign anything. They don't want to sacrifice anything.

You say, well, they ought to, but they're lost. They don't know Jesus. What we've got to do is to get an atmosphere here in this church where they can be welcomed, where they can feel at home. In a Sunday school class, learn to show hospitality. Have Sundays where you have big names. Put those name tags and write the names big enough so people like me who wear glasses can read them without putting the glasses on. I've got good sight from that far on out, but from right on here, I can't.

It happens at 42 years of age right there. Now, look. Look, folks. Put those name tags on there real big. You don't have to say Ajax Sunday school class in letters that big. They know they're in Ajax Sunday school class. Just put the name tags on there real big.

Put the name real big in the Sunday school class name real little on there so people can see it. Serve refreshments. You say, well, should we serve?

Sure. Jesus, some of the greatest times he had with his people when he was feeding them a meal or serving refreshments, Jesus went to a party. He provided the refreshments at a party. There's something about that that's convivial with people just that relaxes. That's what a fellowship is. What am I trying to say?

I don't want to give you a whole course in this, but what I'm saying is, folks, listen. We have got to begin to love people to Jesus. There is a ministry of friendship.

We've got to show the beauty, the love, the grace, the kindness of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. You say, oh, but pastor, our class is so friendly. You may think it is. You may think that you were friendly this morning when I said, turn around and shake hands. You probably shook hands with four people you knew and didn't.

You probably didn't meet a stranger. Most of our so-called fellowships are sacred societies for snubbing sinners. We have little holy huddles and we say, oh, don't we love one another?

Over there standing in the center and we never invite him in. Now, not every visitor is a sinner. Not every member is a saint.

We love people. Jesus did. Now, folks, listen to me. This may be you say, well, pastor, this is not all that inspiring. I'm not trying to be inspiring this morning. I just want to be helpful.

I just want to be helpful. You say, well, pastor, I just don't have any friends. Well, make some friends, make some friends for Jesus. You say, well, I thought I was supposed to be separate from sinners. Well, Jesus did not condemn lost people. There's a difference in acceptance and approval. You can accept people without approving what they do. The time is gone. Listen to me.

Listen to me. Jesus, Jesus was crucified for being a friend of sinners. If you're here today without him, I want to tell you he loves you more than I can say. You say, well, I'm grateful for his love, but do I have to admit that I'm a sinner to have his love, all of sin? If Jesus were not a friend of sinners, I would be sunk.

I would be sunk. Thank God that he loves me. And if God has loved me, then I need to love you. If God has accepted me, then I, for Christ's sake, can accept you. Folks, we need to be a family of friends as a church. And I want you to get that little list of people that you're going to begin praying for.

And you're going to keep your regular friends, but you're going to begin to make some friends, not merely for time, but for eternity. Let's bow our heads together in prayer. Father God, I pray in the name of Jesus that you will lay this truth upon our hearts. And Lord, because of the best friend, the Lord Jesus, may we be his friend and a friend to those that he loves.

And Lord, teach us how to make friends forever. Now while heads are bowed and eyes are closed, would you just pray that God will lay some souls upon your heart? Would you pray anew and afresh that God will make you a soul winner? That God will make you a maker of friends? We're not talking about button-holing people and saying, brother, are you ready to meet God?

We're just talking about showing the love of Jesus, caring about people, making them feel at home when they're at God's house, making friends and bringing them to special opportunities. Would you pray that God will do that in your heart and in your life? And if you've not yet met the Lord Jesus as your personal friend, would you like to pray right now and invite him into your heart? I invite you to pray this way, dear God, if you're not certain that you're saved right now, pray this way, dear God, I need to be saved. My sin deserves judgment, but I want mercy. Jesus, you died to save me. You promised to save me if I would trust you. I do trust you, Jesus. Would you pray that prayer?

Pray it in your heart. I do trust you, Jesus, right now this moment. I trust you to save me. I receive you by faith now as my personal Lord and Savior.

Thank you for saving me. I receive it by faith. You're now my Lord, my Savior, my God, and my friend. And Lord Jesus, because you died for me, I will live for you, and I will not be ashamed of you because you died for me. In your name I pray. Amen.

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