CHRIST'S FRIENDSHIP: ITS INTIMACY
No Longer Do I Call You Servants; for the Servant Knoweth
Not What His Lord Doeth: But I Have Called You Friends; for All Things That I
Heard From My Father, I Have Made Known Unto You—John 15:15
THE
highest proof of true friendship, and one great source of its blessedness, is
the intimacy that holds nothing back, and admits the friend to share our inmost
secrets. It is a blessed thing to be Christ's servant; His redeemed ones
delight to call themselves His slaves. Christ had often spoken of the disciples
as His servants. In His great love our Lord now says: "No longer do I call
you servants"; with the coming of the Holy Spirit a new era was to be
inaugurated. "The servant knoweth not what his Lord doeth"—he has to
obey without being consulted or admitted into the secret of all his master's
plans. "But, I have called you friends, for all things I heard from my Father
I have made known unto you." Christ's friends share with Him in all the
secrets the Father has entrusted to Him.
Let us think what this means. When
Christ spoke of keeping His Father's commandments, He did not mean merely what
was written in Holy Scripture, but those special commandments which were
communicated to Him day by day, and from hour to hour. It was of these He said:
"The Father loveth the Son, and showeth him all things that he doeth, and
he will show him greater things." All that Christ did was God's working.
God showed it to Christ, so that He carried out the Father's will and purpose,
not, as man often does, blindly and unintelligently, but with full
understanding and approval. As one who stood in God's counsel, He knew God's
plan.
And this now is the blessedness of
being Christ's friends, that we do not, as servants, do His will without much
spiritual insight into its meaning and aim, but are admitted, as an inner
circle, into some knowledge of God's more secret thoughts. From the Day of
Pentecost on, by the Holy Spirit, Christ was to lead His disciples into the
spiritual apprehension of the mysteries of the kingdom, of which He had
hitherto spoken only by parables.
Friendship delights in fellowship.
Friends hold council. Friends dare trust to each other what they would not for
anything have others know. What is it that gives a Christian access to this
holy intimacy with Jesus? That gives him the spiritual capacity for receiving
the communications Christ has to make of what the Father has shown Him? "Ye
are my friends if ye do what I command you." It is loving obedience that
purifies the soul. That refers not only to the commandments of the Word, but to
that blessed application of the Word to our daily life, which none but our Lord
Himself can give. But as these are waited for in dependence and humility, and
faithfully obeyed, the soul becomes fitted for ever closer fellowship, and the
daily life may become a continual experience: "I have called you friends;
for all things I have heard from my Father, I have made known unto you."
I have called you friends. What an unspeakable honor! What a heavenly privilege! O
Saviour, speak the word with power into my soul: "I have called you My
friend, whom I love, whom I trust, to whom I make known all that passes between
my Father and Me."
The True
Vine. Andrew Murray
Dear Annie,
ReplyDeleteI feel so blessed that Jesus overlooks my shortcomings and considers me His friend. I also appreciate that He's put special blogging friends in my life, as well. Debbie Seiling
http://bible-passages.blogspot.com and http://christian-overeaters.blogspot.com