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Home » Blog » friendship

Posts Tagged ‘friendship’

31
Aug 2011
Posted by The Revolve Tour
 

What’s The Point Of Friendship?

The Truth about DatingFriendship is like a different kind of oxygen.  People need friendship just as much as they need to breathe.  We don’t do well alone.  We are built for life with others.  We need to experience life with other people.  We have to have care and affection in our lives.  And that is what friends are for.

We actually need people who are “just friends” as much, and even more, than we need romantic relationships.  Though “just friends” is tough to hear when you’re hoping for much more.  But let’s not let the term “just friends” minimize friendship.  I promise you there is nothing minimal about real friendship.  Everyone needs it.  You need it, and without it, you are incomplete.


Excerpted from The Truth About Dating, Love & Just Being Friends. 2011 by Chad Eastham. Thomas Nelson, Inc. pg. 92. Used with permission. All rights reserved.

Posted in: Guys, Revolve News, Revolve Tweets

19
Oct 2010
Posted by Courtney Clark Cleveland
 

Courtney Clark Cleveland On Being REAL!

Posted in: Friends

08
Oct 2010
Posted by Courtney Clark Cleveland
 

Get Your Umbrella!

HOW’S IT GOING!?!

Seriously, is Revolve almost here because I miss your faces. Real bad.

Okay, so we were in the middle of talking about what it looks like for YOU to be a good friend. This fall I want to suggest four ways that you can do this. If you missed the first one – check it out!!!

So #1: ASK GOOD QUESTIONS.

How’d that go? Did you have a moment where you realized that your friend trusted you with something special?

The thing about asking good questions is that then people might start sharing some really personal things about themselves. When this happens, you have a choice to make – you can hold that information and care for it or you can tell a whole bunch of people about it.

That brings me to my next suggestion.

#2: BE A SAFE PLACE

Sometimes it may seem like everything is all fine and sunny when actually life could be raining really hard on your friend. They may be looking for a break or some relief; you never know. Offer her your umbrella.

The thing about an umbrella is it doesn’t stop the rain or make the clouds disappear, but it does provide a shelter from whatever storm your friend might be in.

Being a safe place means being trustworthy. A place where your friend knows she can be herself and share whatever she is going through without judgment. Sometimes it means just being a good listener. Sometimes it means inviting her over to your house for a chilled out sleep over – you know, a simple pizza and a movie kind of night.

To be a safe place for your friend, all you have to do is ask good questions and listen for their response. You’ll know what to do. Just reach for your umbrella.

Posted in: Friends

23
Sep 2010
Posted by The Revolve Tour
 

Promises

Promises

Some people think that they have to have their lives totally together before they turn to God. They think they need to make themselves worthy of Jesus’ friendship. This is a lie that suits Satan’s purposes pretty well. The problem is that nobody will ever be worthy of what God is offering him or her. That’s a part of God’s truth that’s hard to swallow. And if Satan can keep people believing that they have to somehow earn God’s favor—that it’s even possible—he can keep them from taking the first step toward God’s kingdom.

The truth is that God doesn’t ask anyone to be worthy of him. If you come to him—without excuses, without trying to justify yourself, just putting your complete trust in him (like putting all of your weight in a chair)—then Jesus promises not to turn you away. He accepts you because he loves you, not because you’ve earned his friendship.

The Father gives me the people who are mine. Every one of them will come to me, and I will always accept them. John 6:37 NCV

Excerpted from Revolve: The Complete New Testament. © 2010 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Holy Bible, New Century Version. © 2009 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used with permission. All rights reserved.

Posted in: Faith

24
Aug 2010
Posted by Courtney Clark Cleveland
 

Courtney Clark Cleveland on Friendship

So summer is over. My guess is you are either SUPER EXCITED about starting school or FULL OF DREAD. Lets be honest, there may be few things more exciting than organizing new school supplies in your brand new backpack. But on the other hand there may be few things more dreadful than hanging up your swimsuit and trading your lazy summer morning for a blaring alarm clock.

Either way you’re feeling, one thing is for sure . . .

School IS starting.

So let’s focus on the positive—you get to see all your friends you’ve been missing all summer!!! Or have you not really been missing them? Hmm . . .

Here at Revolve, next to questions about boys, we get tons of questions about friendship. So much so that I thought this fall I would devote my blogging to the subject.

Friendship can be tough, huh? You get annoyed with each other, they hurt your feelings and never return the clothes they borrow. And you always feel misunderstood.

I think the thing about misunderstanding is sometimes we fail to understand where our friends may be coming from. We are always seeking to be understood and never doing the understanding.

But friendship can be so great too! You laugh till you can’t breathe, you have the best heart to hearts and you borrow each others clothes.

We need friends, but more than that we need GOOD friends.

You’ve heard it said, “To have friends, first you have to be a friend.” I’m not sure there is better advice than this.

So how can you be sure YOU are a GOOD friend? I want to suggest 4 ways over the course of this fall that will help you become a better friend, as well as tackle one of your questions about friendship.

This month, lets work on one thing:

#1: ASK GOOD QUESTIONS.

And genuinely want to know the answer.

Most people love talking about themselves. Questions are a great way to get to know people and show them that you care.

When we show people we care about them, they tend to share their stories. And when you know people’s stories you almost always can find a connection. And when a connection is made a friendship is born! Ha! If only it were that easy, huh? Well, at least it’s a start. ;)

A good question I received this week was:

Can I have friends who aren’t Christians?

My answer—you not only can, but WILL you, please! Probably one of the greatest ways we can be a friend to people is to show them the love of Jesus. I think too often we judge people and we think we have them figured out. We don’t take the time to ask them GOOD questions to find out why they might be mean to others, wear those clothes, why they keep to themselves, or party like crazy. I’m not saying you need to spend every second with them (spending every second with any one person is a bad idea) but eating lunch with them at school or a random trip to the mall is always a great way to get to know somebody.

All I’m saying is get to know people. Learn their story.

What are some good questions? I’m so glad you asked. :)

Here are some examples:

  • What do you like to do after school?
  • What is your favorite school subject?
  • If you had to choose between having one best friend and a room full of acquaintances, what would you choose?
  • If you could travel to ANY place in the world, where would it be and why?
  • Tell me about your family—Do you have brothers and sisters? Have you always lived in this town or somewhere else? Have you grown up in the same house?

*Notice all of these require more than a yes or no answer; they all require you to listen.

Try asking some good questions this month and see what happens. Check back in September for my second suggestion on how to have great friendships.

I’m here for YOU always. And as far as your relationship with me goes—ALL questions are good questions.

That’s just how good of friends we are. ;)

Posted in: Friends

06
Jul 2010
Posted by The Revolve Tour
 

When Friendship Hurts

Have you ever been in a friendship that hurt so much it made you want to give up? You’ve tried to be nice, but it seems like your friend is always bringing you down. You’ve done everything you can, but nothing you do seems to change anything or anyone for the better. Sometimes you feel so used up and wrung out that it hurts to smile. You wonder if you should keep putting yourself out there to be a friend. That’s totally understandable. Life is hard, and people will disappoint you! But don’t let this stop you in your tracks.

This is when you ask God to be your partner. When the situation is way too big to handle yourself, and you can’t see a way out, it’s definitely a two-man (okay, a God-and-woman) job. It’s human nature to try to handle it yourself, but some situations are impossible without supernatural help. God will intervene in human business as far as someone invites him to, so start asking.

So when you feel like you’re dangling over the relationship cliff and you’ve made yourself hoarse from screaming in frustration, the story isn’t over yet. Tell God where you hurt. He knows the hurt that this person caused you. Ask him what to do about this painful relationship. He will help you make progress or move on.

Excerpted from Revolve™ 2009, The Complete New Testament. Copyright © 2008 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Published in Nashville, TN, by Thomas Nelson. Used with permission. All rights reserved.

Posted in: Friends

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