Q: One of the hardest questions to answer, even among good friends is: What’s next? Why is it important to talk about our dreams not just with our close friends, but with all of our friends?
God made us for a purpose. So much of life begins to feel like we’re just executing day-to-day tasks. When this happens, like feels mundane and purposeless. Talking about our goals and dreams, even just exploring possibilities if we don’t know what our next dream is, is a great way to prevent life from feeling meaningless. Our friends, of a variety of depths, are going to be the people cheering us on as we pursue those dreams.
Q: For each question, you provide five depths a friendship can move toward. Using the question, “What’s next?”, can you walk us through what these five depths would look like?
We want our friendships to grow deeper. Early depths are achievable for casual friendships. Enjoy these early depths. Don’t rush them. But do begin moving some of your friendships to greater depths that can have a more meaningful impact on your life.
· Depth One: The dreams that got you here. We can usually tell our life story through a series of goals.
· Depth Two: The dream you’re working on. If I’m going to come alongside you in a meaningful way, I need to know what you’re working on.
· Depth Three: The dream that is fading. A lot of maturity is letting go of some dreams. We know people who never got over high school or college. We know marriages that failed because they didn’t know what it meant to let young love mature.
· Depth Four: The dream for the next season of life. Because the next season of life is unknown, it is always a mixture of scary and exciting. We should acknowledge that and invite people on that journey.
· Depth Five: The dream you’re afraid to say. Big dreams won’t happen unless they’re spoken. Be more afraid not to try that you are afraid to fail.
Q: You write, “This book is not a recipe for meaningful relationships. Instead, it’s a melody for friendships that can transform your life.” What do you mean by that?
Having seven questions with five levels of depth each can sound mechanical. You don’t build friendships like you stack Legos following the instructions to create what’s on the cover of the box. The seven questions are intended for you to always have something to talk about. The five levels are meant to help you identify what area of a friendship is least developed and allow you to be intentional. If you have that level of awareness, go with where the conversation takes you.
As musically inept as I am, I know a bit about jazz. With jazz, there is no sheet music, no lined chart with notes for each musician to follow. Instead, each musician riffs off the melody and adapts to the other musicians in the band. That’s what makes jazz feel more alive than other styles of music. Even the same song, played by the same musicians, is different each time. Your friendships will flourish the most if you treat these seven questions like the melody for a jazz band rather than the Lego instructions.
Q: In the closing section, you talk about a couple of indicators that show when a friendship is growing imbalanced. What are those indicators and how does your book help us to avoid them? Does every relationship have to be a friendship?
There are two ways friendships should be balanced: knowledge and investment. In a balanced friendship, our awareness of each other’s life is proportional and our investment in the relationship is also proportional. It may not be 50-50, but if it’s 80-20, it’s not a friendship, it is a helping relationship by the wrong name.
There is nothing wrong with helping relationships. I’m a counselor and enjoy being in that role. But I don’t rely on my counselees to be my friends. I know their stories better than they know mine, and I’m supporting them. I respect and admire my counselees. But because the relationship isn’t balanced (and it shouldn’t be), it is not friendship. In church circles, there are often many sweet Christians who get burned out because they are calling imbalanced relationships “friendships.” It is important for people to understand, if a relationship is not reciprocating, it is not a friendship. It may still be worth cultivating, but it needs to be surrounded by reciprocating relationships in order for it to be sustainable for the “responsible friend.”
Q: You also talk about friendships with non-Christians. How does Transformative Friendships help us think through these relationships in a way that creates opportunities to invite our non-Christian friends to consider Christianity?
In many ways, it’s not that different from the rest of the book. But as we engage all of life (the seven questions) at a deeper level, we shouldn’t be able to talk about life at deeper levels without discussing our faith and the implications of the gospel. As we develop a more meaningful relationship with a non-Christian friend, we will gain more of a hearing from them. They will value our words and perspective more. We will be able to speak more specifically into their lives. Learning to be better friends should make us better disciplers with our Christian friends and evangelists with our non-Christian friends.
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