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Whatsa国际传媒檚 COVID-19 doing to friendships?

Life and Faith column by Jim Taylor
22367217_web1_Lonely-Senior

sa国际传媒淐onfession is good for the soul,sa国际传媒 asserted King David in a psalm some 3,000 years ago.

If hesa国际传媒檚 right, I should confess that I am not good at maintaining friendships.

About 700 years after David, Greek philosopher Aristotle defined three kinds of friendships:

sa国际传媒 friendships of utility: the people yousa国际传媒檙e thrown together with

sa国际传媒 friendships of pleasure: the people you do fun things with

sa国际传媒 friendships of the good: the people you feel a life bond with

sa国际传媒淚n a friendship of the good, you value who that friend actually is, strengths and weaknesses alike, and there is sufficient trust between the two that the relationshipsa国际传媒檚 quality and depth outshine those of other types of friendship,sa国际传媒 explained Suzanne Degges-White, PhD, in Psychology Today.

Other authors describe sa国际传媒渇riendship of the goodsa国际传媒 as a soul-to-soul relationship.

It does not depend on necessity, regular contact, or shared enthusiasms. Because all of those can change. And do.

You change jobs, or change neighbourhoods, and the old ties no longer bind. You meet; yousa国际传媒檙e glad to make contact again.

But your paths have diverged. Itsa国际传媒檚 just not the same anymore.

They were friendships of utility, to use Aristotlesa国际传媒檚 classification.

Of all the people I have worked with over 60 years, very few friendships have continued.

And, I say regretfully, keeping in touch happened more often at the other personsa国际传媒檚 initiative than mine.

Aristotlesa国际传媒檚 second category, friendships of pleasure, tended to involve sports or community activities. Especially church.

Events kept us together: weekly games or activities, monthly committee meetings, periodic work parties.

Scouts, every Tuesday evening. Choir, every Thursday. Skiing every winter, or hiking every summer. You get close to these friends. You feel yousa国际传媒檒l be friends for life.

And then your marriage breaks, your partner dies, your kids move away. Or, in our current context, Covid restrictions make it impossible to do things you used to do together.

People retreat into their personal bubbles.

If and when Covid isolation ends, will friendships pick up where they left off? How many friendships will prove to have shallow roots?

In the Bible, I find only two instances of hell-or-high-water friendships.

David and Jonathan were more than buddies. Jonathan risked the royal wrath of his father King Saul by befriending David.

Ruth and Naomi seem also to have been more than mother and daughter-in-law.

Ruth could have abandoned Naomi and returned to her own people.

But the two stuck together, and eventually Ruth became Davidsa国际传媒檚 great-grandmother.

The other instances commonly cited arensa国际传媒檛 as clearly sa国际传媒渇riendships of the good.sa国际传媒

Elijah and Elisha were mentor and pupil. Moses and Aaron, Mary and Elizabeth, Abraham and Lot all had family ties.

Paul may have built friendships with his missionary companions Barnabas, Timothy, and Mark.

But he also quarrelled and split angrily with them.

Long after Aristotle, another philosopher, a Scot named John Macmurray, called friendship the sa国际传媒渒ingdom of Godsa国际传媒 experience that Jesus talked about sa国际传媒 something we already have, but that can occur unexpectedly.

The only human context that fits that description, Macmurray suggested, was friendship.

If Macmurraysa国际传媒檚 right, our protective bubbles may limit our opportunities to experience that sa国际传媒渒ingdom of God.sa国际传媒

Is there a friendship you could strengthen by reaching beyond your bubble?

Jim Taylor lives in Lake Country.

rewrite@shaw.ca



About the Author: Black Press Media Staff

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