Monday, March 16, 2026

Friendship Isn’t a Mission Field

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When people talk about “friendship evangelism,” it often feels like they mean one-way outreach—befriending someone mainly to share your faith. Don’t get me wrong: I’m 100% for sharing the Gospel and supporting others in their spiritual journey. But friendship should never end at the point of conversion or become a mere tactic. If your friendship exists only as a stepping stone for evangelism, it’s not a real friendship.

Friendship is meant to be mutual. It’s about learning, growing, and seeing the world through someone else’s eyes. And this is where many of us fall short. We rarely emphasize the value of cultivating relationships with people who don’t share our beliefs—not just for the sake of outreach, but for our own growth and for the sheer joy of friendship.

There’s immense benefit in having friends outside church: gaining new perspectives, understanding priorities different from our own, and challenging our assumptions. It helps us become less insular, more empathetic, and more aware of the broader world God has placed us in.

We should aim to have as many, if not more, friends outside the church than inside. True friendship doesn’t stop at shared beliefs; it thrives on curiosity, respect, and genuine care. Let’s stop thinking of friendships as a strategy and start embracing them as a way to truly live in God’s world—learning, growing, and connecting with everyone around us.

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