The Companion of Fools
Tim Challies
The Bible tells us repeatedly that we will eventually and inevitably
begin to resemble the people we spend time with. If we walk with the
wise we will become wise, but the companion of fools will suffer harm (Proverbs 13:20).
Much of the book of Proverbs deals with this very theme, warning the
young and foolish to avoid similarly foolish companions. Such proverbs
cannot always be taken too woodenly or literally, yet they do point us
to an important truth. If you spend time with a person you will begin
to resemble that person. Perhaps you will not resemble the person in
appearance (unless you are a teenager) but at least in spirit, in
thought, in attitude, you will. Experience shows me that this is true.
This is one of the great blessings of the local church, that in the
church the foolish are able to spend time with the wise, learning how
to be like them.
Again we know this is true with teenagers, isn't it? Many boys will
drift toward older, cooler, more popular teens. They will do what they
do, play what they play, wear what they wear, speak the words they
speak, watch what they watch. In each of these things they give
testimony that they want to be like the older boys. Maybe it is not too
much to say that they want to be these older boys. Girls are
no different. They find heroes and model themselves in that image. With
each moment they spend with their heroes they learn to be more like
them.
As adults we have probably learned to be a little bit more subtle.
We have learned not to be quite so shameless. But still we gravitate
toward the people we want to resemble. A man who wants to be rich and
powerful will find any excuse to hobnob with powerful men. He will live
where they live, drive what they drive. And as he spends time with such
people, he will develop their thoughts and will look at the world in
the same way they do. A woman who craves popularity will spend time
around the women she deems most popular and, in so doing, she will
begin to emulate them, hoping that she can capture the same formula
that made them so popular.
It is easy to see this as a curse, to focus much on the fool and his
folly. And while certainly it is true that the person who spends time
with a fool will begin to be a fool himself, the opposite is also true.
That we begin to look like the people we spend time with can be a great
means of God's grace. Have you ever considered that the people you
spend time with are a reflection of the person you want to be?
I thought about this topic and wrote this far and then began to
think about the people I love to spend time with and the blessing they
are to me. Would this not prove a reflection of who I want to be? And
from there I thought of the people I have spent time with in recent
weeks and the character qualities, the fruits of the Spirit I would
love to see in my life. It just so happens that I've been able to spend
quite a bit of time with the men in my local church who have been set
apart to serve as elders and pastors.
There is Murray whose love for people and whose genuine interest in
them is unsurpassed. I am a person who is naturally shy and I can allow
shyness to be an excuse to permit me to be reclusive. Murray's love for
people stands as both a challenge and an inspiration. And I mean that;
he truly inspires me to grow in my love for others, to extend
hospitality, to be a genuinely caring Christian. I love to spend time
with Murray because I want to be like Murray.
There is Tom whose patient kindness resonates in my soul. I cannot
think of anyone who has so powerful a combination of gentleness of
spirit and firmness in the faith. Always ready with a word of
encouragement, always eager to steer a conversation to spiritual
matters, Tom serves relentlessly with kindness, with patience and with
boldness. I want to be like Tom.
There is Julian who, though young the youngest of the bunch,
exhibits such spiritual maturity. He is proof that though an elder is
not allowed to be a young and immature Christian, a young man can be
mature and be well-qualified to serve God as an undershepherd. In
Julian I see a relentless desire to read Scripture, to study it, to
live it. And through that I see such growth in maturity and godliness.
And there is Paul. From Paul I've learned to love and respect my
wife as I've seen the way he loves and respects his wife. From him I've
learned to refer to Aileen not only as my wife but as my bride. I love
that word; it points to a freshness that looks back to the day that she
was first given to me. And from Paul I've learned about the importance
of, the skill of, applying the gospel to all of life. He loves the
gospel and knows of the importance of living in the joy and freedom of
that good news. And I love to spend time with him because I want to be
like him, to resemble him in these ways and so many others.
In these men God has given me the opportunity to learn how to love,
how to be gently bold, how to grow in maturity, how to treasure my wife
and how to hold fast to the gospel. Each one has blessed me
immeasurably. What a blessing it is that, by spending time with them, I
can eventually be like them. And what a blessing that he who walks with
the wise grows wise.