Sometimes I joke that friends are just enemies I haven’t alienated yet, but most often, the sliding scale of friendship runs the other direction for me: people I may initially dislike grow on me as I get to know them better; as I learn their story and get to know their hearts.
A couple of years ago when I first joined the church I’m at now, I started looking for a midweek bible study to get involved in. I emailed the leaders of a few groups in my area, and I ended up hitting it off with one guy in particular – Donny.
I’d never met Donny in person, but even over email, our chemistry was obvious. I could see from his gmail photo that he was an attractive man, and we also quickly discovered that we shared ties to the United States Military Academy.
“Hi Donny – I am interested in joining your group, as the time and location are a good fit for me. Is there any additional information you need? What are our next steps? Thanks, Aurora”
“Hi Aurora – Generally we subject all potential new joins to an in depth personality screen, followed by a battery of intelligence and psychological assessments. If those come back satisfactory then we conduct the physical fitness test and group interviews. Just kidding, of course! There is nothing more for you to do other than show up. We would absolutely love to have you! – Donny”
“Hi Donny – I’m an INTJ with a 16:00 two mile time who graduated magna cum laude. Let me know by when you need my congressional nomination. 🙂 Thanks for making me smile. I can already tell we’re going to get along great. Looking forward to meeting you!”
“We’ll need a letter signed by a Senator, actually. And your vertical is?”
The emails continued all week long, increasing in their ridiculousness, so I was shocked when I showed up to bible study and was introduced to Donny’s wife. Naturally, I immediately disliked her. Cristin was beautiful and petite, with intelligent eyes and long, curly blonde hair. I estimated that she was in her mid thirties, and her face was just starting to show the worry lines that came from being the mother of their four children.
Just the frustration of being around lovely, wifely, maternal Cristin would have been enough to deter me from joining their group, but in addition, it ended up being a bible study of 15 married couples (plus me in all my singleness), so I didn’t visit their group again. But our church is a close-knit community, so my path continued to cross with Donny and – more often – Cristin.
Over the past two years, their children have grown old enough to be in the kids’ ministry where I volunteer at church, so I now have the blessing of getting to teach and play with their two beautiful blonde daughters a couple of Sundays each month. And those two sweethearts are some of my absolute favorite girls to teach.
Ally and Avery are kind and thoughtful, intelligent and attentive. They are obedient and respectful, as well as snuggly and affectionate. I have fallen in love with Donny and Cristin’s children, and over the years, I have gotten to know Cristin more and more from passing one another in the hallway, chatting when she comes to pick up the girls, or volunteering at one church event or another. She shared godly wisdom with me over brunch one morning last summer when I was struggling with dating relationships, and in the past few months, she has shared with me about her own struggle with an eating disorder and how it has been affecting her marriage to Donny.
Getting to know Cristin – her heart, her life, her struggles, her children – has changed the way I see her. I care for Cristin, and I care for Donny, too, but now I see him exclusively as Cristin’s husband and my brother in Christ.
Just two days ago, little Avery crawled into my lap to snuggle with me while we talked about the Feast of Trumpets, and as I stroked her soft blonde hair held back by a glittery silver headband, my heart felt full. I kissed the top of her head and felt like a part of their family. In a way, I am. Raising godly children is a community effort. I offered this week to start babysitting for the girls, and my eyes flooded with happy tears as they jumped up and down with excitement, running to wrap their arms around me in enthusiastic hugs.
Two years ago, I never would have dreamed how our relationship would change – my relationship to Donny and, more significantly, my relationship to Cristin. Humanizing people – taking time to get to know them – has a way of peeling back the layers, mitigating assumptions and enabling us to really see people through the eyes of Christ. What Satan intended for evil, God has once again used for good. He truly is the Redeemer of all things.
Authentically Aurora
“Humanizing people – taking time to get to know them – has a way of peeling back the layers, mitigating assumptions and enabling us to really see people….”
Good philosophy – possibly you could apply it to people of other faiths, or no faith, as well.
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Thanks! I do apply it to everyone, regardless of their faith. That’s part of what makes me love people and desire their good.
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A tolerant, open-minded Christian – that’s as rare as a pink elephant!

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It’s funny because I never thought I would become friends with one of my “enemies”. I had this missionary in our mission that grated on my nerves and was the leader of our area. We clashed on all kinds of things and he eventually got transferred. I was pretty stoked about it. Then, I got transferred and guess who I got to be companions with! I was just cringing inside, but when we became companions, we talked about what made us mad about each other and we came to the realization that we were both just mistaken about the personality clashes we had. He became one of my better friends from the whole experience.
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I entered High School with a mission – I chose one kid who clearly didn’t like me, and made it my objective during that year to change his mind. I did that four years in a row, and wound up with quite an eclectic group of friends.
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Nice! Sounds like you learned how to win friends and influence people early on.
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What a great story. Some of the best love stories are those where the protagonists start out hating each other due to a misunderstanding; then grow to love one another as they experience life together and work through their differences. I submit that the same is often true of friendships!
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Yep, most of the rom coms start out that way don’t they? I guess we should start out all relationships that way huh?
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Definitely. Any excuse to spread the bitterness! 😉
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You know, just in case you need a story on how you met, it can become a potential Hollywood blockbuster video.
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This made me think of one of my own experiences. While attending college, I met a girl who was very hard to get along with. Towards the end of the first year, she revealed a small portion of what she had been struggling with for years. I empathized with her situation and it was suddenly clear that the harsh exterior she projected was a defence mechanism to keep herself from getting hurt again. Knowing what she was dealing with gave me more patience and determination to get to know her better. We became pretty good friends by the end of the second year. Thank you for bringing that memory back to mind 🙂
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That’s great! What a neat story. I love that you took the time to get to know her and understand where she was coming from!
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Indeed, he is the redeemer ❤️
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