Tag: Sheridan Voysey

  • Friendship Fridays: Sheridan Voysey on why friendship matters

    Hearing that my friend Sheridan Voysey would introduce my new book Transforming Love: How Friendship with Jesus Changes Us thrilled me. Sheridan heads up the new Friendship Lab and is doing important work to further not only the understanding about the importance of friendship but to help people to deepen these important relationships in their lives. I’m so enjoying the pilot course he’s running. Enjoy his foreword to my book:

    As survey after survey and headline after headline remind us, the recovery of deep friendship is the great need of the hour. Our countries, communities and even some of our churches are getting lonelier by the year as we live, work and worship alone, surrounded by many but connected meaningfully to few.

    I have long had a hunch that the stories of Mary, Martha and Lazarus in the Gospels hold clues to remedy our situation. The three siblings seem to have found a special place in Jesus’s heart. We find them offering Jesus hospitality in their home, eating and resting together. We’re told repeatedly that Jesus ‘loves’ this trio, a term of affection used of no one else but the apostle John (who uses it of himself, and only once). The bond they forge is so close that when Lazarus falls ill the sisters don’t have to mention his name, saying only, ‘Lord, the one you love is ill’ (John 11:3). And yet none of the three is part of Jesus’s inner twelve, or his larger group of seventy-two disciples. Mary, Martha and Lazarus aren’t Jesus’s ministry colleagues – they’re his friends.

    We can go further. At the friendship project I lead, Friendship Lab, we describe a friend as someone we can talk to, depend on, grow with and enjoy, and each of these elements is present in the siblings’ relationship with Jesus. Look at how intimate their conversations get, with Martha free to express her frustrations and Mary free to express her disappointment, even in him. See how they can depend on Jesus to help their sick brother, even when it puts his own life at risk. Read how Mary and Martha grow in faith, getting opportunities to learn and serve typically reserved for men in their time, and how Lazarus (literally) steps into a new season of life. Watch how they enjoy each other at celebratory dinner parties. This kind of affection, connection and support is what our lonely age longs for.

    And so I’m thrilled to introduce Transforming Love by my friend Amy Boucher Pye. With imaginative exploration of these biblical stories and sensitivity to overlooked cultural details, Amy teases out this unique relationship and the transformative effect it has on Mary, Martha and Lazarus. Because at its best friendship is transformative, shaping our characters and destinies like few other forces can, and what’s true of natural friendship is multiplied hundredfold when Jesus is involved. As Amy takes us into the three key encounters the siblings have with him, ushering us into the story as if it were we instead of they who are sitting at Jesus’s feet, being comforted in our loss, or feeling our cold bodies return to life, we come to claim our status as Jesus’s friends too, and the transformation they receive becomes our own. Combined with Amy’s guiding prayers and creative spiritual practices, the result is a rich, graceful exploration of how Jesus befriends and changes us.

    Like other aspects of life, friendship flourishes when we have healthy models to emulate. Well, here’s the model. As a mountain-top waterfall nourishes the valley below it, Jesus is the source of deep friendship, our vertical relationship with him flowing to the horizontal relationships around us. Let’s cup our hands, drink deeply and let this friendship with God transform us into the finest of friends to others.

    Read more in Transforming Love. Find it – including a free copy of the introduction and first chapter – here.

  • Home – Belonging and Becoming by Sheridan Voysey

    No Place Like HomeI’m delighted to welcome Sheridan Voysey to the blog today, sharing some thoughts on home that he originally gave on BBC Radio 2’s Pause for Thought. Sheridan is a wonderful writer and speaker, whom I’ve been delighted to come to know along with his wife Merryn since they moved to the UK from their native Australia. He invites you to ask yourself, “Where is ‘home’ for you—that place where you feel you most belong? Is it the house where you grew up? Your current home? Is it just being with your loved ones, wherever you are, or is it something else entirely?”

    When I visited my hometown of Brisbane, Australia, I had an eerie experience. One night I drove to Kangaroo Point—a cliff top that provides a stunning view of the city—and as I sat there watching the cars rush by on Riverside Drive and the city’s lights shimmer on the Brisbane River, I realised I could see the spots where some of my significant life events took place.

    In front of me was the bustling city, where I’d come as a teenager to buy records and feel grown up. To my right was the Story Bridge, which my dad had driven me across each day to my very first job. To the left was Southbank, the park where Merryn and I had our first date. The first flat I rented was up the river and to the left—it was a converted storeroom with a cockroach problem, but I felt so free and independent living there. And to the right of that was the first radio station I worked at.

    As I sat reliving these memories I was struck by something: even with all these experiences, Brisbane didn’t feel like ‘home’ for me. And it never had.

    sheridan and merrynThe theme of finding home is a significant one as in some ways I’ve been searching for home for some time. It wasn’t until Merryn and I moved to Sydney that I truly felt at home. In Sydney long-held dreams came true, the beauty of Sydney Harbour captured my soul, I was doing work that mattered, and its cosmopolitan feel meant I didn’t have to like football and beer to fit in! I could be myself in Sydney.

    Home is a place of belonging. It’s where you can be yourself and be loved for it. In this sense friends and family are ‘home’ for me, particularly Merryn. Her acceptance means home is wherever we are together. And God is ‘home’ for me. I can feel a sense of home praying in a hotel far away because wherever he is, home is.

    But home is also a place of becoming. It’s a place that challenges us to grow and share our God-given gifts with the world. This is what Sydney gave me that Brisbane didn’t. This is what Oxford gives me now.

    So this is what I’ve learnt along my search: Home is a place of belonging and becoming—where you can be who you truly are, and become who you’re truly meant to be.

    Where do you find home?

    Sheridan Voysey 2015 6 (Blake Wisz)Sheridan Voysey is a writer, speaker, and broadcaster on faith and spirituality. His books include Resilient: Your Invitation to a Jesus-Shaped LifeResurrection Year: Turning Broken Dreams into New Beginnings (shortlisted for the 2014 ECPA Christian Book of the Year) and Unseen Footprints: Encountering the Divine Along the Journey of Life (2006 Australian Christian Book of the Year). He has been featured in numerous TV and radio programs, is a regular contributor to faith programs on BBC Radio 2, and speaks at conferences and events around the world. Sheridan is married to Merryn, and resides in Oxford, United Kingdom.