ARAMAIC WORD STUDY – FRIEND – RACHAM – רחם   Resh Cheth Mem

James 2:23:  “And the scripture was fulfilled which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness: and he was called the Friend of God.”

So Abraham was just a friend of God, that is all just a friend?  In modern Western 21st Century to be a called a friend doesn’t carry that much weight. I mean politicians have friends because they contribute to their campaign.  Entertainers have friends because they help their career.  Kids and teenagers have friends who may not be friends this week but not next semester in school.   Of course, if you have a presence on Facebook and Twitter you have friends coming out of your ears.  People you don’t even know or ever met become your friends. We’ve worn out the word friend in our culture and it can mean different things to different people. 

We hear that Abraham was friends with God.  Big deal.  Yet, the Bible really seems to suggest it is something very special to be friends with God.  The word in Greek for friend is philo which is a word for love but not the greatest love.  I would think something better of Abraham.

Ok, if you have read my blog for the past year, you know what’s coming. The Aramaic uses the word racham. Remember that word?   Do I have to go through the background of this word?  Briefly, it is a word for love but a love that is beyond love.  The love a mother has for a child in the womb and when it first leaves the womb, before the child has had a chance to challenge the mother, rebel, break her heart. The mother still loves that child with chav a love that is unconditional, but falls short of racham.

So Abraham was more than just a friend, he was someone that God loved with a pure love, a love that is perfect as if it has never been offended.  How did he arrive at this status?  He simply believed God.  That is all you have to do is to believe God and you have that perfect love from God, a love that is as if you have never sinned.

God is ready to love you with that perfect love, but you cannot receive that perfect love until you believe He loves you that deeply with racham, that perfect love. Racham is that love that can only exist when it is accepted, you know like accepting Jesus as your personal Savior.  When you accept Jesus as your personal Savior you are really saying: “Yes, I am going to believe that you loved me with that perfect racham love such that you died in my place for my sins. Until you acknowledge that love and believe that it is real, like Abraham did, God’s love for you can only remain in the chav state, unconditional, but still blocked by sin that can only be removed by believing. 

Years ago, I was at a very low point in my life. I had left teaching, I was financially broke, lost my home the whole 9 yards. My brother and sister in law told me they had many friends who would love to take a Hebrew class. So, we set it up, over fifty people showed up for that first class. There were all these friends of my brother and sister in law, all these friends who had friends and I felt so alone and friendless.

I remember after the class sitting in my car after everyone went home.  It was very quiet, a stillness and quiet you feel after a party when everyone has left. I sat alone in my car and I wept before God.  “Why, Lord, why do all these people have friends and I don’t? What have I done wrong, why can’t I have friends.” A side note here,  I have Asperger’s Syndrome and I could not just walk up to people and make friends.  I hated that old advice that I am sick of hearing: “Well, you have to be friendly to have friends.”  “You have to up and make friends to have friends.”  God did not wire my brain that way, I could not do that. People have to make the first move toward me and for whatever reason, the don’t so I don’t make friends. 

I just  sat there in my misery complaining to God, I had no friends, no one ever sought me out to be my friend, when all of a sudden I heard an actual, audible voice. It scared me. I was so embarrassed that someone found me crying, yet there was no one around or nearby. It was a soft, tender gentle voice, almost like a dove cooing.  I knew it was God.  I heard that voice only one other time in my life and I knew it was God. What God said was: “Do you want to be friends?”  He was reaching out to me when no one else would. Yet, He was the one I was being the unfriendliest with.   I almost shouted ‘Yes,” and suddenly I felt and understood racham, what Abraham must have felt, what the disciple whom Jesus racham felt.  I can’t explain it.  I am writing a book on racham but I fear even the book will fall short of explaining racham.  Well, we shall see.

Like that old hymn In The Garden, “The joy we shared as we tarried there, none other has ever known.”  That is what it feels like, it feels like something that no one else in this world could feel or experience.

Do you want to be friends with God, to feel His racham?  You just have to believe in it.  For you see it takes two to create racham.

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