When you think about Jesus and his relationships, I think there's a couple of really powerful lessons. One is that he took these 12 guys, and he did life with them. But they did it together. They moved through life together in a really powerful way. And we need people to do life with. We need people to tell us, "Hey, you're kidding yourself." We need people to tell us, "Hey, you're not seeing this as it really is." We need people to say, "You're being too hard on yourself." We need people to say, "You're being too easy on yourself." We need people to say, "You're procrastinating." We need people to challenge us and to comfort us. We need people to do life with. God loves people. God loves relationships. God loves community, and God wants us to move through life in community. He wants us to have a group of people around us that we can do life with. Very often I think modern culture's very anonymous. You can move through life quite anonymously in the modern culture. But God doesn't want that to be the case. He wants us to know and be known. The other lesson that we learned from Jesus and his radical relationships is that Jesus was constantly, not occasionally but constantly, taking people on the very fringes of society and placing them right at the center of the gospel narrative. When I think about the people on the fringes of society, they don't cross my path that often, right? They probably don't cross your path that often. In most cases we have to go looking for these people. Jesus was on the lookout. He was constantly taking these people on the fringes of society, placing them right at the center of the gospel, making them the most important people in the gospel stories. And he invites us to do the same thing. He invites us to go to the fringes of society, go to the margins of life, and place these people in our narrative.