Two people using their combined two fingers each to form a heart.

Photo by Jennifer Burk

by Vince Wright | May 1, 2019 | 11:59 am

Israel Houghton started his career in 1997 with the release of his first album Whisper It Loud, credited as Israel & New Breed.  He has released a total of 13 albums, including Real, A Timeless Christmas, and The Power of One.  Many of them live, including Live From Another Level, Alive in South Africa, and A Deeper Level.

Houghton received several awards for his work, including eleven Dove, six grammy’s, and two stellar.

This requested review is for the popular and world-famous song friend of God from Live from Another Level.

Lyrics can be found at https://genius.com/Israel-houghton-friend-of-god-lyrics.

Note to new users: This is a different kind of review site!  Read About the Berean Test and Evaluation Criteria prior to reading this review.

1. What message does the song communicate?

The message is simple: God’s undeserved love is amazing, calling His followers friends.  However, Houghton does not explain why.  Of course, we know the answer from Scripture: it is Christ’s sacrificial love for us that provides rationale for His adoration (Romans 5:6-8).  If we’re going to sing about how great God is, the least we can do is tell Him why.

The message that we’re God’s friend is too simplistic, giving people the wrong impression that we can be God’s friend on His say so without conditions, compounding the issue at the end of Verse 1.  See section 2 for a detailed explanation as to why this is erroneous.

Houghton gives us two attributes of God, namely, that He is Almighty and the Lord of Glory.  He is also correct that God’s love is undeserved.

Score: 5/10

2. How much of the lyrics line up with Scripture?

Some of it agrees with the Bible.  As mentioned in section 1, there is a lack of explanation at the end of Verse 1 as to why God’s love is awesome and unexplained rubric for God calling us friend.

I added the designations “Verse 1” and “Bridge”, to section off stanza’s not specified in the link provided.

[Verse 1]

Line 1: References Psalm 8:4.

Line 2: Same point as line 1 worded differently.

Line 3: Rhetorical question already answered in line 1.

Line 4: Indeed how is God’s love amazing?  Houghton does not answer this question.

[Chorus]

Lines 1-4: Based on John 15:15, Jesus declares His followers as friends.  Houghton forgot to tell us that there are conditions:

  1. We must obey Jesus (John 15:14),
  2. He commands us to love one another (John 15:12), and
  3. He called us to bear fruit (John 15:16).

Without conditions, Houghton leaves his audience with the false impression that we may become buddies with Jesus without cost.  This is contrary to Luke 14:25-33.  Yes, salvation is free to us, but it too had a cost (Romans 5:6-8).  So does following Jesus.  Yes, God wants to become friends with us, but what is friendship without boundaries?

[Bridge]

Line 1: There are 48 references in the Old Testament and 10 in the New Testament that describe God as Almightly.  Psalm 24:7–10 describes God as the King of Glory, a fine substitution for Lord of Glory.

Line 2: Derivative of Chorus, line 1.

Score: 5/10

3. How would an outsider interpret the song?

The main thrust of Houghton’s message is that Jesus calls me friend.  As mentioned in sections 1 and 2, Jesus lays out qualifications for His followers to earn that title, unidentified in this song.  What will those who do not yet follow Jesus make of this?  Most likely, that they too can earn the title “friend” without transformation.

Score: 3/10

4. What does this song glorify?

While Houghton attempts to glorify God, given what I have written earlier, it is difficult to find it.  I’ll give some brownie points for describing His attributes and declaring that His love is unearned.

Score: 5/10

Closing Comments

Israel Houghton’s Friend of God has had a lasting emotional impact on those who hear it.  From a biblical perspective, while it correctly identifies His undeserved favor and names two attributes of God, it also lacks explanatory power in why we’re God’s friend, giving false hope to the unhealthy idea of friendship without rules.  It’s hard to see how God can be glorified in that.

If you want to listen to this pre-knowing the truths that Houghton fails to explain, I have little issue with that particular usage.  It is great to be reminded that believers are His friend, providing emotional benefit.  Yet, it should be avoided at all costs for evangelistic effort.

Final Score: 4.5/10

Artist Info

Track: Friend of God (listen to the song)

Artist: Israel Houghton

Album: Live from Another Level

Genre: Contemporary Christian Music (CCM)

Release Year: 2004

Duration: 6:34

Agree?  Disagree?  Don’t be shy or have a cow!  Calmly and politely state your case in a comment, below.

Updates:

03/24/2021 – Updated per repetition announcement.  I also increased the score for sections 1 and 4, raising the overall rating from 3/10 to 4.5/10.

Comments

Jonathan

Good review!

May 02.2019 | 12:18 pm

    tastywallet

    Jonathan,

    Thanks!

    -TastyWallet

    May 02.2019 | 09:51 pm

thoughtsmeander

Hi! Just spotted typos in the Closing Comments. (“it correctly identifies…” “it lacks explanatory power”)
While I don’t have anything against songs that use a lot of repetition, I do agree with you. The repeated lines could have been used to explain.

May 03.2019 | 11:07 am

    tastywallet

    Thoughts,

    Thanks for your comment and grammar correction! I repaired it.

    -TastyWallet

    May 03.2019 | 11:32 am

Wade Lineberger

I was pleasantly surprised that you panned this song. My spider sense was tingling when this song was introduced to our team a few months ago. I wasnt sure why, but you expressed it very well.

Its catchy. It really pops with all kinds of musical dynamics. But it’s message is sloppy, at best. Bzzzzzt! Let’s sing something else.

Jun 22.2019 | 09:59 pm

    tastywallet

    Wade,

    Thank you for your comment! On a personal note, I remember enjoying this one years ago, but that was a time when I claimed to be a Christian because I believed God existed. How ignorant I was!

    -TastyWallet

    Jun 22.2019 | 10:06 pm

Neal Cruco

Vince,

It is true that this song says nothing about how one becomes a friend of God, and for that reason, it shouldn’t get a good “outsider” rating. But why does that lead you to score it so low throughout? Why do you think that this absence will lead people to believe that they can become a friend of God without transformation? Perhaps it is merely a difference of opinion, but I do not see a logical connection there. It seems to me that this song would leave unbelievers asking “how does someone become a friend of God?” and not “I can become a friend of God without transformation”. That then opens the door for a Christian to explain the Gospel.

Mar 31.2020 | 05:50 pm

    Vince Wright

    Neal,

    Great question! The logic is that people tend to be lazy and take the easy way out. It is easier to say “I am a friend of God” without transformation than to say “I am a friend of God” and do what He says. Especially when there’s little to no challenge to become different.

    I hope that makes sense.

    -Vince Wright

    Apr 01.2020 | 07:14 am

Melvina Haynes

Since believers are singing this song together in church, I see it as an expression of awe at the grace of God. Believers know that we were once enemies of God on the way to hell.

Aug 20.2021 | 12:39 am

David

Along with your excellent comments an additional point might be that if we are going to claim friendship with God we need to also recognize that it’s not a friendship of equals. He is our friend, but he is also our Lord. “Buddy Theology” is not scriptural.

Jul 17.2022 | 05:01 pm

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