James
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Why Me?:
James 1:1-18
Hearing God:
James 1:19-27
Favortism:
James 2:1-13
A Faith that
Works: James 2:14-26
The Power of
the Tongue: James 3:1-12
Wisdom James:
3:13-18
Loosening Your
Grip:
James 4:1-17
The Money Curse:
James 5:1-6
Patience:
James 5:7-12 NASB
The Church At
Its Best: James 5:13-20
Sample Sermon
Why Me?
James 1:1-18
James opens his epistle by reaching through the pages of the sacred
text and slapping his reader's faces. It is not a slap that you should
take as an insult or interpret as an act of aggression. Instead it is one
that you would more than likely say, "Thank you, I needed that" the moment
the sting begins to fade. It is a slap intended to wake the reader up and
provide a fresh perspective.
There is no coddling here, no niceties, just good ole, old-fashioned
straight talk. In the opening verses of chapter 1, James is a spiritual
chiropractor, giving his readers an "attitude adjustment." He begins by
adjusting our attitude about trials.
Look at James 1:2-4: "Consider it all joy, my brethren, when you encounter
various trials, [3] knowing that the testing of your faith produces endurance.
[4] And let endurance have its perfect result, that you may be perfect
and complete, lacking in nothing."
Consider it all joy? You may be thinking, "Give me a break. Does James
really think trials are joyful?" Yes, that is exactly what he wrote. Now
he didn't say, "Consider yourself lucky, or hey, don't trials make you
happy?" He wrote, "Consider it all joy." There is a difference. Joy is
a calmness that runs beneath life's storms, it is a delight that stills
the heart and anchors the soul.
Why can you have "calm delight" when trials come? Because in those trials,
God is making you into his masterpiece.
Have you ever had your dreams shattered? Have you wondered where God
was when life became too much to bear? Have you ever thought that if you
had more in life you would get more out of life?
In his book, Shattered Dreams, Larry Crabb wrote: "Satan's masterpiece
is not the prostitute or the skid-row bum. It is the self-sufficient person
who has made life comfortable, who is adjusting well to the world and truly
likes living here, a person who dreams of no better place to live, who
longs only to be a little better--and a little better off--than he already
is."
If Satan's masterpiece is a self-sufficient person, then God's masterpiece
is a "God-dependant person." When it comes to spiritual things, we are
all bankrupt before the Father. People who have true joy are God-dependant,
not self-sufficient. They yearn for a better relationship with Him through
difficult times and find their joy in that relationship, not the fulfillment
of their dreams.
Please notice that verse two doesn't say, "if you encounter various
trials," it says, "when!" No one is immune from hardships. Not even you.
Not even me.
James teaches us to have "calm delight" when we encounter trials. Now
that's a fresh perspective. Instead of mumbling about our trials, we enjoy
a calm delight, even in the face of hardship. But James isn't finished
with us yet. In verses 5-8 he admonishes his readers to be single minded,
not double-minded-he calls on us to have a wise perspective.
James 1:5-8 "But if any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who
gives to all men generously and without reproach, and it will be given
to him. [6] But let him ask in faith without any doubting, for the one
who doubts is like the surf of the sea driven and tossed by the wind. [7]
For let not that man expect that he will receive anything from the Lord,
[8] being a double-minded man, unstable in all his ways."
If people easily confuse happiness and joy, they also easily miss the
distinction between wisdom and knowledge. We live in an information age.
With the click of a mouse key and a good search engine, I can get information
in just about any field. But there is a huge difference between having
access to information and living wisely.
Solomon's name is synonymous with wisdom. Where did he get his "discerning
heart?"
1 Kings 4:29 answers that question. "God gave Solomon wisdom and very
great insight, and a breadth of understanding as measureless as the sand
on the seashore." Why did God give him wisdom? Because he asked for it.
(I Kings 3:9)
James explains that to receive wisdom, the petitioner must ask in faith,
and be single-minded, not the kind of person that is controlled by doubts.
What kind of faith do you have? A firm faith, or a wind-tossed faith?
Verses 9-11 provide another fresh perspective, this time, James asks
his readers to view their life from an eternal perspective, instead of
a temporal one.
"But let the brother of humble circumstances glory in his high position;
[10] and let the rich man glory in his humiliation, because like flowering
grass he will pass away. [11] For the sun rises with a scorching wind,
and withers the grass; and its flower falls off, and the beauty of its
appearance is destroyed; so too the rich man in the midst of his pursuits
will fade away." (James 1:9-11)
Time has a way of changing our perspective. In the early 1940's Ruth
Gruber was working, on behalf of the government, to promote the Alaskan
territory to homesteaders. She traveled by truck, dogsled, and when she
was lucky, by plane.
In 1942, she was about to board a plane headed for Nome, when she received
a message from the Secretary of the Interior. This was before the day of
satellite pagers-it wasn't an instant message-the telegraph operator had
to decode it for her. The bush pilot became impatient and told her he couldn't
wait any longer, the plane would have to leave without her.
Gruber was in a bind, she couldn't walk away from a message from the
Secretary of the Interior, she had to wait. I'm sure she wasn't happy to
miss her flight and to have to arrange other transportation to Nome. The
impatient pilot couldn't wait just a few more minutes, which ended up saving
her life. Soon after taking off, the plane crashed into a mountain, killing
everyone on board.
For a while, Gruber was wishing the operator would hurry up. Later,
she was glad he didn't.
If time can change our perspective like that, what does eternity do?
Wealth, status, position-they all become unimportant when viewed through
the perspective of eternity.
So we don't confuse trials with temptations, James clarifies the source
of both in verses 12-18:
"Blessed is a man who perseveres under trial; for once he has been approved,
he will receive the crown of life, which the Lord has promised to those
who love Him. [13] Let no one say when he is tempted, "I am being tempted
by God"; for God cannot be tempted by evil, and He Himself does not tempt
anyone. [14] But each one is tempted when he is carried away and enticed
by his own lust. [15] Then when lust has conceived, it gives birth to sin;
and when sin is accomplished, it brings forth death. [16] Do not be deceived,
my beloved brethren. [17] Every good thing bestowed and every perfect gift
is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is
no variation, or shifting shadow. [18] In the exercise of His will He brought
us forth by the word of truth, so that we might be, as it were, the first
fruits among His creatures." (James 1:12-18 NASB)
Temptations-enticements to do evil-are from Satan. Trials, that result
in the crown of life, and every good and perfect thing, comes from God.
Something Bob Sorge is learning.
When doctors removed the ulcer next to Bob Sorge's vocal chord they
permanently damaged his throat, leaving him with a remnant of a voice that
hurts if he tries to "whisper" more than an hour a day.
A terrible tragedy for anyone, but the suffering was multiplied for
Sorge. Rev. Bob Sorge, that is. How can a preacher preach without a voice?
For the years that followed, Sorge learned first hand about suffering.
Sorge said: "A lot of Christians will say, 'Don't ask why.' I am not
in that camp. I am strong in asking why. Jesus asked why. King David asked
why. The psalmists asked why. The Bible is full of people who had questions."
Really, "Why?" is a statement of faith not an expression of doubt. It
presupposes that God exists, and that He loves us and is in control of
our destiny.
"God is to be wrestled with." Sorge continues. "He has unfolded purpose
to me. He's transformed the way I think, feel, everything about me. The
crucible of suffering causes you to be desperate for God and to press into
Him."
Why Me? Because in trials, God makes us desperate for Him, and we learn
to press into Him and find "calm delight" in His bosom.
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