Thursday, May 29, 2014

Some James from long ago

Many moons ago I undertook to study and write about James. I started penning a Bible study I hoped to use in teaching my close group of fellow believers. Here's the first section. Any errors in grammar or spelling are attributable to this sitting on the shelf of a computer hard drive for over a decade.


JAMES 1:1-8

TESTED TO PERFECTION

OR

COFFEE BREAK’S OVER, BACK ON YOUR HEADS

 

            After a brief introduction, James gets right into the subject of trials, tests, and temptations.  James writes one of the Christian’s favorite comfort verses right out of the gate in 1:2.  This verse is also one of the most perplexing verses we have today.  “Consider it pure joy my brother when you face trials of many kinds” (Jas 1:2 NIV, emphasis mine).  When I first read this passage as a young Christian, I thought James must be mad.  How can anyone consider trials and tests to be joyful, much less pure joy?  These things aren’t joyful, they’re painful, just ask Job.  I don’t think he really enjoyed scratching his oozing sores with a piece of broken pottery.  When his idiot wife told him to curse God and die, he probably didn’t leap up and down with his fevered body shouting praises.  I have been in tight spots through no ill will of my own (rare though they are) and found no joy in the experience.  Praise God that He inspired James to write down what should be our motivation in trials, and not just a commandment to endure. 

 

Let’s look at the text and answer a few questions that will help us understand exactly what James is saying and what the presence or absence of certain characteristics through trials tell us about our beliefs.  I am using the New English Translation in this study to force us to read anew the things James is writing.  You may use the old familiar NIV or NKJV, but I recommend getting a fresh perspective on the important things said here.

 

1 From James, a slave of God and of Jesus Christ, to the twelve tribes dispersed abroad.  Greetings!

            2 My brothers and sisters, consider it nothing but joy when you fall into all sorts of trials, 3 because you know that the testing of your faith produces endurance.  4 And let endurance have its perfect effect, so that you will be perfect and complete, not deficient in anything.  5 But if anyone is deficient in wisdom, he should ask God, who gives to all generously and without reprimand, and it will be given to him.  6 But he must ask in faith without doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea, blown and tossed around by the wind.  7 For that person must not suppose that he will receive anything from the Lord, 8 since he is a double-minded man, unstable in all his ways. 

(Jas 1:1-8 NET)

 

 

Here are a few questions to help us understand what we should get form this text.

 

1. Who did James write this to?  Why does that make a difference in how we read it?

  

 

 

2.  What is the specific command James gives us?  What specific behaviors obey this command, which ones fly in the face of James and our Lord? (include text references if you have them)
 

 

 

3.  Why does James think we all need a little testing from time to time?  What is the one key thing we all seem to lack?  Why?

 

                       

                        How many of you thought that losing a job through no fault of your own was the result of a need for more wisdom?  We can all name really silly things that have happened in our lives that were placed there by God to bone us up on some “wisdom”.  The key to understanding the trials and tests we go through is to understand who is sovereign and who isn’t.  We often times question the intelligence of the omniscient God of heaven when our lives become a little bit uncomfortable.  Job went on quite the tirade when he was tested.  His friends didn’t help much.  They were constantly accusing Job of sin, beating to death the theory of a cause and effect relationship in our lives.  They were close to the truth, but they never understood that testing and punishment often look the same.  They weren’t let in on the secret that Job was tested for being righteous, not for being sinful.  God disciplines the sinful, but He tests the righteous.  Job’s friends did not know what the cause and what the effect was in Job’s affliction.

            God sees things much deeper than even our Hubble telescope can.  He knows the heart and mind of each man and woman in His creation.  Being a loving father, he wants the best for all of His children.  Just like we human parents do with our children, sometimes God gives us tests to show us our capabilities and our limitations.  When our infant daughters were ready to walk, my wife and I put them to the test.  We helped them upright between us with a few feet of space in between.  With much coaxing and lots of falling, each one eventually made it from one parent to the other.  We did this because we knew they are ready and capable of walking.  They learned this skill because we cared enough to let go.  I don’t remember learning to walk, but I can speculate at what goes through a baby’s mind the first time his “loving” father lets go.

            God places all of us in tests.  He “let’s go” to give us the opportunity to prove to ourselves what we can do.  None of what is accomplished has anything to do with our own great skill, it has to do with whose children we are.  My cat’s children don’t walk upright, but my children do because they aren’t cats, they’re humans.  Children of God live life righteously and skillfully not because they are superior to others but because they are indwelt with the Spirit of the Living God.  God gives us opportunities to live out our faith.  My natural parents were kind enough to put me through the walking test, and I’ve been able to walk with moderate success ever since.  After God gave Job the sovereignty test, Job lived his life in the understanding he gained from a meeting with the Sovereign of the universe.  At the end of specific tests in our lives, we also will discover wonderful things about ourselves and our God.

            Frequently we are lacking at the beginning of trials and tests.  God must do more than just show us what we’re made of.  Tests, then, serve the purpose of equipping us with the wisdom we require.  Wisdom is the ability to live life skillfully (thanks Lynn), and we are often quite short on that skill.  Just as babies lack the skill to walk, we lack the wisdom to live; just as the babies are full of walking potential, we are full of the Spirit of God who gives us unlimited wisdom potential.  In trials and test, we learn to trust God, act on our faith in God, and if necessary, cry out to God for deliverance.  Doing each of those at the appropriate time is wise.  Like the babies of our oft used analogy, we learn when to step out, when to fall, and we learn to always trust our loving parent for safety with either.  We, of course, lag behind babies in the faith department.  They wouldn’t try to walk without faith in us, and we are prone to just stew in our juices during a trial instead of believing God to give us the skill to pass the test.  In the end, we find that the very same test can, and often does, serve the dual purposes of demonstrating who we are and teaching us to rely on God for the rest.  Although we may be amazingly capable as children of God, our skills are still miniscule compared to the Almighty.  In Him we move and breathe and have our being.  We can never believe that too much. 

Finding that razor sharp edge of reality on which we live is not easy, but it is absolutely necessary.  We have to live as who we are (blood bought, new creations of God), die to who we were (vile sinners condemned to an eternity of torment), and stop trying to be what we are not (sovereign deities).  There are two pitfalls we must avoid if we are to endure testing successfully.  The first is forgetting who God is.  The second is forgetting who we are.  If we fall into the first trap, we are likely to see no way out and thus never try.  We judge God by our circumstances instead of vice versa.  We can forget our salvation and believe we are just getting what we deserve.  If the pendulum swings the other way, we can become conceited after a test is concluded.  We somehow believe that by our own majestic power we have accomplished the task.  I hate to burst some people’s bubbles, but pride is the mark of a failed test.  Any man (or woman) who finishes a test proud instead of humbled has utterly failed.  Scripture tells us God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.  The end of a test in life should never be God opposing us.  We have to continually remember why God tests us.  If the end result is not our perfection, the something has gone awry.  If the test ends without the desired outcome, the test is a failure.  Funny thing about a failed test, there always seems to be a re-test, and it is inevitably harder.

If you believe a teacher will help you with an answer to a question on a test, you ask for help and you pass the test.  If you don’t believe the teacher will be of any help, you sit in silence doing nothing productive, or you try on your own and fail anyway.  We behave the same way towards God.  If we actually believe He will give us the wisdom we lack to pass a test and thus move on to something different (like another test), we ask.  The problem we usually run into is that we really don’t believe God will do anything for us, and we don’t bother to ask (see pitfall #1 from before).   God gives us everything we need in times of trials and tests.  He has given us the latent ability through salvation, and He gives us the needed skill through the testing.  We have numerous stories in the Bible and in our own churches to attest to this fact.  God is trustworthy, He is a loving father.  We can trust Him during those times to be our Jehovah Jireh, our provider God.  James tells us to ask, and it will be given to us.  The only stipulation in the asking is that we must ask with faith, or we are to expect nothing from God.  If we ask without faith, we are double minded.  We vacillate between believing God will provide and disbelieving.  In the heat of the moment, we lean on our own understanding instead of on our God.  Our first reaction to testing is fear not faith.  We have to be trained, through the tests and trials in our lives to default to our knowledge of God and our faith in Him instead of the worldly reaction of fear.  This, I believe, is part of the perfection God desires to form in us. 

Our faith does not exist in a vacuum.  God does not require us to have faith founded on fiction.  What we believe about God is based on His character and His impeccable record of being everything He claims to be, without ever changing.  In this text, James proclaims several absolute facts about God on which we can build our trust and our faith.  If we practice living in these principles, even outside of trials, faith can become our default reaction when God chooses to grow us even more towards the perfection He desires for us.  Here is what James assures us about our God:

            1- God is doing a good work in us! 1:3,4

            2- God is generous! 1:5

            3- God will not be harsh during these tests! 1:5

            Here is the point where we must rely on other scripture to fully understand the assertions made in this text.  Paul tells us in Philippians that God, who began a good work in us, will perfect it.  God didn’t save us and forget about us.  No one will arrive in heaven unannounced.  The writer of Hebrews assures us that God is the author and finisher of our faith.  It doesn’t take a genius to look into the Word of God and see that He continues to work in the lives of those He has called.  God’s plan for man includes not just salvation, but also our sanctification, and ultimately our glorification.  Jesus teaches us that the Holy Spirit is given to us to be our guide, our teacher, and our counselor.  All of these occupations involve ongoing interaction with the Godhead, and they all result in our perfection and God’s glory.  In Romans Paul lays out the plan God set for us before the foundations of the world.  At no point in that plan are we ever left idle.  God’s good work in us is constant from the point of salvation until we go home to Him who called us.

            We can see in our Lord’s teaching about the Father that He is indeed generous.  The teaching of Jesus in Mathew 5 resounds with the goodness of God.  From studying Proverbs, Psalms, and the New Testament books, we find that God is generous to all of creation, not just to the saved.  If God causes the rain to fall on the just and the unjust alike, how much more do we find the blessings of God for those who are united with Him through the death of His Son?  The only problem we have with God’s generosity to us is we seldom open our eyes to what He has placed around us.  We seek the miraculous moments to declare His goodness when the greater work of God is the sustenance and provision given every day.  The very breath of life entering our lungs is a boon from the Gifting Giver, yet we seldom take time to acknowledge, much less thank, the Almighty of Heaven who gives to all without finding fault. 

            The final point James makes is hard for many to swallow.  In comparison to the comfort we desire, the testing of God does appear to be very harsh.  My natural inclination is to lay on the couch and watch TV until it’s time to do something less strenuous, like sleep.  When my wife causes me to get up and take out the trash, it seems like a laborious task compared to what I would be doing otherwise.  However, if I really stopped to think about it, I could be left alone to do all the chores of living.  I could do the endless dishes, change a multitude of diapers, vacuum and sweep, and be forced to do all the other things that come with living as a civilized human being.  Compared to the possibility, the reality is quite easy and comfortable.  Being tried and tested by God is much the same.  When my car dies to teach me patience, it’s much better than if my car were to catch fire.  If I deal with joblessness for a season, it’s easier than moving my family into the street and begging for our basic needs.  Compared to all that God could allow to try my faith, the things that come my way aren’t that bad.  They appear horrible from close up, but when some distance from them allows a better view, I see how gentle the Father actually is.

            Although this is not an authoritative treatment of trials and tests in our lives, I hope it is of some use to any who labor through reading it.  Many more clever and insightful things can probably be said about this passage of scripture.  My only hope is that some believers (myself included) will realize that we preach the gospel with our lives whether we intend to or not.  During tests of our faith, it becomes imperative that we preach the truth of the gospel.  

            One final note about how the testing of our faith develops perseverance, not all the tests God allows in our lives are timed events.  Some tests last only a short while, and other tests may last until we are taken home to glory.  There is no “faith equals comfort” formula in this text.  Don’t be led astray by those who would have you believe that faith is the key to comfort on this world.  Faith is the opposite.  Having faith that God raised Jesus Christ from the dead is a guarantee that we will face tests, trials, and even persecution in this world.  This type of life is promised to us by our Lord Himself, but as Paul told us, these temporary discomforts are not even worthy of comparison to the glory we will receive in the end.  Although not specifically in this text, this fact must be recalled from other parts of the Word to avoid heresy.

 

            Now onto the next section, the reality check.  Let’s look at the text and see what James has for us in this one.

 

            9 Now the believer of humble means should take pride in his high position.  10 But the rich person’s pride should be in his humiliation, because he will pass away like a wildflower in the meadow.  11 For the sun rises with its heat and dries up the meadow; the petal of the flower falls off and its beauty is lost forever.  So also the rich person in the midst of his pursuits will wither away.  12 Happy is the one who endures testing, because when he has proven to be genuine, he will receive the crown of life that God promised to those who love him. (Jas 1:9-12 NET)

 

            I had quite a bit of trouble understanding how these words followed what James had just said about being double minded and enduring testing.  I couldn’t really see why he would want to start bringing money into a situation already confused by his unworldly attitude towards trials and test.  Until I grasped this text, I thought I knew what a proper prospective was on the haves and have nots.  As always, God’s inspired Word turned my thoughts upside down.  Common sense became nonsense.

            We should start with a few questions about this passage, then we can move on to taking it apart to get at the meat of the message.

 

1.  If pride is always spoken of so poorly in the Bible, why does James tell poor people to have it?

 

 

2.  What can possibly be the rich man’s humiliation?  Why go to such depths describing the decay of the wealthy?

 

 

3.  How can verse 12 ever tie into the other three verses here?

 

 

            One thought about this text finally brought me to an understanding of how it fits with the verses immediately preceding it.  Life is the test.  After we are given instructions on how to deal with the situational trials, James expands the subject to include every aspect of our lives.  He goes about it differently than I would have, but I’m not the one inspired by the Holy Spirit to pen the very words of God.  That being the case, we’ll have to stick to the way James wrote it if we are to understand what God wants us to understand about dealing with the test of life. 

            I think money and life position are brought into this scenario because they are common denominators between every human being.  All of us fit somewhere in the financial scheme of things.  Since he is writing to the Jews of his day, James also uses this example to correct some long held, but very incorrect, beliefs.  In the mind of a Jew back then, piety equaled blessing.  No wonder the disciples asked Jesus if a blind man had sinned or if his parents were the offenders.  People even today seem to think that if all is going well, then God must be pleased with you.  In truth, if all is going too well, it could be a sign that God is reserving His bitter wrath for you at the judgment seat of Christ.  Jesus told us that the world loves its own and hates what belongs to God.  Comfort in this life is either a blessing from God (like recess between classes) or a curse we induce upon ourselves as we serve the wrong master.  We normally are not capable of determining which one it is.  The key is to behave according to the perfect law of Christ, which will be harder to do if we’re serving mammon.  In the end we find that money makes us all a lot like cats.  If we have it, it’s our biggest burden.  If we don’t have it, it’s our biggest burden.  Just like my cat, Max, I’m always on the wrong side of the door concerning material wealth.  One of the worst experiences I ever had was when I received a bonus check for about $16,000.  The struggle over what to do with it was terrible.  I lost more sleep over having some money than I ever lost from not having it.

            I could be treading very close to the edge of a high precipice with this subject.  Many wealthy people would get outraged at hearing that their earthly possessions may have cost them eternity.  Once again, context can save the day (and my hide!) when dealing with this subject.  In the context of this particular book, attitude is everything.  James never decries the possession of possessions, but he does beat the tar out of those who lose perspective of why they have them, who gave the stuff to them in the first place, and what the end of their precious stuff is.  This teaching squares perfectly with Proverbs, the law, and our Lord’s own words.  James doesn’t say you are a worthless cause if you have stuff, but he does make it clear that your mammon could be the hardest test you’ll be given.  It is a test that many fail, and they are judged accordingly.  We will deal with this subject in much more depth later in the study.

            Now we must get back to the questions at hand concerning this short passage of scripture.  Specifically, we must discover what high position a poor man holds and what humiliation a rich man glories in.  I think that we can find the answer to both questions in the final verse of this section.  “Happy is the one who endures testing, because when he has proven to be genuine, he will receive the crown of life that God promised to those who love him.” (Jas 1:12)  If life is the test, when will a man be proven genuine?  When does he turn in his answer book and receive the score?  The obvious answer is death.  In the end of all things, the poor man is highly exalted when he enters into the kingdom of the Living God.  At the same time, the rich man’s material wealth and all his possessions, those things that were the very glory of the finite world, are instantaneously removed and destroyed from him.  To the world, this is humiliation.  To the Christian, it is the very day he longs for. 

            In either scenario, whether rich or poor, we are challenged by James to live life skillfully.  The person who has vast wealth on this earth must give an account of every penny when he is graded.  I don’t envy this man’s position.  Where there is much responsibility, much wisdom is required.  We’ve already discussed how God instills us with wisdom.  Personally, I’m not too gung ho about undertaking that much testing of my faith.  I have a hard enough time being wise with the small portion God has allotted me.  I do believe I would fail miserably if He challenged me with more.  It is His grace that I occupy the life position that I have. 

            On the flip side of the coin, we find a poor man who must give account for how he spent himself when that was the only worldly possession God gifted him with.  I fall much closer to being in this situation.  Although the external accountability may be less for this man, he must deal more frequently in the commodity God really values.  In the end of all things, when heaven and earth are replaced, the only thing remaining from the old system will be the people.  How we care for them (including ourselves) will be the single grade on the report card.  I guess this option requires just as much, if not more, wisdom than having worldly wealth.  It is a highly exalted position to have full responsibility for the very objects of God’s affection, the ones for whom Christ died.

            After looking more deeply into this passage, it becomes perfectly clear that James is not changing subjects, he’s making the point he set out to make from the beginning.  He tells us in a very sharp fashion that we must live our faith in both the small things of life and in life itself.  Paul tells us we are saved for the good works God prepared for us to accomplish.  James expounds on the theme by letting us know that every moment of every day God is preparing us for the very works for which He saved us.  I don’t believe any man is told what his work is before he enters glory.  At that time, he will give an account for how he handled the task.  If that is the case, then we would all do well to keep a keen eye for the guiding and teaching hand of God.  When we seek the grandiose ways to serve, we can miss the mundane tasks that may be the whole of God’s work for us.  Therefore, we must strive daily to accomplish each and every thing placed before us, whether pleasant or painful, great or miniscule, seen or hidden, in a manner worthy of Christ.  Whether we are entrusted with the wealth to feed the nations or with love to lead the lost to Jesus, we are accountable to God Almighty for how we use His resources.  We are stewards of what He was given us, and we will be judged for how we have handled it.  The trials in life are merely perfecting us for the greater task of living our lives as children of God.  Let us live up to what we have already attained.

 

Do we believe in God?  If we do, we will endure trials and testing with nothing but joy because we know what the outcome is.  We know our loving God is perfecting us to stand in His presence as saved, sanctified, and glorified members of His own family.  He is equipping us with what we need and removing what we don’t need, to live the life He saved us for.  Believing this gives us the ability to “grin and bear it” when we are in tight spots.  Believing what we read in the Bible gives us the courage to step forward when we see God let go while we’re standing on wobbly legs.  Believing God has a very specific plan for each person He saves will encourage us to look continually for how we may serve Him with our lives.  Believing the gospel story that the just died for the unjust, the righteous for the unrighteous, the perfect for the hideous, gives us the patience and motivation to endure any test so we may bring glory to the One who loved us, even to death.  But only if we have faith.

No comments:

Post a Comment