Introduction; James 1:1
There are two kinds of
testing, testing that involves adversity and testing that involves prosperity.
It is the adversity test that is tough. Adversity we cannot escape, it is
outside pressure on the soul and it comes in all kinds of different categories
and shapes and forms. When we yield to that with our sin nature the result is
stress in the soul. We can avoid stress through the use of the problem-solving
devices that God has outlined in Scripture. James 1:4-8 says, “And let
endurance have its perfect result,” which is a bad translation, “that you may
be perfect and complete, lacking nothing. But if any of you lack wisdom, let
him ask of God, who gives to all men generously and without reproach, and it
will be given to him. But he must ask in faith without any doubting, for the
one who doubts is like the surf of the sea, driven and
tossed by the wind.
So we have two options in
life. Job says that man was born to trouble as the sparks fly upwards. We know
that we can’t avoid difficulty, hardship, difficulty and trouble in life, and
to think that we can is to live in a dream world. So we have two options. We
can either live in the midst of that adversity and convert that adversity to
stress in our souls, where we are living in carnality and are going to be
unstable in all our ways, or we can learn how to use what God has given us in
grace, all the tremendous spiritual assets He has given us, take the time to
learn what they are, and the work on implementing them, so that we can grow to
spiritual maturity and avoid the instability that comes from converting
adversity into stress.
The first word in the
epistle is “James.” In the Greek it is IAKOBOS [I)akwboj]. We are not told in this first verse just who is
this James. There are four different James mentioned in the Bible. 1) Scripture
talks about James, the son of Zebedee in Mark 1:19.
He is the brother of John the apostle, Mark 3:17; Acts 12:1-2. But this is not
James the son of Zebedee because he was martyred
under Herod Agrippa I, and that took place not too long after the birth of the
church, probably in the late 30s. So he died too soon to have been the author
of this epistle. 2) James the son of Alphaeus, Matthew
10:3; Mark 3:18. He is a minor disciple, we don’t learn much about him, we find his name listed a few times but he is never
mentioned in the Scriptures other than a few brief mentions in the Gospels. Too
little in known about him and it was probably not James the son of Alphaeus. 3) James the father of Judas the disciple (not
Iscariot), Luke 6:16. Too little is known about him and he was probably not the
author of this epistle. 4) The half brother of the Lord, Galatians 1:19. In
Matthew
James is one of the most
profound little epistles in all of the New Testament, and the writer is writing
it specifically to challenge the believers he is writing to to
keep pressing on to spiritual maturity. No matter how difficult is it, no
matter how testing the trial may be that we face we have to keep pushing on.
That brings up one of the key words that we will see again and again in this
epistle, and that is the Greek word HUPOMONES [u(pomonhj],
which means to persist, to endure, to persevere. (The KJV translates
this “patience,” but it is not patience, MAKROTHUMIA [makroqumia]).
It means sticking with it, hanging in there in the Christian life, coming to
Bible class even when you’re tired because you’ve had a hard day and a hard
week. That is just part of how Satan tries to discourage is from keeping our
priorities together. Bible doctrine should be the highest priority in our life
if we are going to press on to spiritual maturity, and that is our number one
goal as believers in the Lord Jesus Christ. So James is concerned about
challenging every believer to press on to spiritual maturity no matter what
happens. So the theme of this letter is going to be persistence in the
Christian life.
One of the things we
discover in reading commentaries on the epistle of James is that very few
scholars and Bible students have a clue as to what this epistle is all about.
Almost every commentary says that this epistle is like a New Testament book of
Proverbs, there is no real unity to it, it is just a collection of different
points for the Christian life to encourage believers to walk in obedience, and
there is no real unifying theme to the epistle that James wrote. One of the
problems that that engenders is that if you don’t have a proper overview of
James and understand that it has a very tight unity you are going to end up
misinterpreting several critical passage. This is why people get so confused
over a number of different passages here.
The key verse for
understanding the structure of James is found in
James
James is going to talk
about faith and works. This isn’t saving faith. There are three stages in the
spiritual life. Stage one takes place at the cross in a moment of time when we
put our faith and trust in Jesus Christ. Stage two is progressive
sanctification where we are continually by taking in doctrine being saved from
the power of sin in our lives on a day-to-day basis. Stage three is
glorification, which is our salvation from the presence of sin. Now when we
talk about faith and justification of faith to a believer in phase two, what we
are really talking about is vindication. When we trust Christ as our savior nobody sees anything, it is something that took
place inside of us. Five or ten years later we may do something as a result of
apply doctrine and growing to spiritual maturity that gives evidence,
vindication of our salvation. We also may not.
Winding back to our
outline, the first section is the introduction. Then the first major section
has to do with hearing, “be quick to hear.” The second major section is chapter
three, and it is “slow to speak.” It has to do with sins of the tongue. If you
are a believer and are going to grow to maturity you are going to have to deal
with those sins of the tongue—gossip, maligning, vindictiveness, hatred, all of
these various things are going to have to be dealt with. Then in chapter four
is the fourth area which is slow to anger—mental attitude sins and how the
worst sins that can be imagined are mental attitude sins. In chapter five,
around verse 7, we come back to the main topic which is perseverance, patience
and endurance.
James is a man who is
concerned with grace orientation and doctrinal orientation, and we see that is
his opening illustration. James 1:1 NASB “James, a bond-servant of
God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, To the
twelve tribes who are dispersed abroad: Greetings.” He says that he is a
bondservant of God. The Greek word is DOULOS [douloj],
which means a slave. He is a slave of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ. James
is definitely oriented to grace and to doctrine and shows a tremendous deal of
humility, he is not relying at all on any of his physical connections. He
addresses the epistle to the twelve tribes of