The Doctrinal Mirror; James 1:23-25
James
Humility
1)
Humility
emphasizes true objectivity and a lack of arrogance.
2)
This includes
authority orientation, which means respect for the authority of God the Father
and the authority of Jesus Christ, and the Word of God which is the mind of
Christ.
3)
Humility is
teachability. Psalm 25:8-9 NASB “Good and upright is the LORD; Therefore
He instructs sinners in the way.
4)
Every believer
has the opportunity to learn Bible doctrine on the basis of the filling of the
Holy Spirit and humility. Humility is what keeps the person in the status of
teachability.
5)
Teachability
recognizes two things: the authority of the teacher and the content of the
message.
James
The word is POIETES [poihthj]. It is a masculine plural nominative plus the
genitive of LOGOS [logoj]
which stands for the Word of God. To understand this we have to first
understand the significance of the genitive. It is a genitive of production,
which means that it is the Word here in the genitive which produces the action
of the main noun. So it is the LOGOS of God that produces the doer. POIETES is often
taken to mean some kind of program in the church, that you need to start doing
things for God, you need to work in the Sunday school, you need to go out and
start witnessing, and you need to start doing all of these things. It is
normally taken as some kind of overt activity in the Christian life, but that
is absolutely wrong. The average pastor out there is going to teach that the
way you grow in the spiritual life is through prayer, witnessing, giving, doing all kinds of things around the local church. But that
is not what the Bible says. The Bible says that all of these things are the
result of something else. It is the result of an inner transformation that
comes from the Word of God. What has to have priority is learning the Word of
God, studying the Word of God. That is the priority; that is the cause and
effect, and most people out there are trying to produce the effect without the
cause. If there is no transformation from the Word of God transforming the
mentality of the soul, then everything else is pure superficiality and has
nothing to do with true Christianity. It is just works. This does not mean go
out and do, do, do for Jesus. What it means is to apply the Word of God.
Probably the best way to
translate this is, “And you all become appliers [or, practitioners] of the Word
of God.” POIETES means to do, to act, to work, it has all kinds of
meanings, but in the context what James is talking about is applying what you
hear. Remember the command is to be quick to hear. In Greek, just as in Hebrew,
hearing doesn’t mean just having your eardrums vibrated by sound. Hearing
includes the idea of application. Husbands, you have probably heard your wife
say, “But you don’t listen to me.” And you say, “Well, I can repeat the words
that you said.” But she says, “No, no, no, you didn’t really hear what I said,
you didn’t read between the lines.” There was no application, is what she is
saying. The Greek and Hebrew concept of hearing is that no hearing really takes
place unless it results in application. So James is unpacking what he means by
the phrase, “be quick to hear,” that if you think you are hearing and it
doesn’t result in application then you have short-circuited the process and you
are not going anywhere in the spiritual life. He says, “And you all become
appliers of the Word [of God], and not only hearers who delude themselves.”
Let’s look at the learning
process. It starts off with the pastor-teacher, and this is why the gift of
pastor-teacher is so important. God has provided different spiritual gifts for
the body of Christ. Each gift has a role and a place. The man who has the gift
of pastor-teacher is the man who has been spiritually gifted by God to get into
the Word, to study it and to extract the biblical principles, and then to
communicate them to people, the sheep, so that they can grow. The man with the
gift of pastor-teacher has been uniquely gifted and designated by God as the
person who has that responsibility to the rest of the body of Christ. He
inherently has a position of authority, not because of who
he is but because of the message he proclaims. So the pastor-teacher
communicates doctrine. That doctrine is made understandable to the believer
under the category of PNEUMATIKOS [pneumatikoj], spiritual phenomena. This then enters into the ear of the individual
(hearing); then it enters into the mentality of his soul in the outer lobe
which the Bible calls the NOUS [nouj].
Here it becomes GNOSIS [gnwsij],
and that is merely academic knowledge. What happens here is while the Holy
Spirit makes spiritual phenomena understandable He does not understand it for
you. That means you have to engage in the mentality of your soul to interact
with what the pastor says so that you can comprehend it and understand it. That
doesn’t mean that you can just go back out and regurgitate it. Just because you
have all the points down in your notebook does not man that you understand the
doctrine, it just means you are able to take notes and get down what somebody
says. You have to think about it. This is why the Bible often commands us to
meditate, to cogitate on the Word of God, to think about it to make it
understandable in the NOUS. Once it enters the NOUS as GNOSIS, academic
knowledge, it has to go through another step because academic knowledge doesn’t
get you anywhere; it is just a staging ground for real spiritual growth. Having
thought about it and meditated on it, it cycles on into the innermost sphere of
your thinking, which is called the heart [KARDIA/kardia
in the Greek, leb
in the Hebrew]. Here it becomes EPIGNOSIS [e)pignwsij]. This is doctrine that is assimilated into the
thinking of the soul. It is understood, it is believed, and you say, “This is
what I believe.” It is assimilated by means of the Holy Spirit into the heart
where real transformation begins to take place. It starts on the inside as
thinking is transformed. Romans 12:2 NASB “And do not be conformed
to this world, but be transformed by the
renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that
which is good and acceptable and perfect.”
You haven‘t used it yet. At
this point it is just stored in your soul, so when the test comes—and remember,
that is the context of James—now you have some doctrine stored in your soul and
you can apply it. That is what James is getting at. It is not going to do any
good accumulating a lot of academic knowledge spiritually.
Paul talks about knowledge in
Corinthians, and when it is translated “knowledge puffed up” it is not EPIGNOSIS, it is
GNOSIS,
and the believer that does not transfer doctrine into the heart through the
filling of the Holy Spirit where it becomes EPIGNOSIS operates on academic knowledge and that is nothing
more than arrogance and feeds his arrogance. This is the opposite of humility
and therefore there will be no spiritual growth. So are mandated as a general
principle for the Christian life that we are to become appliers of the Word.
The person who is not an applier of the Word is self-deceived; he is deluded.
There are three arrogance skills that feed one another. First,
self-absorption. When a person focuses on themselves before long they
begin to justify themselves, and that goes to self-justification, the second
arrogance skill, which culminates in self-deception. This feeds further
self-absorption. These are the three arrogance skills, and what we see here is
that the person who does not submit himself to the authority of the Word of
God, believe it, store it in his soul as EPIGNOSIS and then use it and apply it in the tests of life, is
self-deceived and is operating on arrogance.
Verses 23 & 24 describe
the person who has short-circuited the grace learning spiral. It is grace
because it is true for every single believer. Every believer has equal access
to learning doctrine. [23] “For if [if, and it is true, 1st
class condition] anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer [applier], he is
like a man who looks at his natural face in a mirror.” This is the person who
gets this far. They hear the Word, they understand it but they don’t exercise
positive volition toward it and transfer it by means of the filling of the Holy
Spirit into the innermost part of the thinking of the soul. They are simply a
hearer accumulating academic knowledge, but it is not in their soul. There is a
fairly perceptive analogy here: “…he is like a man who looks at his natural
face in a mirror.” It is literally, “he is like a man with the face he was born
with.” The Bible is compared at this point to a mirror. The harsh thing we all
know about mirrors is that they never lie; they are completely objective. We
always pay attention to what the mirror tells us. In other words, the person
who is merely an accumulator of academic knowledge is really a fool. He is
leading a superficial life and he is in denial about reality. The Bible is like
a mirror. It is true; it is objective; it is going to tell us exactly how
things are and it behoves us to pay attention to it. [24] “for
{once} he has looked at himself and gone away, he has immediately forgotten
what kind of person he was.” Out of sight; out of mind. He completely forgets
what the objective reflection told him. That is the person who is the
accumulator of academic knowledge.
Verse 25 tells us about the
person who is a practitioner of Bible doctrine: “But one who looks intently at
the perfect law, the {law} of liberty, and abides by it, not having become a
forgetful hearer but an effectual doer, this man will be blessed in what he
does.”
So in the context we have the
hearer and the applier, the person who is applying doctrine.
Summary
1)
Only Bible
doctrine provides objectivity for honest self-evaluation. It is the only way
you can know yourself; only the Bible can tell you exactly the way you are; it defines
reality.
2)
Thus humility is
the pre-requisite. We all know that if anybody tells us how things really are
in our life we need a tremendous amount of humility to accept it. We can’t let
arrogance get in the way or it will destroy our objectivity.
3)
Without humility
the response will be self-deception and arrogance and denial of reality.
4)
Without humility
doctrine will never become anything more than simple academic knowledge and
will have no spiritual value.
So what do we learn from the
successful believer in verse 25? The attitude of the advancing believer begins
with humility and objectivity and advances through diligence. Why do we say
diligence? Look at the main verb. It is the aorist active participle of the
verb PARAKUPTO [parakuptw].
It portrays a person who is looking and concentrating on what he is looking for
to the point that he stoops over, maybe even gets down on his hands and knees,
and digs around to try to find that for which he is searching. It implies
energy, concentration and diligence—“…the one who looks diligently at the
perfect law.” So the growing believer is not someone who just has a passing
academic curiosity but is intent. He has made learning doctrine the highest
priority in his life. He is not just going to show up at church once a week or
two or three times a month, he is going to be there at every opportunity he has
in order to let the mirror of God’s Word reflect upon his life. He looks
intently at what? The “perfect law,” but that is not a very good translation.
The word “perfect” is the Greek word TELEIOS [teleioj], and it can mean perfect in the sense of flawless, but
it is doubtful that there is any place in the New Testament where it means
that. It also means to bring something to completion, to complete, to make
whole. So here we will translate it with the word “complete”—“the complete
law.” What is that referring to? It is referring to the completed canon of
Scripture. It wasn’t complete yet for James. James is one of the earliest of
the books of the New Testament. But once the Bible is complete, only then can
man have a pure, total view of who he really is. All through the Old Testament
and up through part of the New Testament era when the canon was incomplete the
mirror of God’s Word could give only a partial or incomplete view of man.
Let’s look at 1 Corinthians
13:8ff “Love is permanent; but if {there
are gifts of} prophecy, they will be abolished; if {there are} tongues, they
will cease of their own; if {there is} knowledge, it will be abolished.” The
same word is used of knowledge and prophecy; both are abolished. Then we
continue to talk about knowledge and prophecy because tongues is seen by the
passage as being irrelevant; it is just going to disappear. [9] “For we know in
part and we prophesy in part.” This is the Greek phrase EK MEROUS [e)k merouj] which means
partial. Whatever we are saying about prophecy and knowledge they are
revelatory gifts, they have to do with the revelation of doctrine. But they
only give partial doctrine. No one who had the gift of prophecy or the gift of
knowledge knew the whole realm of doctrine. They each contributed a piece of
doctrine but not all of it. So verse 9 says these gifts are partial, but [10]
“but when the perfect comes, the partial will be done away.” Once again “perfect”
here is a mistranslation of the word TELEIOS. Notice that the context is comparing TELEIOS with
something that is partial. It is not comparing something that is perfect, but
something that is imperfect. It is contrasting something that is incomplete with
completion. When the complete has come the partial shall be done away. What is
the partial? Prophecy and knowledge. What abolishes
prophecy and knowledge is that which completes. If prophecy and knowledge are
revelatory gifts then what abolishes them is going to be of the same kind, i.e.
revelation. So when the completed revelation of God comes, the completed canon,
then the spiritual gifts of prophecy and knowledge will be done away with. Tongues is viewed as secondary by the writer. Why? Because the purpose of tongues is given chapter 14 as related to
God’s purpose for
Then we get two interesting
analogies. [11] “When I was a child, I used to speak like a child, think like a
child, reason like a child; when I became a man, I did away with childish things.”
What do those things relates to—speaking, thinking, reason? They relate to
knowledge. This illustrates the difference between incomplete and complete
knowledge. A child has incomplete knowledge but when they are an adult they
have a complete understanding of things and they put away the incomplete. [12]
The same thing in relation to prophecy. “For now we see in a mirror dimly, but
then face to face; now I know in part, but then I will know fully just as I
also have been fully known.” A mirror that is incomplete only gives a partial
reflection. The word that is used for “now” there means now at this present
time. Verse 13 uses a different word for “now,” which means now in this church
age: now in the church age, what continues? Faith, hope and
love. Verse 12 says, Now at this present time in this pre-canon period during the
apostolic age when we have an incomplete canon—we see in that incomplete canon
dimly, but then face to face. This isn’t face to face with God,
this is face to face with the completed mirror. The terminology that is used
here is reflective of terminology used back in the Old Testament. God is
speaking to Moses and says he is going to speak to Moses mouth to mouth (not
face to face), “but with other prophets I speak…” and the Greek translation of
the Old Testament uses the word which means dimly, the same word that is
translated “dimly” here in v. 12. So the verbiage that is used in v. 12 is
reminiscent of the same terminology that is used back in Numbers when God is
talking to Moses about the nature of prophetic communication. Too often the
prophet doesn’t understand the message that he is given. He can communicate it
clearly but he doesn’t understand all of its ramifications, it is an enigma to
him. But when you have the completed canon of Scripture you can know what God
has to say. “For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face; now I
know in part, but then I will know fully just as I also have been fully known.”
In other words, the Word of God when it is complete is going to give us
that complete objective knowledge of ourselves that we need in order to grow
and advance spiritually.
James uses that same kind of
imagery: “But one who looks intently at the perfect law, the {law} of liberty…”
Here he refers to the Bible as the law of liberty. In Galatians Paul refers to
the Mosaic law as a slave master. It enslaves us, we
are in bondage to it, we are like a child in the Roman system that is enslaved
to a pedagogue, and that pedagogue is the Mosaic law.
We are in bondage to the law. But the completed canon, with all of the
information about the completed work of Christ on the cross and the spiritual
life of the church age, now becomes a law of liberty. The term “law of liberty”
reflects the contrast with the Mosaic law which is
bondage.
In contrast to the Mosaic law,
which was designed to restrain sin, criminality and idolatry, to promote establishment
freedom and reveal man’s inability to save himself, the law of liberty
emphasizes the true freedom of the church age believer—freedom to advance
spiritually and to glorify God. This isn’t the freedom to sin; this is the freedom
to grow. Any time you have freedom to grow and succeed you have to have freedom
to fail. If you take away that freedom to fail and you put a safety net there,
the higher the safety net goes the lower the ceiling of success becomes, until
eventually you end up in socialism when
every operates at the level of the lowest common denominator. This take away any incentive to succeed. So freedom is now
the right of the church age believer because he is no longer enslaved to the
Mosaic law.
“…. and abides by it.” This
is a word that is loaded with meaning in the Greek: MENO [menw]. In many places it refers to our fellowship with
God. We are to abide in Christ. That is a synonym for remaining in fellowship.
So remaining in fellowship is related to continuous obedience of God’s Word.
But we know that if we fail we have immediate restoration through 1 John 1:9.
James is not contradicting
Paul here by talking about the law. He agrees with Paul in Romans 6:14 that we
are not under law but under grace. He would agree with Peter in Acts
This is consistent with
the statement that Christ makes in John 8:31, 32 NASB “…“If you
continue in My word, {then} you are truly disciples of
Mine;
Then we come to the final
statement: “…this man will be blessed in what he does.” James 1:25. The Greek
says, “this person shall be [future tense] shall be
blessed by means of what he does.” It is EN [e)n] plus
the dative of means, not because of
what we do. Obedience is the means. Why? As you take in the Word of God and you
apply it, and you become an applier of the Word, that produces maturity. As you
mature you develop capacity for life. Once you develop capacity for life then
God will pour out on you those contingent blessings in time. He holds them back
until you are ready. Just you as a good will not give your children gifts that
they are not ready for.