The Doctrine of Inheritance; James 2:5
Verses 1-13 of this chapter
deal with partiality, which is just one aspect of the application of
unconditional love. Then there is a shift at verse 14 into a different subject,
the relationship of faith which here is not only the operation of the
faith-rest drill but what you believe, doctrine in your soul: “What use is it,
my brethren, if someone says he has faith but he has no works [application]?
Can that faith deliver him?” Then there is an illustration in vv. 15-17. That
illustration of supplying a need of somebody in a situation of being
financially destitute is similar to the illustration of the poor and wealthy in
vv. 1-13. So he then goes vv.15-17 are back in an illustration related to the
first part of the chapter. So we go from subject A to subject B, then back to
subject A, and then to subject B. That shows us that this entire chapter has a
literary unity. That is important because one of the reasons that most people
screw up in interpreting this passage is that they just want to jump into the
last section from v. 14-26 as an independent whole without relating it to its
context of the entire chapter and relating that to the main theme which is
hearing and doing.
James 2:5 NASB
“Listen, my beloved brethren: did not God choose the poor of this world {to be}
rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom which He promised to those who love
Him?” This begins with the aorist active imperative of AKOUO [a)kouw]. Back in
The bottom line here is to
begin and continue doing something. This is important, it is solemn, it is to make this the highest priority, to start doing it
and to make it a continuation in your life. How does all this grammar relate to
what James is telling us? One thing we need to remember is that there is an
important stylistic shift in James’ writing. Every time he shifts gears and
uses a second person plural he is making a new point, and it grabs our
attention. The oast time that James used an aorist imperative, second person
plural, was in
In between
So verse 5 begins with the
mandate to concentrate, to listen; and we know that listening isn’t just having
our eardrums tickled but it includes the concept of application. Then he says,
“my beloved brethren.” This tells us that he is
addressing them as believers here, not as unbelievers, so we are talking about
phase two doctrine, spiritual life doctrine, not phase one salvation doctrine.
“…did not God choose the poor of this world {to be} rich in faith and heirs of
the kingdom which He promised to those who love Him?” What in the world is this
talking about?
Who are the poor? What does
he mean by the poor? There are only two options for defining the word poor. The
first option is that we can define the word poor economically, in terms of pure
economics. If we define it economically, then what that is really saying is
that poverty in and of itself becomes a spiritual virtue. That is going to
appeal to the ascetics but the implication of that, that being poor and giving
away all your money and having nothing and living as a homeless person somehow
impresses God and is necessary for acquiring divine blessing. That just goes
against everything else in the Scriptures. So obviously we have excluded
economics here as a definition because it would just lead to an absurd
theology. The other option is that when we get into verse 5 James has shifted
the nuance of poor from economic poverty to spiritual poverty or humility. “Did
not God choose the humble of this word to be rich in faith?” In
Luke
The thrust of all of this
is dealing with spiritual issues and spiritual attitudes, and it is not dealing
with physical or overt things. The hungering for righteousness, who are
positive to doctrine, who are applying doctrine, who want to know the Word of
God, who realize that man shall not live by bread alone but by every word
received from the mouth of God; “who weep now,” i.e. those who are sorrowful
over sin and its consequences in their life, for sorrow over the world and its
situation and the loss that can include a number of attitudes. Jesus wept when
he looked on Jerusalem because of their negative volition, so it is not wrong
to have a sense of sorrow, sadness over the lost and over those who are on
negative volition; “when men hate you,” i.e. for the gospel. And what do you
get for all of that. There is reward, so we are not talking about salvation here, we are talking about position in heaven.
Matthew 5:3 NASB
“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” Luke
said Blessed are the poor.” So now we have a new
phrase, and that is going to help us understand the concept of poor. We have
this phrase EN PNEUMATI [e)n pneumati]. There are several problems we have to address here.
First we have to understand what PNEUMA means. Does this refer to the human spirit, the Holy
Spirit, or does it have another connotation? Then we have to look at the
phrase. Is this an EN plus the dative of means or agency, indicating by
means of the human sprit or by means of the Holy Spirit.
Is it a locative dative, which would mean in the sphere of the spirit? The word
PNEUMA
has a number of different meanings. Its basic core meaning is breath or wind. It
has come to be used for that which is unseen both in terms of the Holy Spirit
and the human spirit. But it also has to do with thinking, and according to the
lexicon it means an attitude or disposition reflecting the way in which a person
thinks about or deals with some matter. In those passages where it talks about
having the spirit of anger it is talking about having an attitude or disposition
of anger, the way of thinking. Here we have an attitude or disposition that is
related to poor, and the whole phrase here is an idiom for humility. Blessed
are those who have a humble attitude, an attitude or way of thinking in terms
of humility; “for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” In other words, the
arrogant one is not going to inherit the kingdom. The subject all through here
in Matthew 5 is talking about inheritance.
What James says in 2:5 is
almost a paraphrase of what Jesus said. God chose the poor of this world, and
if we take poor as humble, God chose the humble of this world “to be rich in
faith and heirs of the kingdom which He promised to those who love Him?” What
we have seen in studying inheritance is that there are two categories of
inheritance.
The doctrine of inheritance
1) We need to look at the basic meaning of the word inheritance,
KLERONOMOS [klhronomoj]. The core meaning is
inheritance, possession or property. So to inherit the kingdom means to possess
the kingdom. Sometimes this refers to a birthright which someone enters into by
virtue of their physical descent or sonship.
Galatians 4:30; Hebrews 1:4. It can refer to property as a gift in contrast to
a reward. Hebrews
2) Jesus Christ is the
heir of all things. Hebrews 1:2. We then enter into inheritance by virtue of
our union with Christ.
3) Inheritance is
based on adoption. Adoption occurs at the moment of salvation, we are adopted
into the family of God, we become sons of God and are viewed as adult sons [u(ioj] in Galatians
3:29; 4:1. So inheritance is related to our position in Christ, blessings
related to positional truth. Romans 8:16, 17. “… heirs
of God, and fellow heirs with Christ.” So that passage tells us that there are
two categories of inheritance. One is heirs of God,
the second is joint heirs with Christ “if indeed we suffer with Him.” What is
James talking about? He is talking about perseverance, testing, suffering.
4) Inheritance is
based on the grace promise of the Abrahamic covenant.
Galatians
5) Inheritance, entering into the family of God, demands
eternal life. Titus 3:5-7.
6) Inheritance means
to share the destiny of Christ. Christ has an eternal destiny and we share it
as we share His election. Ephesians 1:11; 1 Peter 1:3.
7) Inheritance is both
a present reality and a future possession. 1 Peter 1:4, 5; Ephesians 1:11, 13,
14. We have obtained is, that is part of it, but the rest is contingent. The
contingency of that inheritance, those contingent blessings in eternity, are
going to be determined by how we live our life today.
8) Inheritance means
eternal security. 1 Peter 1:4 “…an
inheritance {which is} imperishable and undefiled and will not fade away…”
9) God the Holy Spirit is a down payment on our inheritance.
Ephesians 1:14.
10) Some passage speak of inheritance as a permanent
possession based on faith alone in Christ alone and other passages seem to make
inheritance contingent upon certain behaviour. E.g. 1 Corinthians 6:9, 10
indicates that if you participate in certain kinds of carnal activity you will
not inherit the
11) We either inherit the kingdom—Ephesians 5:5; 1
Corinthians 6:9, 10, or there is inheriting salvation—Hebrews
12) Christ inherits the kingdom, Psalm 2:8, 9, due to His loyalty
to God the Father. Hebrews 1:8, 9; Psalm 45:6, 7. The joint heirs with Christ
will also inherit the kingdom.
13) Thus the kingdom has been promised to those who love
God, and not all believers love God. John 14:21-24; James 2:5 “…did not God
choose the poor [humble] of this world {to be} rich in faith [doctrine] and
heirs of the kingdom which He promised to those who love Him?” What do the
humble do? They take in the Word and make it a priority in their life to apply
it. “heirs of the kingdom”—promise to whom? Those who love
Him. Not all believers love Him. Those who are failures in the spiritual life,
who do not advance spiritually, who do not make doctrine the priority in their
life, they will operate in the sin nature producing sin, human good, and
temporal death, leading to spiritual weakness, emotional instability, spiritual
regression, a hardening of the heart. And at the judgment seat of Christ they
will lose rewards and there will be shame at the judgment seat of Christ. They
will be heirs of God but not joint heirs with Christ. Heirs of God means that
they will have a resurrection body, that after the initial shame at the
judgment seat of Christ there will be no more tears, no more pain, the old things are passed away. But they will not enter into
all of the blessings that come as being joint heirs with Christ and being a possessor
of the kingdom. They will live in the kingdom but they will not possess the kingdom.