I will show you my faith by my works
James 2:18
Somehow I
get the impression that James was not the guy that I would ask for an opinion
unless I really wanted to know. Be honest. You want to avoid “James”. I have
been blessed with a “James” or two in my life. Here’s the difference. I can
ask, “How was the sermon?” Most will say, “That was a good message” coupled
with one of those innocuous smiles that lets me know the message has already
escaped and the lunch menu has moved to front of mind. “James” will say, “the
intro was a weak, you lost your main point in the middle, exegesis lacked
sharpness and you could have ended 3 minutes before you did…but I like your
text selection”.
James is not
the “feel good” book on your summer reading list if you are a bit timid about
following Christ or “double-minded” as “James” would say. It stings. But, I
love to read James because James destroys any thought that my faith in Christ
is irrelevant. I cannot read James and believe that God intends for my faith to
be some disconnected ethereal feeling. Real faith matters every day. Real faith
- the kind of faith in Christ that keeps me talking to Him, worshiping Him,
feeding on His words and following Him – will show up in my actions today. Faith
connects with orphans and widows. Faith is not hidden inside my head or my
heart. It is on display in my life every day.
Today, it’s
very popular to ask leaders about “core values”. The questions can probe
decision-making in an organization or at a personal level. Perhaps James would
ask, “What would your family members, your colleagues and friends say are your
core values?” Otherwise, answers are mostly aspirational. I don’t think I’ve
ever seen a tractor-trailer rolling down the highway with
“We value profit over people” printed on the side! In the Christian life, it’s
not easy to confess that we value temporal things over eternal. Sometimes, it’s
uncomfortable to be honest about what our daily lives reveal about what’s most
important to us. James was not written to make us comfortable. James makes it
clear. Don’t uncouple faith and action. Each day is a deposition recorded in
the book of my life regarding my faith. “James” is not afraid to look me in the
eye today and say, “Show me.”