Sunday, January 3, 2010

James 2

6 comments:

Denise said...

"So whatever you say or whatever you do, remember that you will be judged by the law that sets you free" (v.12)

"As Christians, we are saved by God's free gift (grace) through faith, not by keeping the law. But as Christians, we are also required to obey Christ. The appostle Paul taught that "we must all stand before Chirst to be judged" (Corinthians 5:10) for our conduct. God's grace does not cancel our duty to obey him; it gives our obedience a new basis. The law is no longer an external set of rules, but it is a "law that sets you free" - one we joyfully and willingly carry out, because we love God and have the power of his Holy Spirit."

"There will be no mercy for those who have not shown mercy to others. But if you have been merciful, God will be merciful when he judges you" (v13).

"Only God in his mercy can forgive our sins. We can't earn forgiveness by forgiving others. But when we withhold forgiveness from others after having received it ourselves, we show that we don't understand or appreciate God's mercy toward us".

Christina B said...

"My dear friends, don't let public opinion influence how you live out our glorious, Christ-originated faith" - this verse (from the Message) spoke to me as I am often finding myself allowing others' opinions/idea(l)s jade my own. I get caught-up in how others are "mums" "wives" "women" and forget to focus on how God desires for me to be.
"Faith with works, works with faith, fits together hand in glove" What Jesus did for me is priceless...period! So why do I not speak of it more? A question I have been asking myself lately. But beyond that - as "actions speak louder than words" - I need to be more conscious of what I can do to show my faith! Take advantage of those "moments" that arise.

Denise said...

Hi Christina! It's nice to see you here and read you comments!

Berry Girl said...

ah, I love James. What a great book. Denise, those are some great devotional comments - where do you get those? I love the comment that God's grace does not cancel our duty to obey Him but rather gives it a new basis.

Unknown said...

"But you show no respect to the poor. The rich are always trying to control your lives." v6

I remember when I was fifteen and went to Mexico for the first time. I was repulsed by the standard of living that many Mexicans had. Truly they were poor financially but what I didn't realize then was how rich they were in spirit.

When I graduated and went on the ship to South America I was old enough to learn to see the riches of life these "poor people" had, that are often sadly lacking in our culture due to our materialism and greed.

I would (and do) choose economic poverty in order to invest in the things of REAL life. Things that won't burn at the end of the age.

Chris said...

James is a favorite of mine too, but so hard hitting. "For whoever keeps the whole law and yet stumbles at just one point is guilty of breaking all of it."

Didn't anyone else cringe at this? When I know the good I ought to do, and I'm not doing it, it sure stings. I'm like Felix... delaying a decision, hoping God will spell out exactly what it is I should do, when all I need to do is the royal law. Sometimes I'm so far from where I want to be...