Text: James,
a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, 1:1
Many Bible scholars believe that the Book of James does not
teach us about Christ. One Bible scholar
who felt this way was Martin Luther.
Luther said about James, ‘I praise
it and hold it a good book because it sets up no doctrine of men and lays great
stress upon God’s law.’ Luther ends up both blessing the book of James and
to cursing it. And concerning the latter, the most devastating criticism he
leveled against James was that he believed it did not teach us about Christ.
Luther is correct when he says, ‘That is the true test, by which to judge all books when we see whether
they deal with Christ or not since all the Scriptures show us, Christ.’ Sadly, though, Luther went on to say that
James does not pass that test.
If you were to listen to most people talk about James, and
most preachers preach from the book of James, you might think that they were
all students of Martin Luther! It is all too common for people to approach
James as a book without Christ in it. They merely glean the essentials of James
while missing him revealing Jesus. Since
this is a series of Christ Through the Bible, let us look at how James reveals
Jesus Christ.
In the gospel of Matthew, Jesus preaches the Sermon on the
Mount and covers the Law of Moses and how it related to the follower of
Christ. There are many ways in which the
book of James clearly echoes the sermon of Jesus. Both tackle the themes of
worldliness over against heavenly-mindedness. Both deal with issues like oaths
and vows, suffering well, judging others, persecution, effective prayer, and
proving our faith by the fruit of good works.
And, like Jesus’ sermon, James must be read with Jesus
himself in mind. In the Sermon on the Mount, who is the peacemaker, the one who
is persecuted, and the pure in heart? Yes, those beatitudes belong to us
believers, but only as they first belong to our Savior who spoke such
blessings. Similarly, in James, who is it that has correctly endured the test
(1:12), Jesus Christ? Who is the lowly one who is exalted (1:9)? Who is himself
the perfect gift that has come down from the Father of lights (1:17)? And who
has come to this world, from the Father, to visit orphans and widows in their
affliction, and to keep himself unstained from the world in perfect
righteousness (1:27)? It is the same Christ who alone can ultimately save our
souls from death and cover a multitude of sins (5:20).
The book of James gives numerous commands to believers to live
out by God’s strength. James has around fifty commands in just over one hundred
verses. And those commands are meant to be obeyed by us. But, like all the
commands in God’s Word, they describe obedience that was first and foremost
lived out by Jesus, who came to fulfill the Law of God. Jesus is the one who
came, not to abolish the law, but to fulfill or keep it (Matt. 5:17). It is
Jesus who has really fulfilled the royal law according to the Scripture (James
2:8). So, the proper approach to the obedient Christian life is not a life of
just trying harder all the time, as James is often read and preached, but a
life of becoming who we are in Christ.
It is commonly believed that the James who wrote this book
was James, the half-brother of Jesus. While James had a human father named
Joseph, and Jesus had a heavenly Father, they yet shared the same human mother
named Mary. As best we can tell, James and some of his other siblings neither
believed nor followed Jesus during his earthly ministry (see Matt. 12:46–50;
John 7:5). The disciples who followed
Jesus were: Simon Peter, Andrew, James (the son of Zebedee), John, Philip,
Bartholomew, Thomas, Matthew, James (the son of Alphaeus), Thaddaeus, Simon the
Zealot and Judas Iscariot. James the
brother of Jesus was not a follower.
This background makes James’ later position of leadership in
the church nearly as amazing as that which a Pharisee named Saul would enjoy!
It also makes the book of James the same kind of ‘not how I did it in my
earlier years’ kind of treatise as that of Peter in his first epistle.
But the sibling relationship between Jesus and James ought
not to be too quickly passed over. It is true that Jesus is explicitly named by
James only twice, in 1:1 and 2:1. But it is wrongly inferred from this, that
this is the full extent of when James had Jesus in mind when he wrote the
contents of his epistle. And it is wrongly assumed that these are the only
times when James wanted us to have Jesus in mind as we read this book.
The opening of New Testament letters carries more importance
than we often realize. The first couple of verses provide an opportunity to
present the author’s credentials. So, if you were James, the half-brother of
Jesus, why not mention that connection? Would this not lend some credibility to
your claims? And yet, James begins differently than we might have expected. In
verse 1, he labels himself ‘a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ.’ And
in verse 1 he also calls his intended readers' spiritual exiles, ‘the twelve
tribes in the Dispersion’ (cf. 1 Pet. 1:1, ‘elect exiles of the dispersion’).
After giving such spiritual identity labels, James then says in verse 2, ‘Count
it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds.’ And in the
next two verses, he speaks of the goal of suffering well, that we may become
‘perfect.’
Now, if you were in that original audience, getting a letter
from a man whom you knew to have had the unique privilege of growing up with
JESUS, how could you not think to yourself, ‘James calls himself, not Jesus’
brother, but his servant! And James calls me his brother and speaks of me
reaching this complete state!’ James is dignifying his audience of ordinary
people by grouping them with himself, thereby indicating that all who are found
in Christ by faith are brothers with this brother of Jesus.
In a book where he so infrequently names his brother who is
the object of our faith, James calls us his brothers time and time again! And
he speaks of our calling — to go down the same path that all of us know Jesus
walked. It is almost as though this is James’s biography of his brother Jesus
because his person and work are everywhere in this book! This is not unlike the
book of Ruth, where the name of God is infrequently used, but the fingerprints
of divine providence are all over it. James, the half-brother of Jesus, never
intended for us to read of the wisdom that comes down from above (James
3:17–18) without thinking of Jesus, the Wisdom that has come to us from above
(Matt. 11:19; 1 Cor. 1:30).
Some Christians are fond of James because they think it
speaks almost exclusively of them and their obedience. But other Christians are
cautious about James because, like Luther, they’re not quite sure if it says
much about Jesus. Let us not find ourselves in either category. Let us be those
readers who appreciate how our Savior’s obedience is described in the book, and
then be challenged by faith in him to heed the many practical commands. This is
a book about how we should live because it is a book about how Christ lived.
How is the ‘joy’ of trials (1:2) to be understood, unless we
can understand our trials in the light of the cross, which we now bear, and
understand them regarding his image, to which we are being conformed through
them? How else can we not be discouraged by the discussion in chapter 2 of
faith being demonstrated by our works, unless we realize that the
less-than-perfect fruit of our faith is sanctified by Christ to become
presentable to God? How can we read the many references in James to the final
judgment that is coming, without clinging by faith to the Christ who will
present us pure and undefiled to the Father? The centrality of Christ to this
book and to its demands gives us the comfort of knowing that, although we are
not, Jesus is that ‘perfect man’ who has perfectly bridled his body and tongue
(3:2).
Some people read the book of James as if they are still
living under the Old Testament Law. They
do not see Christ in the message. But if it is read in the light of Christ, we
can walk in the commands it sets before us. When Jesus preached the Sermon on
the Mount, saying that we need to be perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect
(Matt. 5:48), we are not discouraged to the point of giving up our efforts to
be faithful. James is a book of practical holiness that is lived by the Spirit
of Christ that dwells within us.
Yes, Virginia Christ is in the Book of James.
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