We all know that
the Bible teaches that God gives eternal life to anyone who simply and only
believes in Jesus Christ for it (John 3:16; 5:24; 6:47; etc). In this message,
we come to a passage in James 2 that on first glance, seems to say exactly the opposite.
We have said that faith without works gives eternal life, but James 2 says that
faith without works is dead. We have said that we are justified by faith alone,
but James 2 clearly says that a man is justified by works, and not by faith
alone.
This passage has
caused so much confusion and controversy over the years, that some have even
tried to remove it from Scripture. Martin Luther, for example, that great
reformer who battled the Catholic church over the issue of how to receive
eternal life, called the book of James, “a right strawy epistle” meaning that
there was nothing in it but wood, hay and stubble. He was so insistent on
justification by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone, that he had
trouble reconciling these truths with the teachings of James.
We will see that
with a careful and contextual study of this passage, there is no problem in
reconciling what James writes with what Paul and Jesus taught. But the context
is the key. Have you heard the three rules of proper Bible interpretation?
Number 1, context. Number 2, context. Number 3, context. Some call it studying
the Bible with 20/20 vision. Look at the 20 verses before and the 20 verses
after. But James 2:14-26 requires much more than just the 20 verses on either
side. We need to get the complete historical, cultural and grammatical context
of the passage in order to understand it.
Context of James 2
Let’s look at the
historical/cultural context first. This asks who wrote the book, who it was
written to. It asks historical questions like what challenges were they facing
and what questions were they asking. It looks at cultural issues like what were
the common practices and beliefs of people in that time and place that this
book was written to? Let’s answer some of these questions.
Often times, the
best place to look for answers is right at the beginning of the book. Turn to
James 1:1.
James 1:1. James, a bondservant of God and of the Lord Jesus
Christ. To the twelve tribes which are scattered abroad. Greetings.
James the
half-brother of Jesus Christ wrote the book. During Christ’s ministry on earth,
James doubted that Jesus was the Messiah, but after Christ died and rose from
the dead, James could not deny the facts, and so believed in Jesus for eternal
life. He soon became one of the elders in the rapidly growing Jerusalem church,
and when we come to Acts 15, we read that he presided over the Jerusalem
council.
He wrote it to.twelve
tribes scattered abroad. Who is this? Jews. And there are two kinds of
Jews, believing Jews and unbelieving Jews. Which kind is this letter written
to? my brethren. verse 16. Do not be deceived, my beloved brethren.
Verse 19. So then, my beloved brethren.
James 2:1My
brethren, do not hold the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Lord of glory,
with partiality. This sort of statement can only be made to Jewish
believers. And you can go through the rest of this letter and discover that
quite clearly, James is writing to Jewish believers. There were very few Jews,
if any, who were Biblically illiterate. Almost all Jews knew the Old Testament
and were schooled and trained in the Old Testament, and so whenever we read a
book of the New Testament, like Matthew, or Hebrews, or James that was written
specifically to Jewish believers, we must make sure we have a proper
understanding of the Old Testament also. We will see how this plays into James
2.
So, James, the
brother of Jesus, is the author. We have also learned who James was writing to
– Jewish believers. Now, to round out the picture, we must understand his
occasion for writing. We must discern the reason James wrote this letter. What
issues were they facing? What questions did they need answered? What struggles
did they have?
James tells these
Jewish believers how to stand up under persecution. How to stand up under
temptation. He talks to them about the importance of obeying the Word, rather
than just learning it. He warns them against showing favoritism toward the rich
in the church. He tells how dangerous the tongue is and we need to watch what
we say and to whom we say it. He tells them that if you think you are wise, the
best way to show it is by living a Godly life. He warns them against pride and
tells them how pride leads to strife in the church. He tells them not to judge
one another and not to boast about your future. He reminds them that the rich
will be judged for how they used their power and riches. He closes with some
careful instructions about prayer and helping restore wayward Christians.
Do you want to know
what the Jewish believers were struggling with? They were struggling with how
to live with one another in this new church! It was all so new to them. They
had trouble getting along with one another. They had trouble knowing how much
of the Old Testament law they still had to keep, and if they were supposed to
keep any of it. They had trouble knowing who to put into positions of authority
in the church. They had trouble with facing persecution – especially when it
came from other Jews who used to be their friends. They had trouble knowing how
to pray, and when to pray and what to pray for.
These are the
questions that new Christians ask about how to live as a Christian. James is
giving them a crash course in discipleship. “You’re going to face persecution –
here’s how to handle it. The rich are going to try to get power in the church –
don’t let them. There will be some who will try to sound wise and educated – if
they truly are wise, they will show it by their conduct. One of the biggest
problems in church is gossip, so watch your tongue. Prayer is vitally important
for the health of the church, so make sure you pray.”
This is
Christianity 101. This is Christian boot camp. These are Christian basics. This
is practical, down to earth stuff.
And what is one of
the main questions that every new Christian asks? What about works? Every new
Christian I have ever talked to who has clearly understood that justification
is by faith alone in Christ alone has asked “So…I don’t have to do anything?
Nothing at all? I just believe in Jesus and that’s it?”
In Romans, Paul
clearly defines the Gospel. Chapters 1-3 explain our sinful condition. Chapters
4-5 explain that justification is by grace alone through faith alone in Christ
alone no works at all anywhere. And what does the imaginary objector say in
Romans 6:1? This imaginary objector basically says, “Well, if that’s true, why
can’t I sin all I want?” There’s the question. Paul explained the gospel so
clearly the person he was explaining it to said, “Well if I can be declared
righteous simply by faith in Christ with no works at all, why can’t I just sin
all I want?” The same question is asked again in Romans 6:15.
D. Martin Lloyd
Jones says: “If a man preaches justification by works, no one would ever raise
this question. If a man’s preaching is, ‘If you want to be Christians, and if
you want to go to heaven, you must stop committing sins, you must take up good
works, and if you do so regularly and constantly, and do not fail to keep on at
it, you will make yourselves Christians, you will reconcile yourselves to God,
and you will go to heaven.’ Obviously, a man who preaches in that strain would
never be liable to this misunderstanding. Nobody would say to such a man,
‘Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound?’, because the man’s whole
emphasis is just this, that if you go on sinning you are certain to be damned,
and only if you stop sinning can you save yourselves…
When people hear
that salvation is by grace alone,
through faith alone, in Christ alone, the natural reaction is, “So what
about good works?” Paul gives one answer
in Romans 6. He gives a different answer in 1 Corinthians 3. Jesus answers this
question in places in many of His parables. John answers this question in the
book of 1 John. James gives us an answer
in James 2:14-26. James is writing to a new church filled with new believers
struggling with how to live out their new identity in Christ. They are facing
all of the questions and all of the struggles that new believers face – and
among these questions is one that we all struggle with as well. “I’ve believed
in Jesus for eternal life, but what role does works play?”
James’ reason for
writing? To instruct them on the basics of Christian living. What is the
specific question he is answering in James 2:14-26? What role does works play in the Christian life? That is the
historical-cultural context. But we still need to look at the grammatical
context. That is, we look at the words James uses, and what they mean. We look
at the sentence structure he uses and how the paragraphs are formed. We look at
the flow of the arguments and the basis for those arguments.
This passage hinges
on correctly understanding four key terms. Correctly defining terms is the key
to understanding the grammatical context of any passage. To correctly
understand James 2:14-26, you must have accurately defined the words “save,”
“dead,” “justify” and “perfect.” We will define these as we go through the
text.
James begins in
James 2:14 by asking two questions. First, James 2:14. What does it profit,
my brethren, if someone says he has faith but does not have works?
So right from the
start, the issue is not eternal life, but profit. The question is, “What is
profitable? What is beneficial? What will help most in your Christian life?
Faith or works?” And then we come to the second question: Can faith save
him?
This is a negative
rhetorical question in the Greek which means that the implied answer is an
emphatic no. Can faith save him? No, of course not. Another way of translating
it that brings this out could be, “Faith cannot save him, can it?”
Remember Ephesians
2:8-9? We read there, “by grace you are saved through faith.” In Ephesians 2,
we read that we are saved by faith. But here, James says that faith cannot
save. So are these two verses in contradiction? No they are not. Why not?
Because of the definition of the word “save.” The word “save” is defined as “to
deliver” and must always be understood in context.
It does not mean to
be delivered or saved from hell and given eternal life unless the context
indicates that this is the meaning. In Ephesians 2, the context tells us that
our salvation, our deliverance is from sin and the eternal consequences of sin.
So Ephesians 2 is talking about being delivered from sin.
But is that what James
2 is talking about? No, not even close. The context tells us what we are saved,
or delivered from. Look at James 2:12-13. So speak and so do as those who
will be judged by the law of liberty. For judgment is without mercy to the one
who has shown no mercy. Mercy triumphs over judgment. These verses are
talking about some sort of judgment that believers will face. So you see, James
brackets the passage we are considering with this theme of a judgment that
Christians will face. And it apparently is a judgment based on our works. There is only one judgment of this
sort in the Bible. In fact, though there are several different times and forms
of judgment in the Bible, the only one
Christians will face is the judgment seat of Christ, sometimes called the Bema.
It is there that we will be judged according to our works done in the body,
whether good or evil (2 Cor. 5:10). It is there that reward is handed out and
eternal privileges are distributed.
And it is what
James has in mind right here. He says that when we stand before the judgment
seat of Christ, although we will have the wonderful gift of eternal life, the
issue that day will be what you did in this life with the gifts and talents and
abilities God gave you. “In that day,” James says, “faith alone will not
profit.” These new Christians have asked, “What role does works play?” and
James has answered, “Before the judgment seat of Christ, it is works that will
be profitable.”
Faith alone in
Christ alone gets you into heaven. Works earn you reward in heaven. If all you
have is faith in Christ, that will get you into heaven, but faith will not save
your reward, or inheritance or profit that could have been yours in heaven.
When Christians ask, “Why can’t I sin all I want?” the most basic Biblical
answer is: “Because you will lose heavenly reward.”
Caring for our Christian Brethren (2:15-17)
Now, James is a
very practical pastor, and so he sets out to illustrate and apply this for his
readers in James 2:15-16.
James 2:15-16. If a brother or sister is naked and destitute of
daily food, and one of you says to them, “Depart in peace, be warmed and
filled,” but you do not give them the things which are needed for the body, what
does it profit?
James says, “Look,
one of your Christian brothers or sisters is without clothes and is starving.
And you learn of their need, and so you go to them and say, ‘I believe God can
supply for all your needs. I will pray for you. I have faith that God can give
you clothes and fill your belly’ how did that help them or you?” Jesus didn’t
say, “If you see someone who is thirsty and tell them you believe God can
quench their thirst” then that’s good enough. Jesus said that if you give a cup
of cold water in His name, you will not lose your reward in heaven (Matt.
10:42).
James says the same
thing here. He says that when you are standing before Christ in heaven, and He
asks you how you have helped those who were in need, it is not going to be a
satisfactory answer to say, “Well, I had faith that God could help them. I
believed that God would take care of their needs.” Jesus will say, “You should
have helped them. You should have met their needs.” On that day, all the faith
in the world will not be profitable. You need works. On that day, faith will be
useless. Which is exactly what we read in James 2:17.
James 2:17. Thus also faith by itself, if it does not have
works, is dead. Here is another one
of those terms to define. What does the word “dead” mean? Useless. Ineffective.
We could probably even say in context, unprofitable. It never in the Greek, in
the Hebrew, or even in English means “non-existent.” There are some who teach
that a dead faith is no faith at all. But the definition of dead is useless, and unproductive. Ineffective.
Unprofitable. It doesn’t mean “non-existent.” When we stand as Christians
before the Bema seat, Christ looks at our works, not at our faith. Faith is
dead, useless on that day. Faith is unprofitable.
James also implies
here that works are profitable in this life also. They first of all profit the
person who we help with our works. Feeding somebody helps get rid of their
hunger. Clothing somebody helps keep them warm. So works are profitable at the
Bema, and profitable in helping others. But James says that works are
profitable even beyond this. He implies here in verse 17, and will get into
much greater detail later, that works help energize and mature our faith, but
they do not save us from hell.
This is a
challenging thought for some people to understand or even accept. We are so
convinced sometimes that there is no connection between faith and works, we do
not see how works can help energize and mature our faith. So in James 2:18,
someone objects to what James is teaching. We come in James 2:18 to someone who
doesn’t really like what James is teaching, and so they voice an objection.
James has apparently had this conversation with other Jews before, and he knows
what some of them are thinking. So he includes it here in his letter.
The Objection to James (James 2:18-19)
Now the problem
here is what exactly the objector says. There is much disagreement here on how
far we should take the objector’s quotes. And I’ll tell you right now, you
cannot tell just by looking at the quotation marks in your Bible. You see,
Greek does not have punctuation like we do. They do not have quotation marks.
When we want to show what a person says, we bracket it with quotation marks.
But Greek didn’t have this, so authors had to use other things to show when a
quote started and when it ended.
In James 2:18, we
read But someone will say. So James does open the quote in the normal
way by introducing the objector. James 2:20. But do you want to know, O
foolish man,…
James 2:18-19. But someone will say, “You have faith, and I have
works. Show me your faith without your works, and I will show you my faith by
my works. You believe that there is one God. You do well. Even the demons
believe—and tremble!” James 2:20 is where James begins to respond to his objector. What
is the objector saying? He is basically saying that there is no true connection
between faith and works. Let me reword the objection here to help you
understand it.
“But someone is going to say, ‘All right then!
Let’s say that you have correct beliefs and I have correct actions. Go right
ahead! Take some belief of yours and make it visible by means of your actions.
And if you can do that (but, of course, you can’t!), then I will take my
actions and will make my belief visible through them (utterly impossible!)
“Oh, I know! You’ll
claim that your faith in the unity of God is demonstrated by your good conduct.
I disallow that claim. The demons also believe the same thing you believe and
they don’t do good. They only tremble!'”
Do you see what the
objector is saying? It’s somewhat difficult to grasp. He is saying that beliefs
do not result in actions, and actions do not reveal beliefs. And he uses the
cardinal doctrine of Judaism as a test case – that God is one. The objector
says, “Look, you believe that God is one and as a result, you live as you think
you should. But there are a lot of people who live their life just as good as
you do, but they don’t believe that God is one. And so actions do not reveal
beliefs.”
“Furthermore,” the
objector says, “let’s take this belief again and apply it to demons. They
certainly believe that God is one. They are good theologians. But they
certainly don’t do good works. They do evil works. So again, correct beliefs do
not result in actions. There is no connection between faith and works. People
can believe what they believe without it effecting their works, and people can
do whatever they want to do without it revealing what they believe.”
Let me apply this
to a modern day situation. One that is near and dear to all of us: Christians
who do not have good works in their life. Look at it from both perspectives.
First, take their beliefs. They say they believe in Jesus for eternal life.
They believe that Jesus Christ is God’s Son, was born of a virgin, lived a sinless
life, died on the cross for their sins, was buried and raised to life three
days later. But their life is in shambles. They sin constantly. This objector
in James 2 would say, “See? Their faith has no connection with their works.”
And then take
exhibit B. Mormons and Jehovah’s Witnesses and Buddhists. We know that they all
have incorrect beliefs about God and Jesus Christ and eternal life. But many of
them live much better lives than the average Christian! So once again, this
objector has seemingly proved his point. Good actions do not reveal correct
beliefs. There seems to be no connection between faith and works.
Now, James is going
to respond to this and point out the error in a masterful way in verse 20 and
following. But before we look at that, I want to make one point about verse 19
before we do. I cannot tell you how many times I have been accused by other
Christians of teaching easy-believism because I teach that the only thing one
has to do to receive eternal life is believe in Jesus for it. Now, first of
all, it’s not me who teaches this, it’s the Bible. But without fail, the only
verse these accusers quote at me is James 2:19. They always say, “Well, it has
to be more than just believe, because the demons believe and they aren’t
saved.” I always sigh when I hear that. Those who use such an argument have
only revealed their complete ignorance of the passage they have just quoted.
First of all, they
are not quoting James, but an objector to James. That’s like quoting Satan when
he tempts Christ and then calling it truth. If you are going to quote
Scripture, quote someone is teaching the truth, rather than someone who is
objecting to the truth. But even beyond this, what is it the demons believe
here? They believe that God is one. That God is unified. Now since when is that
a belief that has ever given anybody eternal life? All Jews believe that God is
One. All Muslims believe that God is One. But how many Jews and Muslims have
eternal life because they believe that God is One?
Zero! You do not
get eternal life by believing that God is One. You get eternal life by
believing in Jesus for it. And the demons have never and will never believe in
Jesus for eternal life. Why not? Because it hasn’t been offered to them. Jesus
did not die for the sins of demons. No demon believes in Jesus for eternal
life. So don’t allow people to tell you that it has to be more than just
believe because the demons believe. That is ripping this verse completely out
of context.
The Response of James to the Objection (2:20-26) But let us get to
the rebuttal of James in James 2:20. James
2:20. But do you want to know, O foolish man, that faith without works is dead?
James begins his
rebuttal by repeating what he said in verse 17. He said there that faith
without works is dead. Works empowers and energizes faith. Works make faith
profitable. James says, “So, you don’t believe that there is a connection
between faith and works? Let me show you what the Bible says.” Now the objector
used one of the cardinal Jewish theological beliefs to make his case – the
truth out of Deuteronomy 6 that God is One. So James says, “Oh yeah? Two can
play that game.” And James, to make his case, uses the premier figure of faith
in the Old Testament, the father of faith and the father of all JewsJames uses
the example of Abraham.
James 2:21. Was not Abraham our father justified by works when
he offered Isaac his son on the altar? Some critics look at this and see a
contradiction in the Bible. Paul, in Romans 3-4 and in Galatians 2-3 holds up
Abraham as the father of faith because he believed God and so was justified by
his faith. He says that Abraham was justified by faith, apart from works! But
James says exactly the opposite, that Abraham was justified by works.
To understand what
is going on, you need to understand that Paul and James are talking about two
completely different events in the life of Abraham. Paul, in saying that
Abraham was justified by faith, refers to the events in Genesis 15 where God
promises to Abraham that he will be the father of many nations and that the
Messiah would come through Abraham. And we read in Genesis 15:6 that Abraham
believed God and his faith was credited to him as righteousness. He was
declared righteous in the sight of God. He was justified before God. And this
is exactly what we read in Romans 4:3 and Galatians 3:6. How do we get eternal
life? How are we justified? The same way Abraham was. By faith alone.
But James says that
Abraham was justified by works. But do you notice when James says this
happened? …when he offered Isaac his son on the altar. When was that?
This was 15 years later in Genesis 22! Abraham was justified, or declared
righteous by God in Genesis 15, but then he was also justified, or declared
righteous again in Genesis 22. Only this second time, it was not by God, but by
men.
Justification does
not mean “get eternal life.” It means “to declare righteous.” And we can only
tell by context who is doing the declaring. The Scripture contains two
different kinds of justification. The first is the kind we are most aware of.
It is justification through faith alone in the sight of God. Galatians 3:11
talks about being justified in the sight of God. The other kind of
justification though, is not through faith, but is through works and is in the
sight of men. This is the kind of justification James is talking about here and
the kind of justification Abraham received in Genesis 22. Paul hints at this
second kind of justification in Romans 4:2.
James is a Bible
scholar and he knows that Abraham had faith in Genesis 15, but he is pointing
out to his objector here that Abraham’s faith was maturing and being energized
by his works. This is what he says in James 2:22. James 2:22. Do you see that faith was
working together with his works, and by works faith was made perfect?
The word perfect
in the Greek means mature. Our faith, our relationship, out intimacy, our
fellowship with God, matures and grows and develops only as we live in
obedience to Him. Do you want to know why the faith of some grows cold? Because
they do not work. Do you want to know why some Christians lack vibrancy and joy
and the intimacy and closeness with God they wish they had? Because they don’t
have works. Do you want to know why God sometimes feels distant and like you
are out of fellowship with Him? Because you don’t have works. Do you want to
know why some Christians always seem to be immature and never grow? Because
they don’t have works! Do you want to know why some Christians always struggle
with sin? Because they don’t do the works that they can do. Good works causes
our faith to grow. Works help keep your faith alive and vibrant and exciting
and growing.
For Abraham, it
took a long time for his faith to mature. As it does for us also. He
experienced ups and downs. He doubted God for a while. He lied about his wife.
He got involved in sexual immorality with his maidservant Hagar. He was not a
good father to Ishmael. Abraham had some serious sin issues. But his faith was
maturing because even though he had numerous failures, he was trying day by day
to walk with God. This all comes to light between Genesis 15 and Genesis 22. In
Genesis 15, Abraham believed God and so was justified in the sight of God. But
it was not until Genesis 22 that Abraham’s faith had matured enough through his
works that people began to think of him as righteous also.
This is what James
2:23 points out. James 2:23. And the
Scripture was fulfilled which says, “Abraham believed God, and it was accounted
to him for righteousness.” And he was called the friend of God.
Here we have the
whole spectrum from Genesis 15 to Genesis 22 condensed down into one verse.
Justification in the sight of God eventually led to justification in the sight
of men. Do you see that little phrase there at the end of James 2:23, “and he
was called God’s friend”? Who do you think called him that? The servants of
Abraham, and the people who lived near Abraham had heard how God spoke to him
and had heard how Abraham had promised to follow God and obey him completely.
And so they watched him to see what he would do. It’s like us when we become a
Christian, and our friends, family and co-workers watch us to see if there will
be any change. That is what they did with Abraham. They watched him – for 15
years. Sometimes he seemed righteous. Sometimes he didn’t. During this whole
time, Abraham had been claiming to have been declared righteous by God. Many
people who witnessed his life, however, may have been skeptical.
But then something
happened,…God asked Abraham to take his one and only son, the son that Abraham
had waited 100 years for, the only son of his inheritance, God asked Abraham to
take that son, and go offer him up as a sacrifice on an altar. What did Abraham
do? Genesis 22:3 says that Abraham left early the next morning. He did not wait
around. He did not question God’s request. He obeyed, and he obeyed quickly.
And what happened? You all know the story. God stopped the knife of Abraham
just before it took the life of Isaac, and gave in his place a ram from among
the thorns. You can believe that news of this spread quickly, and Abraham’s
faith was make evident to all, and when Abraham went walking by, people would
say, “That man is God’s friend.” He was called the friend of God. He was
justified in the sight of men.
Do you want to be
known as a friend of God? Jesus tells us how in John 15:24. He says there, “You
are my friends if you do what I command.” We have been saved by faith alone in
Christ alone. We are headed for heaven. We are the children of God. But faith
alone in Christ alone does not make you the friend of God. And what does it
take to be the friend of God? Jesus said, “You are my friend if you do what I
command.” Abraham did what God commanded, and he was called God’s friend. Faith
alone gave Abraham justification in the eyes of God. Works gave Abraham
justification in the eyes of men. They looked at him and said, “Yes, he is
righteous. He is God’s friend.”
This is what James
says yet again a third time in James 2:24.
James 2:24. You see then that a man is justified by works, and not by
faith only.
So James has done a
pretty good job refuting the objector. He has clearly shown that there is a
connection between faith and works. While it is true that works do not really
reveal what a person believes, works are
intimately connected with faith for works help faith mature. Works energize our
faith. Works make our faith vibrant.
But James is not
done. James knew that for many of his readers, Abraham was a hero. He was the
“first Jew.” He was their founding father. If you could take Thomas Jefferson,
George Washington, and Abe Lincoln and put them all into one person, together,
they would not equal the way the Israelites felt about their forefather
Abraham. So, while all Jews wanted to be like Abraham, some of them may have
been saying “Well James, we see your point, but Abraham’s faith was so for
beyond the level of ours, that what you’re saying doesn’t really seem to apply
to us.” So, James gave another example. And this example is the exact opposite
of Abraham. It’s found in James 2:25. James
2:25. Likewise, was not Rahab the harlot also justified by works when she
received the messengers and sent them out another way?
Rahab was the exact
opposite of Abraham. Abraham was man. Rahab was a woman. Abraham was the father
of Israel. Rahab was a Gentile. Abraham lived a pretty good life, so most Jews
thought. Rahab was a prostitute. But James says that even Rahab was justified
by her works when she received the messengers and sent them out another way.
And if anything, her faith matured much faster than Abraham’s.
For the two
Israelite spies showed up in Jericho, and stayed with Rahab, and probably told
her that God was going to destroy Jericho and give the promised land to Israel.
And Rahab believed what God had said, and so was justified in the sight of God.
And maybe she told the spies that she believed, and so would they please spare
her and her family when they destroyed Jericho? But they could not actually
know if she was telling the truth or not, and so they asked her to energize her
faith with works. They told her to protect them, hide them, let them escape
without getting caught, put her own life in danger by not revealing where they
had went, then gather her family members into her house, and lower a scarlet
cord from her window in the wall, and God would deliver her.
And this is what
she did, and so she was justified by her works in the sight of men. She acted
in faith, and by so doing, she saved the lives of the two spies, and she saved
her own life and the life of her family when Jericho fell to the Israelites.
Incidentally, as we see from Matt. 1:5, Rahab was further blessed by God to
become a part of the Messianic line.James closes his argument with an analogy
from our body in James 2:26. James
2:26. For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is
dead also.
Just as the spirit energizes and
makes the body useful, so works energizes faith and makes faith productive and
profitable. When we stand before Christ at the Bema, the question will be “Was
your faith profitable or dead and useless?”
Conclusion
What place do works have in the life
of the Christian? They don’t get us eternal life. They don’t help us keep
eternal life. They don’t prove we have eternal life. But they do make our faith
profitable for that day when we stand before the Bema seat, and they do help us
have better fellowship with other Christians and they do help our faith mature
and grow as God wants it to.
Can a person believe in Jesus and not
have works? Well, probably everybody will have some works, but those who
neglect good works are missing out on all that God has for them here and now,
are ruining their witness with the world, are destroying their fellowship with
other Christians, and will miss out on the rewards they could have had in
heaven. Are works important? You bet they are. They will save us from a
negative judgment at the Bema, they help justify us before men, and they
energize our faith here and now.
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