James 5:7-12
In 4:11-5:6 James warns his readers against reacting to the
suffering of their present circumstances by speaking evil against one another,
attempting to gain control over their lives by making plans without God, and by
clinging to accumulated wealth as if it could give them the life and peace they
crave. Now James concludes this long section by encouraging his readers to be
patient.
James is returning to where he began his letter. In his opening
lines, he encourages his readers to be counting their current trials as joy
because this testing of their faith "produces steadfastness," that is
steadfastness of faith. It is this steadfastness of faith, this turning to God
and counting on Him through all of our ups and downs that leads to our being,
in the end, "perfect and complete, lacking in nothing." So now James speaks again of our need to wait
on God. There is an interesting pattern here. There are two sections on
patience, each followed by a warning against sins of the tongue.
James calls upon his readers to patiently wait for
the coming52 of the Lord. This patience seems to have a
two-fold outworking. First, it is the kind of patience that does not
seek to retaliate for wrongs committed against us as Christians. We leave the
execution of justice to our Lord when He returns to judge His adversaries. Second,
patience has a positive element, which works itself out as endurance and
perseverance. It means that we do not grow weary in well doing (Galatians 6:9; 2 Thessalonians 3:13; Hebrews 12:3).
James gives us an example of this kind of patience
by using the illustration of the farmer, who patiently waits for the early and
late rains, which will produce the precious fruit of the ground (verse 7b).
-Be patient--example: like the farmer, 5:7&8
-Do not grumble against one another, 5:9
-Look at the steadfastness and patience of the prophets and
Job, 5:10 &11
-Do not swear,
but let your yes be yes and your no be no, 5:12
Notice that James begins the section with the word
"therefore." James is tying
this to the previous section. This is his conclusion to his warnings just
before. Therefore, since there is no future in speaking against each other,
making plans on your own, or clinging to your wealth, what are you to do when
you are pressed and discouraged in the midst of ongoing or difficult trials?
You are to be patient "until the coming of the Lord."
So, we are to fix our eyes on Jesus' return. This is to be the
reality that frames our present experience and gives us the perspective to live
in our current situations. And as James says later in verse 8, "the coming
of the Lord is at hand." Does this mean that James thought Jesus would
return in his lifetime and that he was wrong? How can we believe that the
Lord's coming is "at hand" when this was written almost 2000 years
ago? It means that Jesus' coming is always, eternally at hand, that His coming
back is closer, more real to us than the next event in our lives. It is the
really real around which we orient our lives. His coming truly has been at hand
throughout Christian history.
But what do we usually regard as being most at hand to us? It
may seem like our immediate difficulties or our uncertain financial or
relational futures. But this is not so. We can be patient for the Lord's coming
is the certain and near future of our lives. This is the most likely event to
take place: it is certain that He is near and that He will indeed come. Nothing
can stop this event.
What does it mean to be patient? James uses the illustration of
the farmer to indicate that patience is connected to waiting. The farmer waits
for "the precious fruit of the earth" and in this waiting, he is
patient "over it until it receives the early and the late rain." The
farmer is waiting for the fruit. This is what he has his mind set upon when he
is planting, when he is waiting. Knowing that it is coming, he is able to be
patient through not only the early but the late rain. It may seem, if he only
looks at the time passing or considers the dreariness of more rain, that this
fruit may never come at all. But the farmer doesn't focus on these things. He
is not waiting for the rain, but for the fruit. We are waiting for the Lord's
coming, a reality that is "at hand." Focusing on, remembering this
truth can allow us to be patient through the "early" struggles and
those still to come. There will be a harvest! The Lord guarantees it.
Being patient, James goes on to say, involves establishing our hearts.
Being patient is
an action of faith. It is something we take up, something we actively choose.
Patience, then, is not just an absence of anxiety, something we can be when
there is nothing to be anxious about. We choose to trust that God is a generous
giver and the source of all good gifts. We choose to count on the fact that God
is not tempting us in the midst of our trials. And, we establish our hearts in
the fact that His coming is indeed near and that we are going to be perfect and
complete, lacking in nothing.
James illustrates the point that being patient is an act of
faith in verse 10, when he turns his readers attention to the prophets who are
examples of "suffering and patience." Trusting in, waiting on God
here and now, with whatever we are facing can and often does involve suffering.
I know so many people right now who are facing major trials such as loss of a
job, or serious illness. There is a great deal of suffering in this world. And
there is a kind of suffering to letting go of our plans and attempts at control
and instead handing everything wholeheartedly over to God. It is not easy and
automatic, is it?
When James calls for patient endurance in 5:7-12,
he gives two negative commands regarding the tongue: (1) Don’t grumble – verse
9; and, (2) Don’t swear – verse 12. As I understand them, the remaining verses
give us examples of the positive use of the tongue. In verses 13-15, the tongue
of the sick person calls for the elders of the church, who pray (using their
tongues) for the sick. The element of confession of sin is also included as a
possibility in verse 15, and confession is then encouraged more generally in
verse 16. Confession and prayer are important uses of the tongue. Elijah is
used as an example of the effectiveness of prayer (verses 17-18). The final two
verses instruct us to reach out to the wayward, seeking to restore them to the
way of truth they once knew. Surely this involves the use of the tongue as
well.
But James is very encouraging. He goes on to say that "we
call those happy who are steadfast." We do? Why? I would have thought he
would say that we call those happy who are not suffering, who have no trials to
deal with. But no, James mentions those who are steadfast in their faith, those
whose hearts are truly established in the Triune God. And we know that this is
true. How wonderful to remain patient in the truth, comforted by God and able
to receive His peace and presence in the midst of whatever we are going
through. Truly these are people able to keep their circumstances from robbing
them of the joy and peace that is ours always in Christ Jesus.
James mentions Job at this point, an interesting choice for an
illustration. Why? Because Job was steadfast in His counting on God to be
the One who would answer Him in the face of terrible suffering and loss. Job's
steadfastness certainly did not arise from focusing on his circumstances, but
on the character of the God he knew--My Redeemer.
Lastly James reminds his readers that they "have seen the
purpose of the Lord, how the Lord is compassionate and merciful." What is
God up to? Why are we going through these things? What will be the end result
of them? James reminds us of the heart of God. Who is He? He is the
compassionate and merciful One. This is what He is up to. Whatever we are
dealing with, we can count on the fact that God's purposes for us come from His
great compassion and mercy. We turn our eyes to this One and away from our
circumstances to feed on and grow in this wonderful truth.
There are two warnings: The first one is in verse 9. James
warns his readers again not to grumble against one another, and again mentions
the Judge. James seems clearly to be speaking of our tendency to grumble
against others in God's family. And it is the same as his earlier warning about
speaking evil against or judging one another. Grumbling is dismissing the
person with a "final" word of judgment from us. It would seem that
establishing our hearts for the Lord's coming and grumbling against our sisters
and brothers are incompatible. And this makes great sense.
When we are grumbling against one another, our focus is not on
God's reality and work in our lives but on the inequalities we see as we focus
on those around us. It is easy to find lots of reasons to grumble at the good
fortunes or bad decisions or extravagances, etc. of our sisters and brothers.
James does not qualify this. He doesn't say "don't grumble
unless you have a good reason to." As soon as we are grumbling, we are
unable to receive God's peace at that time, and we are unable to receive our
brother or sister as a blessing. We are not able to see them as God does.
We are not to grumble that we "may not be judged." In
fact, James goes on to say, "behold, the Judge is standing at the
doors." Like the section preceding this one on the coming of the Lord,
James emphasizes the nearness of God. God is near so that He sees any and every
injustice. Because the God who sees is near we can count on Him to put
everything right, sooner or later. He is very aware of all wrongs all
injustices. We need not grumble or deliver God’s final word of judgment as if
God were blind or absent or uncaring.
When we grumble, it shows we are not content with God's work in
our lives and in those around us. Instead of turning it over to God, we speak
evil against others and so lose our true perspective on the situation. We act
as if God is distant and uncaring. But the truth is that He isn't--He is always
with us, present in our lives. If we refuse to give up our judgments without
mercy of others, God judges us in the same manner. When we refuse to extend
mercy to others, we cannot receive God's mercy extended to us. Furthermore,
when we grumble against one another, we are not living in the wonderful truth
that God never grumbles about us. Have you thought about that? (What happened to Miriam when she grumbled?)
The second warning James strongly warns against using oaths to
back up our words. Instead, he tells us "let your yes be yes and your no
be no..." At the time James was writing, people often backed up their
words by swearing to something. The person taking the oath would take it more
or less seriously depending on what they were swearing by. Basically, what it
came down to is that one could not trust that person's word. One could not be
sure that person would come through at all.
(“to tell you the truth”, “Now I will be honest!” etc.)
We can still do this today even if we do not use oaths anymore.
We can say "yes" but mean only that we will consider it as one
option. They let their circumstances decide whether they would keep their word.
We need to be careful of saying yes lightly--just to sound
willing or because we hope somehow that if we say yes it will work out in the
end. When we say yes, others begin to work and act as if that is the case. (ch.4) We are not to make plans outside of
God's real leading. We are not to say yes without prayer and consideration of
God's work in the situation. Then our yes is an act of trust in God--that He
will enable us to fulfill our commitment. That doesn't mean that even then
sometimes things get in the way, but we have set ourselves, with God's grace,
to be faithful to our word.
When we are not letting our yes be yes and our no be no, we are
doubleminded. And this does not reflect God's deepest character. God is never
doubleminded about us. With God, we can always trust that His yes is yes and
His no is no. He is indeed the "Father of lights with whom there is no
variation or shadow due to change."(1:17) How wonderful to have God Who we can so fully trust.
James repeatedly calls his readers "brethren. This is a very intimate and encouraging
passage. James call to them to be patient is embedded in reminders of the
nearness and compassionate purposes of our triune God. His being "at
hand" is the really real upon which our lives are founded. I hope God uses
these words to enable you to more fully rest in and wait on Him today.
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