Walk the Talk: A Study of the Book of James

The book of James is actually a letter from James, the half-brother of Jesus, to the Jewish Believers that are scattered around the countries of the world. James is one of the earliest New Testament books and was written before Paul’s missionary work was completed and at a time when the Church was still made up largely of Hebrew Christians.
Hegesippus, a 2nd century Christian writer, says that James had an unusual nickname. He was in the habit of entering alone into the temple and was frequently found upon his knees begging forgiveness for the people. Consequently, his knees became hard like those of a camel. That’s the kind of man I want to read after! I want to hear what old “Camel Knees” has to say about the Christian life and how to live it!


Recognize the Reality: Trials Will Come!

Recognize the Reality: Trials Will Come!
In the opening verses of his epistle, James tells us that we WILL suffer. He emphatically says, ‘…when you fall into various trials.’ Not IF but WHEN! I wish it did say IF. I know that this is not a comforting thought, but it seems that suffering is a strange little tool that God uses to work into our lives those things that He just can’t work any other way. What is God up to when it seems He doesn’t always come through and you fall into these ‘various trials.’


Let’s Talk About Trials

Any time in your life there is a trial, heartache, or suffering, it is God, who loves you, that has filtered that intruder through His will and allowed that event to manifest.  My ability to praise God through my tears, when my world is crumbling around me, is not because of how I FEEL. I must KNOW something! What is it that I know as a Believer that allows me to rejoice in the midst of trials?


Suffering: God’s Super Tool!

The concept of temptation and trial are often used interchangeably by those who don’t grasp the significance of the difference between the two. James is teaching us that trials come from God and are used to grow and mature us. They may not be pleasant, but they are never an invitation to sin. Temptation, on the other hand, comes from Satan and is an effort to take advantage of our natural vulnerabilities. Trials are intended to do us good, while temptation is intended to do us in!

Receiving the Word in Suffering

James assures us as we move through our tests and trials that God is working greatness and maturity into our lives. He now encourages us to respond to these opportunities with certain qualities. Our patient response will allow the trial to ultimately do us good and work strengths into us that we can’t get any other way. These five responses are noted by James as totally necessary for the Word of God to be properly ‘engrafted’ in you in order to save your soul.

The Word of God is Like

The subject to date has been the importance of the Word of God in our lives and our ability to understand what God is up to, particularly in the areas where we experience difficulty and suffering. We are to ask God (vs.5) for that kind of wisdom. The primary tool that God uses to answer that request is to speak to us through His Word. James uses three similes to describe what the Word of God is like.