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	<title>Little Flowers Community &#187; Book of James</title>
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		<title>The Book of James &#8211; Part 8</title>
		<link>http://littleflowers.ca/2010/06/james-8/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 13 Jun 2010 16:16:42 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Book of James]]></category>
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In the first half of James 5, we are warned about the dangers of  injustice, impatience and divided loyalty in the community of faith and  in God&#8217;s Kingdom.  However, James goes on the show that, in the midst of  our brokenness, redemption and love are the pervading reality.
“Is any one of you [...]]]></description>
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<p>In the first half of James 5, we are warned about the dangers of  injustice, impatience and divided loyalty in the community of faith and  in God&#8217;s Kingdom.  However, James goes on the show that, in the midst of  our brokenness, redemption and love are the pervading reality.</p>
<p><strong>“Is any one of you in trouble? He should pray. Is anyone happy?  Let  him sing songs of praise. Is any one of you sick? He should call  the  elders of the church to pray over him and anoint him with oil in  the  name of the Lord. And the prayer offered in faith will make the  sick  person well; the Lord will raise him up. If he has sinned, he will  be  forgiven. Therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for  each  other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous man is   powerful and effective.  Elijah was a man just like us. He prayed   earnestly that it would not rain, and it did not rain on the land for   three and a half years. Again he prayed, and the heavens gave rain, and   the earth produced its crops.”</strong></p>
<p>Some Christians have taken this teaching to suggest that all illness  can and will be healed miraculously through the prayer of the faithful.   Some even take it so far as to suggest seeing medical professionals to  be a compromise of faith, thus invalidating the opportunity for God to  work miraculously.  This idea is offensive, dangerous and insupportable  through Scripture.  Yes, we believe that we should always pray for the  sick among us, believing that God can and may miraculously heal them.   However, James is presenting neither a guarantee nor an admonition  against seeing doctors.</p>
<p>Rather, when we read these words in contrast to the earlier challenge  to be patient and long-suffering.  Not only were the early Christian  communities often without the means to see healers, but their status as  enemies of the Empire made it even harder for them to seek out such  help.  To further highlight the problem, their unparalleled commit to  serve  the needs of the poor meant that there was a much higher ratio of  sick people (without means) in their communities and in their homes.   This radical hospitality is the root what later developed into hospices  and then hospitals.  In the face of these challenges might have led some  to withdraw from their commitment to the poor (thus James 5:1-6),  becoming impatient with god and others (thus James 5:7-11) and even  begin to bargain with God to free them from their circumstances (thus  James 5:12).  In this light, the necessity on trusting God in the midst  of such suffering an important reminder.  Our obedience must never be  contingent on our circumstances.</p>
<p>It is important to note here how much our governments and other  institutions have removed the need for Christians to practice such  radical hospitality.  While we should be grateful for the benefits such  changes afford those in dire need, we must <em><strong>never</strong></em> believe  that this in <em><strong>any way</strong></em> diminishes our personal and  grass-roots communal responsibility to those suffering injustice.  Both  locally and globally, there is more than enough opportunity to embrace  the radical hospitality that James takes for granted as being central to  living the Christian life.  We have strayed from this central aspect of  our vocation as the Church and must do all we can to recover it.</p>
<p>Like Jesus so often did, James links the healing of the body with the  forgiveness of sin, reinforcing that God&#8217;s Kingdom, His shalom,  concerns itself with the whole person (indeed, all of creation).   Therefore, while our physical circumstances do not change the obedience  we are called to, neither should assume for a minute that those needs  are any less important to our Father God than other more (so-called)  &#8220;spiritual&#8221; concerns.  Such faithfulness is not just characteristic of  the &#8220;super-elite&#8221; of His Kingdom.  After all, in this Scripture, James  masterfully demonstrates this by calling the revered and honoured  prophet, Elijah, &#8220;a man just like us&#8221;.  Again, he is not teaching us  that, in prayer, God will do whatever we demand of Him (See Matthew  6:5-15 &amp; James 4:1-3), but rather calls us to humble, submitted and  deeply dependent faithfulness to God.</p>
<p><strong>&#8220;My brothers, if one of you should wander from the truth and  someone  should bring him back, remember this: Whoever turns a sinner  from the  error of his way will save him from death and cover over a  multitude of  sins.&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>For any who would suggest that James&#8217; teaching is a call to moral  perfection beyond human means, this section should silence that.  While  in no way making excuses for compromise, in the face of the challenge he  has mentioned and in light of the difficult demands of radical  obedience, he knows that many will wander from the truth.  Be it through  deception, immaturity, rebellion or some other factor, James  acknowledges that our human brokenness makes such occurrences expected.   Again avoiding the empty and hypocritical posture of judgment, he calls  us to approach these wanderers with humility, grace and love.  By  beginning the sentence with &#8220;my brothers&#8221;, James is affirming that these  wanderers are also our sisters and brothers, whom we should pursue with  the same loyalty and devotion.  It is a love that wants only the best  for them, hoping to save them from the consequences of their sin,  consequences that we ourselves are only spared of through grace.</p>
<p>The Epistle of James is a book that has much to teach us about how we  are to live in faith together.  So clearly rooted in the teachings and  example of Jesus Christ, to ignore or minimize the import of what it  teaches us is to ignore or minimize the call of Christ to His  disciples.  Being a Christian is about actively following our Lord,  submitting every aspect of our lives to Him- our beliefs, convictions,  attitudes, actions, priorities and purposes.  Take some time this week  to read through the entirety of James, perhaps twice.  Consider what it  means for you and the community of faith which you are a part of.</p>
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