Welcome to Wisdom for the Heart with Stephen Davey. Stephen is the president of Wisdom International and he's been teaching the Bible for over four decades. We have a resource that can provide instant answers to your Bible-related questions. it can instantly search through Stephen's four decades of Bible teaching and provide you with biblically faithful answers immediately. If you have a question about the Bible or if you just want to try this out, visit wisdomonline.org slash ask.
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Now here's Stephen. James says, in effect, trials produce single-minded affection for completeness. That's a word that could easily be translated maturity. Maturing is big with James. Why not?
It ought to be because he's talking about faith. that matters to life. He's talking about faith that makes a difference in the world as they see the demonstration of our faith in our works. He sees faith. Growing up.
That's why he talks about maturity over and over and over again. Ladies and gentlemen, putting faith. to work in your life. has more to do with how you respond to trouble. Then perhaps any other thing.
You encounter. There is a connection between suffering and usefulness.
So is it any wonder that the Christians would be questioning this very issue? And that James would dive right into the subject about how to make your faith real. How to bring faith down to earth is going to have a lot to do with the truth about. Trouble. and how to handle it correctly.
And don't miss the fact, by the way, as we begin, that the original audience of James is in deep. Trouble. Don't skip over the last part of verse one where James announces his audience. He says, to the twelve tribes who are dispersed abroad. Greeting.
In general, the word dispersion diaspora. Referred to Jews living outside the world of Palestine. But more specifically, the James audience, many of these Jews had been scattered because of persecution. Claudius, the Roman emperor, was driving the Jews into exile. He was anti-Semitic.
He just hated Jews. It was the heart of the enemy, of course, Satan himself, to so despise this covenant people of God. And so he has had his leaders along the generations who hated them as well. try to rid the world of them, thus bringing the covenant of God to naught.
So many of these Jews were facing the persecution of Claudius. Under his rule, they were exiled from Palestine. They were even driven from Rome. For them, life was very threatening. It was fearful.
It was unsafe. It was dangerous.
So I want you to keep that in mind as you move to verse 2 and beyond. That's the audience of James. But the Jews who had begun to follow Jesus Christ Faced as it were double jeopardy. There was double trouble being Jews. They were now being persecuted by Gentiles, hated and hounded by them.
But because they were Jews who now followed Jesus Christ, they were also hated by their own people. You talk about trouble. They were surrounded by it. It was trouble on every level. Everything for them had changed.
Everything was upside down. They had been forced to leave their homes and run for their lives. To other cities and villages that might give them sanctuary. You know how hard it was for you to move from the home you used to live in to the home you live in now? And you got to pick the date.
But even still All the packing, all the stress, all the questions, all the labor, all the issues, all the details, and you got to choose. that particular time.
So James, with hardly a greeting, begins to discuss the primary subject on their minds. And frankly, every Christian's mind for the last 2,000 years What do you do with trouble? James will begin to answer that, and his answer is loaded with truths about trouble. And I want you to notice, first of all, his basic premise. Look at verse 2.
Consider it all joy, my brethren, when you encounter various. Trials.
Now, I want to begin by having you circle in your text, or at least in your mind, that little word. When? In verse 2. The first of three truths I'll give you that James gives to us about trouble is that trouble is unavoidable.
So at the very outset of this issue, James is telling the believer to expect trouble. Trials are a given. And the truth is, you don't have to go looking for trouble either. It'll find you. all by itself.
Now, there are well-meaning people. You can watch them on. Cable. television, who will preach a way that that if you really have enough faith. Whatever trouble you're having will go away.
I remember watching one man for about 10 minutes who had all of his listening audience send in their credit card statements, and he had them piled up. Around the front of the stage, and he prayed over them, and they were supposed to somehow. disappear If you're really following Jesus, Trials Tribulation becomes a thing of the past. You're going to live on this perpetual mountaintop of good health and lots of wealth and your dream job and perfect relationships and trouble-free lives. That's nonsense.
James Writes it this way, count it all joy. When you encounter Various trials. It'd make a lot more sense To those preachers and to us, though, if we admitted it, if he had said, count it all joy when you escape various trials. I like that version. Joyful is certainly the absence of trials, right?
No, if you're the slave of God. And you want to obey your Master and Lord. You would think that trials would become a thing of the past. Jesus Christ, though, says, Differently in John 16, he says, in the world you will have trouble. He says in Matthew chapter 6: every day will have its share of trouble.
The Christian experience is notably distinctive, not by the absence of trials, but their presence. The question is. What do you do with it? Maybe you've been a Christian long enough to discover The troubling thought you've had to take to the Lord that you really aren't his sheltered people, you are his scattered people, and in every generation he has scattered his people around the world, tantamount to scattering the seeds of the gospel. The second truth change reveals about trouble.
Not only is it unavoidable, It's unlimited. He says at the end of this phrase that we will encounter various Trials, the word various. There's a word that gives us our word, polka dot. Multicolored. And they'll come in all kinds.
All types. The packages are small or large or medium. They will involve everything imaginable. They will involve your health and your relationships and your finances and your job and your future and your social standing and your past and your hopes and your children or the lack of children, on and on. They come in all kinds of sizes, all colors of the rainbow.
James says, you need to understand. in this premise Which sets the stage. For this text, the trouble is unavoidable in trouble is unlimited. He also says that trials are unexpected. He writes, look again, count it all joy when you encounter.
That word encounter various trials is translated in the King James Version. If you happen to have one, it's a wonderful translation. Fall into. That's a wonderful word picture. Of the Greek language that gives us, communicates to us something of the unexpectedness.
you fall into it. You didn't expect that. As you were walking down the path, you didn't expect that pothole and you fell. Into it. In fact, I think it's interesting that the word in this premise translated trials at the end of the phrase, pyrasmos, is linked to another Greek word in the same root meaning just slightly differently, the word pyrates.
Which is translated attacker. We have taken that particular word, pirates, transliterated it to create an English word. Pirate. And that creates even a clearer mental image of the sudden appearance. You imagine you're sailing along, life is really good.
Clear skies. Suns blazing away at the perfect temperature. Wind in the sails, and suddenly you look over as a shadow falls across the deck of your life, and there's a pirate ship.
Some really mean looking guys. And they throw ropes over and they fasten your boat to theirs.
Now, you would expect then, the next verse, since he creates that kind of word picture for us, to tell us how to. Cut the ropes and Sail away. Not quite. Brethren, you could read verse 2. when you encounter a variety of Pirates.
Trials.
Consider it. Or Joy. You might be tempted to think of James like I thought of my professor. He's lost a marble or two. say something like Maybe you think, well, he's an apostle.
He's paid to say things like that. It's going to be in the Bible.
So we expect that from him. You need to understand, he isn't. He isn't saying that you're going to enjoy your trials.
Now James says to consider it. It might help to add the word with, to consider it with. Enjoy. The word consider is a financial term. It means to evaluate.
It means to sum, total it up. It means to reckon. to total, to evaluate. See, the Christian who understands he is the slave of God. James 1 verse 1, you remember?
Can have joy when surrounded by trouble because he happens to be living for the things that matter. Most. His evaluation. The way he totals up life, his values. are reflected in his response.
If our highest value is our health, we're going to be really upset when we lose our health. When what we're living for is money, we're going to be really upset when money Flies away, you see, that's the point. You need to keep in mind as a child of God that God is literally behind it. I like the way one person said it when he wrote, Satan may turn up the heat. But God has his hand on the thermostat.
See, it's that kind of trust It's that kind of submission as the slaves of God. that we evaluate trouble With a joyful spirit, instead of the opposite, which could be you fill in the blank, complaining. Bitterness A resentment An or not. See, that's the opening statement of James. That's his premise.
Consider it joy when you understand God is behind the scenes and you, His slave, encounter various trials. Because God has good in mind. He has a product in mind. We're going to look at the product in just a minute, but before we get to it, I want you to understand something, and I'm going to take James' premise and reword it. You do not get to choose your crosses.
You choose. Your responses. Speaking from his experience as a prisoner in the Nazi concentration camps. Dr. Victor Frankl said this, and I quote him: everything can be taken from a human being but one thing.
The last of human freedoms. The freedom to choose One's attitude. in any given set of circumstances. We can't choose our crosses. We get to choose our responses.
Now, I want you to look at the product. Here it is, verse 3. Look there. Knowing this, The testing of your faith produces Endurance. That's a compound word that means It develops in you the ability to stay under.
to abide under The pressure. Like lungs that have been developed through exercise to stay underwater longer. Or run uphill. Further. Your practical faith that lives out In the world, in your walk, has what he would call staying.
Power.
So let endurance, he goes on, have its perfect In other words, don't short circuit God's work in your life by trying to escape. Let endurance be developed. Stay under. The pressure. Let it have its purpose.
perfect result. The end of verse 4 says that you may be. perfect. And complete, and everybody immediately thinks: well, that rules me out. Perfect.
You need to understand the word perfect here. Refers to undivided affection. You might write that in the margin. Your Bible, undivided affection. Trials have a way of doing that, don't they?
In the midst of suffering. Everything that the world clamors for suddenly becomes nonsense, doesn't it? I mean, imagine, go back to that metal picture again. You got the pirate ship that comes up, straps himself. Your life's in danger, and would you ever think for a moment, what's for launched?
This is the point, all of our clinging to the world. All of our clinging to self, all of our clinging to temporal things begins to lose its grip on our lives and our focus when suffering is to turn to Christ and the sufficiency of Christ. You begin to run. Hebrews says with endurance the race that's set before us. James says, in effect, trials produce single-minded affection for Christ when everything else becomes just a little more silly than it was, and really it ought to be.
He goes on to end verse 4 by saying that that kind of endurance in trials or trying times produces. Completeness. That's a word that could easily be translated maturity. Maturing is big with James. Why not?
It ought to be because he's talking about faith. that matters to life. He's talking about faith that makes a difference. in the world as they see the demonstration of our faith in our works. He sees faith.
Growing up. That's why he talks about maturity over and over and over again. as he exhorts us. Don't try to escape. Stay in there.
God will make you mature, is his point. My wife and I have I've had raised just about finished with our last, but we've had four children. All four children had the same problem. They actually had a lot of problems, but I'll just mention one of them. And this is about an eight months when it became a really big problem.
They got to where they didn't want to go to sleep. in their cribs alone. in the room. And they'd stand up and they'd cry. And then cry.
And they cry and they cry. You see, a sign of physical and mental maturity. is the ability for your child to go to sleep. when they're alone. A sign of spiritual maturity.
Is The ability to rest. Even when God seems absent. And that's going to require Growth in wisdom, isn't it? James knew that we would need it. And so verse 5.
It says, if any of you lacks, wisdom, and he's assuming we do, because that is an imperative. Ask God, exclamation point. Ask God. He will give to all. I love that little word all.
He doesn't have his pets, his favorites. You know, you're at the top of the class, so you get wisdom. You're at the bottom of the class, they afterward do some hard labor, and I'll give you a little bit. No. Gives to all.
generously and without reproach. He gives. Did you notice that James does not say if any man lacks Knowledge. Let him ask of God. There's a big difference between knowledge and wisdom.
Knowledge is is the accumulation of facts. It's data, it's what you learn. Wisdom is knowing how to use what you Learn correctly. You have a lot of knowledge. but cannot make decisions in life.
Why? Because they lack wisdom. It's interesting. But James tells us to ask God. for wisdom.
And by the way, why not? Deliverance. Why not strength? Why not grace? How little do we pray along the lines of James?
when there's trouble. We ask for God to deliver people, deliver us. God has actually introduced that into our lives to develop us. We are praying counter to the movement of God's Spirit in our lives.
Now James is going to move to a warning. Let me take you there quickly. Look at verse 6. But he must ask in faith without any doubting, for the one who doubts is like the surf of the sea. Driven and tossed by the wind.
For that man ought not to expect that he will receive anything from the Lord, being a double-minded man. The average Christian, again, you read that and you think, well, again, this is ruling me out. This is an unfortunate interpretation of this text, James's. actually describing a wicked man who's Like the troubled sea, the word double-minded can literally be translated to sold.
Somebody who has two souls. There is a division in their heart. We would use it. They have two hearts, they have two affections. They're trying to go in two directions at the same time.
That's what he's talking about. He hasn't made up his mind. One day he inclines toward God, the other day he inclines toward the world. James says, in effect, this person says he wants the wisdom of God, but he's keeping all of his options open. Ladies and gentlemen, God does not give wisdom to someone until their only option.
is God.
Now he gives us some perspective.
Now, there are some Bible scholars who believe the book of James is actually a sermon he delivered. And so he transcribed it while he delivered it. I'm not convinced, but one indication of that is that James will be rattling along upon a certain theme, and then he'll just drop in from nowhere an illustration. I like creatures or Our uh in need of doing more often. Notice his illustration in verse 9.
But the brother of humble circumstances is to glory in his high position, and the rich man is to glory in his humiliation, because like flowering grass he will pass away. For the sun rises with a scorching wind and withers the grass, and its flower, literally its petals, fall off. And the beauty of its appearance is destroyed, so too the rich man in the midst of his pursuits will fade away. The point of this illustration is to give us a little perspective. These are both believers.
You have a poor believer and you have a rich believer, but they're going to recognize that suffering levels the ground. And both of them need to recognize their status and their sufficiency in Christ. The poor man needs to consider his high position as a prince of God, even though everything in his life says the opposite. He needs to glory in his exaltation in Christ. The rich man needs to remember.
That his trust is not what he sees around him. His wealth, it can be like a flower with a hot, dry, scorching wind knocking the petals right off it. Both need to recognize their sufficiency is in their master and lord whom they serve. And then James moves. to the promise.
Here's the truly happy man, verse 12. Blessed is the man who perseveres under trial. For once he's been approved. That is tested. He will receive the crown of life which the Lord has promised to those who love him.
Verse 12, by the way, is the concluding statement of James' discussion on trials. It's not the beginning statement of more things. He's going to change the context to temptation as we explore the nature of sin. This verse is a verdict. You are blessed.
You are Fulfill. Later James writes in this verse You're going to experience The culmination of that fulfillment and that satisfaction when you receive. The crowns.
Now, by the way, James is not implying that you earn eternal life by enduring suffering. What he is saying is that the believer Urns. Crowns. from persevering. You don't choose your crosses.
You choose your responsiveness. James says, one day you'll be rewarded. Every time you chose to respond with trust, Humility. And a request for wisdom. and the sum totaling of it up.
as joy. Because you understood God had a product. In mind. Your spiritual maturity. John Phillips recorded in his commentary A story that he heard.
Howard Hendricks deliver at Moody Bible Institute's Annual Founders Week Conference. And he recorded that story in his commentary, Exploring James. Let me just. Of read through it for the sake of time as we wrap up our study. He said.
Howard Hendricks told how he once had the opportunity to play the town's champion. Checkers player. Hendricks was a young fellow at the time and he was so confident. He believed he could take on the old veteran. He was offered the first move.
Which you gladly took? And he decided to set the pace. After a few moves, his opponent put a piece in the line of fire which Hendrix could jump and the man said, well I guess you'll have to jump in. And Hendricks did so, scooping the piece triumphantly off the board. He thought then he had the game in the bag when his opponent did it again, and then again, putting another piece in jeopardy, saying, Well, you're going to have to jump me again.
Hendrix happily took the piece. And then it happened. The old man Picked up one of his checkers and jumped. Jump. Jump?
Jump. And the old man's checker landed At that final jump, in king territory and he announced Crown me. It's a wonderful thing to say. After that, young Hendrix didn't have a chance as piece after piece was pounced on until he had lost them all.
Okay. Then Hendrix made the point. No good checker player minds losing an occasional piece, and he can with joy, so long as he understands he's heading. For a crown. You cannot choose your crosses.
But you can choose your responses. What better way to encourage us all at the end of this discussion? Than to have here James effectively saying to us, one day your crosses will be exchanged. for a crowd.
So play on it. Crowning Day. may soon be here. That was Stephen Davey, and this is Wisdom for the Heart, a production of Wisdom International. Learn more at wisdomonline dot org.