1 John 4
KingComments1 John 4:1
Warning For the Rich
James 5:1. James is addressing the rich people in sharp terms. That was necessary because of their behavior. They reveal themselves as opponents to the poor in whom we can recognize the believing remnant of God’s people. They drag the poor to court (James 2:6). The rich are exerting power over the poor who are dependent on them. When the poor for example were not able to pay the rent of their houses, the rich sued them. Of course they have the judges on their side, for they are corruptible.
The rich cling to their wealth, they rely on it. That’s the cause of the separation between them and God. However, what they are trusting in will be taken away from them. They will be struck by the judgment of God. With a view to that James is calling on the rich to become aware of what is waiting for them. That should make them weep and howl as an expression of repentance about the sins they have committed. If they finally repent, this weeping and howling will be of temporal nature. If they do not repent they will weep and howl forever and ever.
James 5:2. James doesn’t address them as ‘brethren’. These rich people are unbelievers who have gained their riches in a crooked way. The riches that they have are corrupted riches and the nice-looking garments they wear (James 2:2) with which they show off, expose traces that they were eaten by moths. Rotten riches are riches that offer no support at all. Moth-eaten garments are garments that do not give any warmth.
This rebuke of James in the direction of the rich must have sounded strange to his readers, who belong to the twelve tribes. After all, wealth in the Old Testament is generally an evidence of God’s favor. Didn’t He promise them that He would bless them if they were faithful (Deuteronomy 28:1-14)? But that promise regarded a national blessing that the people would receive as a whole if the people as a whole would obey God. But the people as a whole awfully disobeyed God very much with the low point the rejection of the Lord Jesus. Due to that things turned out differently and therefore the case can be that a faithful believer is poor and an ungodly person rich. That is the situation among the twelve tribes to whom James addresses this letter.
James 5:3. The rich are fooling themselves that their gold and silver can make them to enjoy life without limits. James completely overturned that false security. The glitter of these materials, that are so precious for the rich, has not only faded away, but has changed to rust. James is presenting the ultimate result. Just as corruption and moths can decompose and consume materials, rust is a condition that makes materials totally useless. Rust is a process that ends up in total destruction. Everything that these rich people have gained will testify against them. God will show them the uselessness of the treasures they have gathered. These will deliver the proof of their wicked life. Then they will receive the wages that they deserve in the eternal fire (Revelation 20:11-15).
As an additional reproach, James says that they have been busy gathering treasures “in the last days”. It already is foolish for a person to heap up treasures for himself, but it is even more foolish to do that in the last days. He who lives like that is not only selfish and insensitive for the need of others, but also short-sighted and blind for the threatening judgment that will strike him and his possessions.
It applies also as a warning to you as a believer. Don’t let yourself be dragged in the struggle for having more and more. The call of the Christian is not collecting, but giving. A Christian shows Who God is, and God is a Giver.
When James speaks about the last days, how much more should that apply to us. It has never been God’s purpose that a Christian should heap up treasures on earth. Just look at the great Example, the Lord Jesus. You read of Him that He, though He was rich, yet for our sakes He became poor, that we through His poverty might become (spiritually) rich (2 Corinthians 8:9).
The servant of Elisha, Gehazi, is a striking example of how it should not be done. Gehazi had been heaping up treasures through lies and deceit. He got to learn that it was not time yet for that (2 Kings 5:26). He did not have to send back his wealth to Naaman, but the leprosy of Naaman was added to him. The greed for wealth makes a person to become a leper, meaning that it causes a disease that ends up in death. The rich who lives for his wealth walks with death in his shoes.
James 5:4. How did these rich people gain their treasures? They gained them in a most unfair way. They simply kept back the pay of the laborers whom they hired to work on their fields. They profited from the harvest of the work of the laborers and they also had pleasure in the thought that they kept the wages of their laborers in their own pocket. They thought themselves rich, for they thought to be doubling their profit.
James rebukes them by telling them that they were making a miscalculation. They calculate without “the Lord of Sabaoth”. The Lord of Sabaoth is Yahweh of the hosts. It is God in His majestic greatness as the Captain of all heavenly and earthly armies.
The rich close their ears to the cry of the poor, the ones who have been disadvantaged by them, but the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth are not closed. His ears hear two things. The wages that the rich have kept back unjustly are crying out to the Lord and also the cries of the mowers are reaching His ears. The wages that were unjustly kept back are testifying in God’s sight against them. By committing these actions they make themselves violators of the law (Leviticus 19:13; Deuteronomy 24:14-15) and they will be judged as such. God will vindicate the complainers who have called on Him and also make sure that they will be reimbursed.
James 5:5. The rich have excessively fed themselves with all luxury and wanton pleasure that the earth can possibly offer. They did that to the detriment of the poor. There was nothing in their heart that could stop them from living such a life. They “have fattened” their “hearts”. They wholeheartedly gave themselves to this depraved life. That only proves that they have become totally numb. Their conscience does not function anymore.
They gorged like swine. Every day was “a day of slaughter” for them, a day with an abundance of meat. Instead of sharing that with others, they pounced on it and stuffed their fat bodies with it more and more. Their god is their appetite, literally belly (Philippians 3:19).
It is also a possibility that James uses the word ‘day of slaughter’ as an allusion to the risk of the judgment looming menacingly over their heads. For an animal, a day of slaughter means the end of its life. These people get to learn that, while the slaughter of the judgment is near, they happily continue to feast. They refuse to consider the judgment.
James 5:6. As the high point, or better said, the nadir, of their selfish life style James accuses the rich for making themselves guilty of the death of righteous compatriots, who did not resist against it. James is able to speak of this accusation, because the spirit of the rich is the same spirit that brought the Lord Jesus to the cross. In a life that puts their own honor and satisfaction in the center there is no room for Him. Wherever He appears in such a life to offer something that really gives joy, He is condemned and murdered, even though He may have done only good.
The selfish person does not tolerate kindness, which proves how bad and evil he is. He does not want to be confronted with it and therefore he will try to eliminate everything that tries to do that. He even does that with people who only come to ask him the wages they are entitled to. He cannot stand such righteous people.
That especially applies to the true Just. James seems to be thinking primarily of Him. The last phrase, “he does not resist you”, seems to confirm this. The Lord Jesus has not resisted those, who are rich in might and honor and wealth in the expression of all their evil. He did not open His mouth, but let Himself be led to the slaughter like a lamb (Isaiah 53:7). He endured all injustice and did not resist at all. He surrendered everything to Him Who judges righteously (1 Peter 2:23). He suffered as the Just for the unjust, that He may bring to God anyone who acknowledges that (1 Peter 3:18). Toward all evil of man His perfection shines in everything. His example may be an encouragement for you when you have to suffer injustice.
Now read James 5:1-6 again.
Reflection: Which warning(s) does this portion contain for you?
1 John 4:2
Patience
James 5:7. James connects his exhortation to be patient with the previous verse. There you saw that the Lord Jesus has patiently endured the suffering. Patience is something we can learn from Him. In James 5:7-10 the word “patience (patient, patiently)” appears four times. That shows how important it is to be patient, for how easily feelings of impatience can arise. Patience is needed in circumstances where you are treated unjustly and/or when you have no prospect in your circumstances. Patience is always rewarded when it means waiting on the Lord.
Being patient until the coming of the Lord here refers to His coming to the earth to do justice, to exert justice and to reign justly and to reward everything that was done for Him. As a member of the church of God you may also look forward to the coming of the Lord Jesus when He will catch up all the believers to be with Him (1 Thessalonians 4:14-18). That coming will precede the coming of the Lord to the earth.
You may also look forward to the coming of the Lord in the sense of a coming into the circumstances wherein you find yourself (cf. Philippians 4:5b). That is not so much the point here, but you may surely draw consolation from it. You can be sure that the Lord wants to be involved in your circumstances, to support you That will keep you from getting caught up in the injustice that has been done to you all and to which you seem to be at the mercy of.
Sometimes you have to accept that things will not change. Then you can be sure that the Lord will come to you to strengthen you. In that sense Paul had also experienced that the Lord came to Him and encouraged him (Acts 18:9). If you have a vivid thought about the coming of the Lord, you will experience that He is with you.
The thing with patience is the same as the farmer who has sown. The only thing that is left for him to do, which he does after he has finished sowing, is to patiently wait until the delicious fruit of the land comes. For the growing of the seed and the ultimate fruit he is dependent on the rain from heaven (Deuteronomy 11:11; 14). He expects that from God.
Your life is a field in which God has sown the seed of His Word. His desire is that fruit will come out of that. He does not accelerate the process of growing, but He waters the soil with His Word and His Spirit. His Word is like rain (Deuteronomy 32:2). He wants to have delicious fruit for Himself out of your life.
That also applies to professing Christianity as a whole. At the beginning there was the “early” rain. You can apply that to the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:1). That is how the church has come into existence which was purposed by God to be bearing fruit for Him.
After the rapture of the church, there will be another outpouring of the Holy Spirit and that will be over the remnant of Israel (Joel 2:28-29). That is the application of the “latter” rain. When the remnant has received the latter rain, it will then surely produce delicious fruit for God.
James 5:8. The patience to wait is the opposite of the immediate satisfaction of need to which the rich deliver themselves. They want to have something and they want it right now. Such an attitude is inappropriate for a child of God. A child of God is not supposed to expect that his desires will be directly fulfilled. He needs to learn to be patient. Therefore James, after the example of the farmer, repeats his exhortation to be patient.
He adds to that to strengthen their hearts and passes on the means of strengthening: the coming of the Lord. For the second time he refers to the coming of the Lord. The believer will only be satisfied in his desires when the Lord comes. And His coming is near. That thought gives the heart courage to persevere in the path of faith. As soon as you lose sight of the coming of the Lord, you will make an effort to make your life on earth as pleasant as possible. When the Israelites were tired of waiting on Moses, they demanded a gold calf to be made and therefore they fell into idolatry (Exodus 32:1). In a parable the Lord Jesus shows that the same danger is threatening the Christians (Matthew 24:48-49).
James 5:9. Looking forward to the coming of the Lord will therefore be a guarantee that we do not trouble one another, but on the contrary encourage and comfort one another with the view to that coming. How easily it occurs that we complain against one another about the injustice we suffer. If we complain against each other we quickly say things that are not appropriate or that are even untrue. It is possible that we accuse those who make our life difficult of much more than they in fact do. It is even possible that we blame God for our difficulties. We will then be judged for that at the coming of Him Who is on the edge of coming as Judge.
The coming of the Lord is not only a comforting event, through which there comes an end to all injustice that is done to us. The coming of the Lord also has the result that each person, you and I included, will have to give account of himself (2 Corinthians 5:10).
James 5:10. Instead of grumbling and complaining about our circumstances, we have to look at the prophets and follow their example. Haven’t they tolerated many who grumbled about them; not to mention the injustice that they had to suffer? They had the thankless task from God to reprimand the people for their sins. That was not something for which the people were grateful. On the contrary, the people mocked, despised and ridiculed them (2 Chronicles 36:15-16). What a lot of patience these prophets have shown. The people refused to listen, but they still went on to preach in the Name of the Lord.
James 5:11. If we notice endurance, a sense of admiration arises from our hearts. People who endure show character. They also achieve something. That definitely goes for us also when it comes down to the faith. Those who endure in faith, show that they possess something that is worthy of holding on to, right through all adversities. That is what the prophets have shown.
James points at another remarkable example of endurance and that is Job. What this man has shown in terms of endurance, can indeed be called unique. Consider all the sufferings he had to endure. All his possessions were taken away from him in a short time. He lost all his children and also his health. When he got into that situation he was even deprived from his wife’s support. As his help she should have been pointing him to God, but instead she encouraged him to say goodbye to God. From being a very wealthy and blessed man, Job in a short time turned into the most pitiable man on earth (Job 1:1-3; 12-19; Job 2:7-9; 11-13).
The readers of this letter are familiar with the matchless suffering of Job. James, however, does not write about the suffering of Job, but about the endurance of Job. They have heard about that and that had to be an encouragement for them. If Job has endured, shouldn’t they, who had to suffer to a lesser extent, also endure?
James adds another important detail. He does not tell us how gloriously Job overcame the tough afflictions. He writes about “the outcome of the Lord”, meaning the final result of the Lord’s purposes with Job (Job 42:7-17). In this way James emphasizes that the Lord has achieved His goal with Job.
All the time of Job’s suffering, also caused by the accusations of his friends, the Lord was “full of compassion and merciful” toward Job (cf. Exodus 34:6). It can be of comfort to us that if we feel rejected and lonely and that we have failed, to be reminded that the Lord is with us with His compassion and mercy.
James 5:12. After the examples of patience James also exhorts to be patient with the tongue. He sees the abuse of the tongue as the greatest danger, for he says that they “above all” should not swear. If someone is facing a suffering which seems to last endlessly, and if waiting for an answer becomes very hard, he is in great danger to swear. A person then may for instance promise to do things as long as the pain gets lighter or as long as the difficulty disappears. Also revenge can be sworn toward the person who is seen as the cause of this suffering or that problem.
Such expressions of the tongue show the mind of a heart that is not subjected to God. That heart does not strengthen itself in God or in grace, but gives in to impatience. The Lord and His majesty are forgotten and heaven or earth or other things are called upon to empower the own will. That is bad and judgment must come on that.
James speaks a lot about judgment. That’s because he approaches the Christian life practically and he calls the Christian to account for his responsibility. He often points at the tongue. Instead of using powerful terms we are to express ourselves by common words like ‘yes’ and ‘no’. We should not be ambiguous about these words. God and men must be able to rely on our words.
Now read James 5:7-12 again.
Reflection: What makes you to be quickly impatient? How realistic is the coming of the Lord to you?
1 John 4:3
Patience
James 5:7. James connects his exhortation to be patient with the previous verse. There you saw that the Lord Jesus has patiently endured the suffering. Patience is something we can learn from Him. In James 5:7-10 the word “patience (patient, patiently)” appears four times. That shows how important it is to be patient, for how easily feelings of impatience can arise. Patience is needed in circumstances where you are treated unjustly and/or when you have no prospect in your circumstances. Patience is always rewarded when it means waiting on the Lord.
Being patient until the coming of the Lord here refers to His coming to the earth to do justice, to exert justice and to reign justly and to reward everything that was done for Him. As a member of the church of God you may also look forward to the coming of the Lord Jesus when He will catch up all the believers to be with Him (1 Thessalonians 4:14-18). That coming will precede the coming of the Lord to the earth.
You may also look forward to the coming of the Lord in the sense of a coming into the circumstances wherein you find yourself (cf. Philippians 4:5b). That is not so much the point here, but you may surely draw consolation from it. You can be sure that the Lord wants to be involved in your circumstances, to support you That will keep you from getting caught up in the injustice that has been done to you all and to which you seem to be at the mercy of.
Sometimes you have to accept that things will not change. Then you can be sure that the Lord will come to you to strengthen you. In that sense Paul had also experienced that the Lord came to Him and encouraged him (Acts 18:9). If you have a vivid thought about the coming of the Lord, you will experience that He is with you.
The thing with patience is the same as the farmer who has sown. The only thing that is left for him to do, which he does after he has finished sowing, is to patiently wait until the delicious fruit of the land comes. For the growing of the seed and the ultimate fruit he is dependent on the rain from heaven (Deuteronomy 11:11; 14). He expects that from God.
Your life is a field in which God has sown the seed of His Word. His desire is that fruit will come out of that. He does not accelerate the process of growing, but He waters the soil with His Word and His Spirit. His Word is like rain (Deuteronomy 32:2). He wants to have delicious fruit for Himself out of your life.
That also applies to professing Christianity as a whole. At the beginning there was the “early” rain. You can apply that to the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:1). That is how the church has come into existence which was purposed by God to be bearing fruit for Him.
After the rapture of the church, there will be another outpouring of the Holy Spirit and that will be over the remnant of Israel (Joel 2:28-29). That is the application of the “latter” rain. When the remnant has received the latter rain, it will then surely produce delicious fruit for God.
James 5:8. The patience to wait is the opposite of the immediate satisfaction of need to which the rich deliver themselves. They want to have something and they want it right now. Such an attitude is inappropriate for a child of God. A child of God is not supposed to expect that his desires will be directly fulfilled. He needs to learn to be patient. Therefore James, after the example of the farmer, repeats his exhortation to be patient.
He adds to that to strengthen their hearts and passes on the means of strengthening: the coming of the Lord. For the second time he refers to the coming of the Lord. The believer will only be satisfied in his desires when the Lord comes. And His coming is near. That thought gives the heart courage to persevere in the path of faith. As soon as you lose sight of the coming of the Lord, you will make an effort to make your life on earth as pleasant as possible. When the Israelites were tired of waiting on Moses, they demanded a gold calf to be made and therefore they fell into idolatry (Exodus 32:1). In a parable the Lord Jesus shows that the same danger is threatening the Christians (Matthew 24:48-49).
James 5:9. Looking forward to the coming of the Lord will therefore be a guarantee that we do not trouble one another, but on the contrary encourage and comfort one another with the view to that coming. How easily it occurs that we complain against one another about the injustice we suffer. If we complain against each other we quickly say things that are not appropriate or that are even untrue. It is possible that we accuse those who make our life difficult of much more than they in fact do. It is even possible that we blame God for our difficulties. We will then be judged for that at the coming of Him Who is on the edge of coming as Judge.
The coming of the Lord is not only a comforting event, through which there comes an end to all injustice that is done to us. The coming of the Lord also has the result that each person, you and I included, will have to give account of himself (2 Corinthians 5:10).
James 5:10. Instead of grumbling and complaining about our circumstances, we have to look at the prophets and follow their example. Haven’t they tolerated many who grumbled about them; not to mention the injustice that they had to suffer? They had the thankless task from God to reprimand the people for their sins. That was not something for which the people were grateful. On the contrary, the people mocked, despised and ridiculed them (2 Chronicles 36:15-16). What a lot of patience these prophets have shown. The people refused to listen, but they still went on to preach in the Name of the Lord.
James 5:11. If we notice endurance, a sense of admiration arises from our hearts. People who endure show character. They also achieve something. That definitely goes for us also when it comes down to the faith. Those who endure in faith, show that they possess something that is worthy of holding on to, right through all adversities. That is what the prophets have shown.
James points at another remarkable example of endurance and that is Job. What this man has shown in terms of endurance, can indeed be called unique. Consider all the sufferings he had to endure. All his possessions were taken away from him in a short time. He lost all his children and also his health. When he got into that situation he was even deprived from his wife’s support. As his help she should have been pointing him to God, but instead she encouraged him to say goodbye to God. From being a very wealthy and blessed man, Job in a short time turned into the most pitiable man on earth (Job 1:1-3; 12-19; Job 2:7-9; 11-13).
The readers of this letter are familiar with the matchless suffering of Job. James, however, does not write about the suffering of Job, but about the endurance of Job. They have heard about that and that had to be an encouragement for them. If Job has endured, shouldn’t they, who had to suffer to a lesser extent, also endure?
James adds another important detail. He does not tell us how gloriously Job overcame the tough afflictions. He writes about “the outcome of the Lord”, meaning the final result of the Lord’s purposes with Job (Job 42:7-17). In this way James emphasizes that the Lord has achieved His goal with Job.
All the time of Job’s suffering, also caused by the accusations of his friends, the Lord was “full of compassion and merciful” toward Job (cf. Exodus 34:6). It can be of comfort to us that if we feel rejected and lonely and that we have failed, to be reminded that the Lord is with us with His compassion and mercy.
James 5:12. After the examples of patience James also exhorts to be patient with the tongue. He sees the abuse of the tongue as the greatest danger, for he says that they “above all” should not swear. If someone is facing a suffering which seems to last endlessly, and if waiting for an answer becomes very hard, he is in great danger to swear. A person then may for instance promise to do things as long as the pain gets lighter or as long as the difficulty disappears. Also revenge can be sworn toward the person who is seen as the cause of this suffering or that problem.
Such expressions of the tongue show the mind of a heart that is not subjected to God. That heart does not strengthen itself in God or in grace, but gives in to impatience. The Lord and His majesty are forgotten and heaven or earth or other things are called upon to empower the own will. That is bad and judgment must come on that.
James speaks a lot about judgment. That’s because he approaches the Christian life practically and he calls the Christian to account for his responsibility. He often points at the tongue. Instead of using powerful terms we are to express ourselves by common words like ‘yes’ and ‘no’. We should not be ambiguous about these words. God and men must be able to rely on our words.
Now read James 5:7-12 again.
Reflection: What makes you to be quickly impatient? How realistic is the coming of the Lord to you?
1 John 4:4
Patience
James 5:7. James connects his exhortation to be patient with the previous verse. There you saw that the Lord Jesus has patiently endured the suffering. Patience is something we can learn from Him. In James 5:7-10 the word “patience (patient, patiently)” appears four times. That shows how important it is to be patient, for how easily feelings of impatience can arise. Patience is needed in circumstances where you are treated unjustly and/or when you have no prospect in your circumstances. Patience is always rewarded when it means waiting on the Lord.
Being patient until the coming of the Lord here refers to His coming to the earth to do justice, to exert justice and to reign justly and to reward everything that was done for Him. As a member of the church of God you may also look forward to the coming of the Lord Jesus when He will catch up all the believers to be with Him (1 Thessalonians 4:14-18). That coming will precede the coming of the Lord to the earth.
You may also look forward to the coming of the Lord in the sense of a coming into the circumstances wherein you find yourself (cf. Philippians 4:5b). That is not so much the point here, but you may surely draw consolation from it. You can be sure that the Lord wants to be involved in your circumstances, to support you That will keep you from getting caught up in the injustice that has been done to you all and to which you seem to be at the mercy of.
Sometimes you have to accept that things will not change. Then you can be sure that the Lord will come to you to strengthen you. In that sense Paul had also experienced that the Lord came to Him and encouraged him (Acts 18:9). If you have a vivid thought about the coming of the Lord, you will experience that He is with you.
The thing with patience is the same as the farmer who has sown. The only thing that is left for him to do, which he does after he has finished sowing, is to patiently wait until the delicious fruit of the land comes. For the growing of the seed and the ultimate fruit he is dependent on the rain from heaven (Deuteronomy 11:11; 14). He expects that from God.
Your life is a field in which God has sown the seed of His Word. His desire is that fruit will come out of that. He does not accelerate the process of growing, but He waters the soil with His Word and His Spirit. His Word is like rain (Deuteronomy 32:2). He wants to have delicious fruit for Himself out of your life.
That also applies to professing Christianity as a whole. At the beginning there was the “early” rain. You can apply that to the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:1). That is how the church has come into existence which was purposed by God to be bearing fruit for Him.
After the rapture of the church, there will be another outpouring of the Holy Spirit and that will be over the remnant of Israel (Joel 2:28-29). That is the application of the “latter” rain. When the remnant has received the latter rain, it will then surely produce delicious fruit for God.
James 5:8. The patience to wait is the opposite of the immediate satisfaction of need to which the rich deliver themselves. They want to have something and they want it right now. Such an attitude is inappropriate for a child of God. A child of God is not supposed to expect that his desires will be directly fulfilled. He needs to learn to be patient. Therefore James, after the example of the farmer, repeats his exhortation to be patient.
He adds to that to strengthen their hearts and passes on the means of strengthening: the coming of the Lord. For the second time he refers to the coming of the Lord. The believer will only be satisfied in his desires when the Lord comes. And His coming is near. That thought gives the heart courage to persevere in the path of faith. As soon as you lose sight of the coming of the Lord, you will make an effort to make your life on earth as pleasant as possible. When the Israelites were tired of waiting on Moses, they demanded a gold calf to be made and therefore they fell into idolatry (Exodus 32:1). In a parable the Lord Jesus shows that the same danger is threatening the Christians (Matthew 24:48-49).
James 5:9. Looking forward to the coming of the Lord will therefore be a guarantee that we do not trouble one another, but on the contrary encourage and comfort one another with the view to that coming. How easily it occurs that we complain against one another about the injustice we suffer. If we complain against each other we quickly say things that are not appropriate or that are even untrue. It is possible that we accuse those who make our life difficult of much more than they in fact do. It is even possible that we blame God for our difficulties. We will then be judged for that at the coming of Him Who is on the edge of coming as Judge.
The coming of the Lord is not only a comforting event, through which there comes an end to all injustice that is done to us. The coming of the Lord also has the result that each person, you and I included, will have to give account of himself (2 Corinthians 5:10).
James 5:10. Instead of grumbling and complaining about our circumstances, we have to look at the prophets and follow their example. Haven’t they tolerated many who grumbled about them; not to mention the injustice that they had to suffer? They had the thankless task from God to reprimand the people for their sins. That was not something for which the people were grateful. On the contrary, the people mocked, despised and ridiculed them (2 Chronicles 36:15-16). What a lot of patience these prophets have shown. The people refused to listen, but they still went on to preach in the Name of the Lord.
James 5:11. If we notice endurance, a sense of admiration arises from our hearts. People who endure show character. They also achieve something. That definitely goes for us also when it comes down to the faith. Those who endure in faith, show that they possess something that is worthy of holding on to, right through all adversities. That is what the prophets have shown.
James points at another remarkable example of endurance and that is Job. What this man has shown in terms of endurance, can indeed be called unique. Consider all the sufferings he had to endure. All his possessions were taken away from him in a short time. He lost all his children and also his health. When he got into that situation he was even deprived from his wife’s support. As his help she should have been pointing him to God, but instead she encouraged him to say goodbye to God. From being a very wealthy and blessed man, Job in a short time turned into the most pitiable man on earth (Job 1:1-3; 12-19; Job 2:7-9; 11-13).
The readers of this letter are familiar with the matchless suffering of Job. James, however, does not write about the suffering of Job, but about the endurance of Job. They have heard about that and that had to be an encouragement for them. If Job has endured, shouldn’t they, who had to suffer to a lesser extent, also endure?
James adds another important detail. He does not tell us how gloriously Job overcame the tough afflictions. He writes about “the outcome of the Lord”, meaning the final result of the Lord’s purposes with Job (Job 42:7-17). In this way James emphasizes that the Lord has achieved His goal with Job.
All the time of Job’s suffering, also caused by the accusations of his friends, the Lord was “full of compassion and merciful” toward Job (cf. Exodus 34:6). It can be of comfort to us that if we feel rejected and lonely and that we have failed, to be reminded that the Lord is with us with His compassion and mercy.
James 5:12. After the examples of patience James also exhorts to be patient with the tongue. He sees the abuse of the tongue as the greatest danger, for he says that they “above all” should not swear. If someone is facing a suffering which seems to last endlessly, and if waiting for an answer becomes very hard, he is in great danger to swear. A person then may for instance promise to do things as long as the pain gets lighter or as long as the difficulty disappears. Also revenge can be sworn toward the person who is seen as the cause of this suffering or that problem.
Such expressions of the tongue show the mind of a heart that is not subjected to God. That heart does not strengthen itself in God or in grace, but gives in to impatience. The Lord and His majesty are forgotten and heaven or earth or other things are called upon to empower the own will. That is bad and judgment must come on that.
James speaks a lot about judgment. That’s because he approaches the Christian life practically and he calls the Christian to account for his responsibility. He often points at the tongue. Instead of using powerful terms we are to express ourselves by common words like ‘yes’ and ‘no’. We should not be ambiguous about these words. God and men must be able to rely on our words.
Now read James 5:7-12 again.
Reflection: What makes you to be quickly impatient? How realistic is the coming of the Lord to you?
1 John 4:5
Patience
James 5:7. James connects his exhortation to be patient with the previous verse. There you saw that the Lord Jesus has patiently endured the suffering. Patience is something we can learn from Him. In James 5:7-10 the word “patience (patient, patiently)” appears four times. That shows how important it is to be patient, for how easily feelings of impatience can arise. Patience is needed in circumstances where you are treated unjustly and/or when you have no prospect in your circumstances. Patience is always rewarded when it means waiting on the Lord.
Being patient until the coming of the Lord here refers to His coming to the earth to do justice, to exert justice and to reign justly and to reward everything that was done for Him. As a member of the church of God you may also look forward to the coming of the Lord Jesus when He will catch up all the believers to be with Him (1 Thessalonians 4:14-18). That coming will precede the coming of the Lord to the earth.
You may also look forward to the coming of the Lord in the sense of a coming into the circumstances wherein you find yourself (cf. Philippians 4:5b). That is not so much the point here, but you may surely draw consolation from it. You can be sure that the Lord wants to be involved in your circumstances, to support you That will keep you from getting caught up in the injustice that has been done to you all and to which you seem to be at the mercy of.
Sometimes you have to accept that things will not change. Then you can be sure that the Lord will come to you to strengthen you. In that sense Paul had also experienced that the Lord came to Him and encouraged him (Acts 18:9). If you have a vivid thought about the coming of the Lord, you will experience that He is with you.
The thing with patience is the same as the farmer who has sown. The only thing that is left for him to do, which he does after he has finished sowing, is to patiently wait until the delicious fruit of the land comes. For the growing of the seed and the ultimate fruit he is dependent on the rain from heaven (Deuteronomy 11:11; 14). He expects that from God.
Your life is a field in which God has sown the seed of His Word. His desire is that fruit will come out of that. He does not accelerate the process of growing, but He waters the soil with His Word and His Spirit. His Word is like rain (Deuteronomy 32:2). He wants to have delicious fruit for Himself out of your life.
That also applies to professing Christianity as a whole. At the beginning there was the “early” rain. You can apply that to the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:1). That is how the church has come into existence which was purposed by God to be bearing fruit for Him.
After the rapture of the church, there will be another outpouring of the Holy Spirit and that will be over the remnant of Israel (Joel 2:28-29). That is the application of the “latter” rain. When the remnant has received the latter rain, it will then surely produce delicious fruit for God.
James 5:8. The patience to wait is the opposite of the immediate satisfaction of need to which the rich deliver themselves. They want to have something and they want it right now. Such an attitude is inappropriate for a child of God. A child of God is not supposed to expect that his desires will be directly fulfilled. He needs to learn to be patient. Therefore James, after the example of the farmer, repeats his exhortation to be patient.
He adds to that to strengthen their hearts and passes on the means of strengthening: the coming of the Lord. For the second time he refers to the coming of the Lord. The believer will only be satisfied in his desires when the Lord comes. And His coming is near. That thought gives the heart courage to persevere in the path of faith. As soon as you lose sight of the coming of the Lord, you will make an effort to make your life on earth as pleasant as possible. When the Israelites were tired of waiting on Moses, they demanded a gold calf to be made and therefore they fell into idolatry (Exodus 32:1). In a parable the Lord Jesus shows that the same danger is threatening the Christians (Matthew 24:48-49).
James 5:9. Looking forward to the coming of the Lord will therefore be a guarantee that we do not trouble one another, but on the contrary encourage and comfort one another with the view to that coming. How easily it occurs that we complain against one another about the injustice we suffer. If we complain against each other we quickly say things that are not appropriate or that are even untrue. It is possible that we accuse those who make our life difficult of much more than they in fact do. It is even possible that we blame God for our difficulties. We will then be judged for that at the coming of Him Who is on the edge of coming as Judge.
The coming of the Lord is not only a comforting event, through which there comes an end to all injustice that is done to us. The coming of the Lord also has the result that each person, you and I included, will have to give account of himself (2 Corinthians 5:10).
James 5:10. Instead of grumbling and complaining about our circumstances, we have to look at the prophets and follow their example. Haven’t they tolerated many who grumbled about them; not to mention the injustice that they had to suffer? They had the thankless task from God to reprimand the people for their sins. That was not something for which the people were grateful. On the contrary, the people mocked, despised and ridiculed them (2 Chronicles 36:15-16). What a lot of patience these prophets have shown. The people refused to listen, but they still went on to preach in the Name of the Lord.
James 5:11. If we notice endurance, a sense of admiration arises from our hearts. People who endure show character. They also achieve something. That definitely goes for us also when it comes down to the faith. Those who endure in faith, show that they possess something that is worthy of holding on to, right through all adversities. That is what the prophets have shown.
James points at another remarkable example of endurance and that is Job. What this man has shown in terms of endurance, can indeed be called unique. Consider all the sufferings he had to endure. All his possessions were taken away from him in a short time. He lost all his children and also his health. When he got into that situation he was even deprived from his wife’s support. As his help she should have been pointing him to God, but instead she encouraged him to say goodbye to God. From being a very wealthy and blessed man, Job in a short time turned into the most pitiable man on earth (Job 1:1-3; 12-19; Job 2:7-9; 11-13).
The readers of this letter are familiar with the matchless suffering of Job. James, however, does not write about the suffering of Job, but about the endurance of Job. They have heard about that and that had to be an encouragement for them. If Job has endured, shouldn’t they, who had to suffer to a lesser extent, also endure?
James adds another important detail. He does not tell us how gloriously Job overcame the tough afflictions. He writes about “the outcome of the Lord”, meaning the final result of the Lord’s purposes with Job (Job 42:7-17). In this way James emphasizes that the Lord has achieved His goal with Job.
All the time of Job’s suffering, also caused by the accusations of his friends, the Lord was “full of compassion and merciful” toward Job (cf. Exodus 34:6). It can be of comfort to us that if we feel rejected and lonely and that we have failed, to be reminded that the Lord is with us with His compassion and mercy.
James 5:12. After the examples of patience James also exhorts to be patient with the tongue. He sees the abuse of the tongue as the greatest danger, for he says that they “above all” should not swear. If someone is facing a suffering which seems to last endlessly, and if waiting for an answer becomes very hard, he is in great danger to swear. A person then may for instance promise to do things as long as the pain gets lighter or as long as the difficulty disappears. Also revenge can be sworn toward the person who is seen as the cause of this suffering or that problem.
Such expressions of the tongue show the mind of a heart that is not subjected to God. That heart does not strengthen itself in God or in grace, but gives in to impatience. The Lord and His majesty are forgotten and heaven or earth or other things are called upon to empower the own will. That is bad and judgment must come on that.
James speaks a lot about judgment. That’s because he approaches the Christian life practically and he calls the Christian to account for his responsibility. He often points at the tongue. Instead of using powerful terms we are to express ourselves by common words like ‘yes’ and ‘no’. We should not be ambiguous about these words. God and men must be able to rely on our words.
Now read James 5:7-12 again.
Reflection: What makes you to be quickly impatient? How realistic is the coming of the Lord to you?
1 John 4:6
Patience
James 5:7. James connects his exhortation to be patient with the previous verse. There you saw that the Lord Jesus has patiently endured the suffering. Patience is something we can learn from Him. In James 5:7-10 the word “patience (patient, patiently)” appears four times. That shows how important it is to be patient, for how easily feelings of impatience can arise. Patience is needed in circumstances where you are treated unjustly and/or when you have no prospect in your circumstances. Patience is always rewarded when it means waiting on the Lord.
Being patient until the coming of the Lord here refers to His coming to the earth to do justice, to exert justice and to reign justly and to reward everything that was done for Him. As a member of the church of God you may also look forward to the coming of the Lord Jesus when He will catch up all the believers to be with Him (1 Thessalonians 4:14-18). That coming will precede the coming of the Lord to the earth.
You may also look forward to the coming of the Lord in the sense of a coming into the circumstances wherein you find yourself (cf. Philippians 4:5b). That is not so much the point here, but you may surely draw consolation from it. You can be sure that the Lord wants to be involved in your circumstances, to support you That will keep you from getting caught up in the injustice that has been done to you all and to which you seem to be at the mercy of.
Sometimes you have to accept that things will not change. Then you can be sure that the Lord will come to you to strengthen you. In that sense Paul had also experienced that the Lord came to Him and encouraged him (Acts 18:9). If you have a vivid thought about the coming of the Lord, you will experience that He is with you.
The thing with patience is the same as the farmer who has sown. The only thing that is left for him to do, which he does after he has finished sowing, is to patiently wait until the delicious fruit of the land comes. For the growing of the seed and the ultimate fruit he is dependent on the rain from heaven (Deuteronomy 11:11; 14). He expects that from God.
Your life is a field in which God has sown the seed of His Word. His desire is that fruit will come out of that. He does not accelerate the process of growing, but He waters the soil with His Word and His Spirit. His Word is like rain (Deuteronomy 32:2). He wants to have delicious fruit for Himself out of your life.
That also applies to professing Christianity as a whole. At the beginning there was the “early” rain. You can apply that to the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:1). That is how the church has come into existence which was purposed by God to be bearing fruit for Him.
After the rapture of the church, there will be another outpouring of the Holy Spirit and that will be over the remnant of Israel (Joel 2:28-29). That is the application of the “latter” rain. When the remnant has received the latter rain, it will then surely produce delicious fruit for God.
James 5:8. The patience to wait is the opposite of the immediate satisfaction of need to which the rich deliver themselves. They want to have something and they want it right now. Such an attitude is inappropriate for a child of God. A child of God is not supposed to expect that his desires will be directly fulfilled. He needs to learn to be patient. Therefore James, after the example of the farmer, repeats his exhortation to be patient.
He adds to that to strengthen their hearts and passes on the means of strengthening: the coming of the Lord. For the second time he refers to the coming of the Lord. The believer will only be satisfied in his desires when the Lord comes. And His coming is near. That thought gives the heart courage to persevere in the path of faith. As soon as you lose sight of the coming of the Lord, you will make an effort to make your life on earth as pleasant as possible. When the Israelites were tired of waiting on Moses, they demanded a gold calf to be made and therefore they fell into idolatry (Exodus 32:1). In a parable the Lord Jesus shows that the same danger is threatening the Christians (Matthew 24:48-49).
James 5:9. Looking forward to the coming of the Lord will therefore be a guarantee that we do not trouble one another, but on the contrary encourage and comfort one another with the view to that coming. How easily it occurs that we complain against one another about the injustice we suffer. If we complain against each other we quickly say things that are not appropriate or that are even untrue. It is possible that we accuse those who make our life difficult of much more than they in fact do. It is even possible that we blame God for our difficulties. We will then be judged for that at the coming of Him Who is on the edge of coming as Judge.
The coming of the Lord is not only a comforting event, through which there comes an end to all injustice that is done to us. The coming of the Lord also has the result that each person, you and I included, will have to give account of himself (2 Corinthians 5:10).
James 5:10. Instead of grumbling and complaining about our circumstances, we have to look at the prophets and follow their example. Haven’t they tolerated many who grumbled about them; not to mention the injustice that they had to suffer? They had the thankless task from God to reprimand the people for their sins. That was not something for which the people were grateful. On the contrary, the people mocked, despised and ridiculed them (2 Chronicles 36:15-16). What a lot of patience these prophets have shown. The people refused to listen, but they still went on to preach in the Name of the Lord.
James 5:11. If we notice endurance, a sense of admiration arises from our hearts. People who endure show character. They also achieve something. That definitely goes for us also when it comes down to the faith. Those who endure in faith, show that they possess something that is worthy of holding on to, right through all adversities. That is what the prophets have shown.
James points at another remarkable example of endurance and that is Job. What this man has shown in terms of endurance, can indeed be called unique. Consider all the sufferings he had to endure. All his possessions were taken away from him in a short time. He lost all his children and also his health. When he got into that situation he was even deprived from his wife’s support. As his help she should have been pointing him to God, but instead she encouraged him to say goodbye to God. From being a very wealthy and blessed man, Job in a short time turned into the most pitiable man on earth (Job 1:1-3; 12-19; Job 2:7-9; 11-13).
The readers of this letter are familiar with the matchless suffering of Job. James, however, does not write about the suffering of Job, but about the endurance of Job. They have heard about that and that had to be an encouragement for them. If Job has endured, shouldn’t they, who had to suffer to a lesser extent, also endure?
James adds another important detail. He does not tell us how gloriously Job overcame the tough afflictions. He writes about “the outcome of the Lord”, meaning the final result of the Lord’s purposes with Job (Job 42:7-17). In this way James emphasizes that the Lord has achieved His goal with Job.
All the time of Job’s suffering, also caused by the accusations of his friends, the Lord was “full of compassion and merciful” toward Job (cf. Exodus 34:6). It can be of comfort to us that if we feel rejected and lonely and that we have failed, to be reminded that the Lord is with us with His compassion and mercy.
James 5:12. After the examples of patience James also exhorts to be patient with the tongue. He sees the abuse of the tongue as the greatest danger, for he says that they “above all” should not swear. If someone is facing a suffering which seems to last endlessly, and if waiting for an answer becomes very hard, he is in great danger to swear. A person then may for instance promise to do things as long as the pain gets lighter or as long as the difficulty disappears. Also revenge can be sworn toward the person who is seen as the cause of this suffering or that problem.
Such expressions of the tongue show the mind of a heart that is not subjected to God. That heart does not strengthen itself in God or in grace, but gives in to impatience. The Lord and His majesty are forgotten and heaven or earth or other things are called upon to empower the own will. That is bad and judgment must come on that.
James speaks a lot about judgment. That’s because he approaches the Christian life practically and he calls the Christian to account for his responsibility. He often points at the tongue. Instead of using powerful terms we are to express ourselves by common words like ‘yes’ and ‘no’. We should not be ambiguous about these words. God and men must be able to rely on our words.
Now read James 5:7-12 again.
Reflection: What makes you to be quickly impatient? How realistic is the coming of the Lord to you?
1 John 4:7
Patience
James 5:7. James connects his exhortation to be patient with the previous verse. There you saw that the Lord Jesus has patiently endured the suffering. Patience is something we can learn from Him. In James 5:7-10 the word “patience (patient, patiently)” appears four times. That shows how important it is to be patient, for how easily feelings of impatience can arise. Patience is needed in circumstances where you are treated unjustly and/or when you have no prospect in your circumstances. Patience is always rewarded when it means waiting on the Lord.
Being patient until the coming of the Lord here refers to His coming to the earth to do justice, to exert justice and to reign justly and to reward everything that was done for Him. As a member of the church of God you may also look forward to the coming of the Lord Jesus when He will catch up all the believers to be with Him (1 Thessalonians 4:14-18). That coming will precede the coming of the Lord to the earth.
You may also look forward to the coming of the Lord in the sense of a coming into the circumstances wherein you find yourself (cf. Philippians 4:5b). That is not so much the point here, but you may surely draw consolation from it. You can be sure that the Lord wants to be involved in your circumstances, to support you That will keep you from getting caught up in the injustice that has been done to you all and to which you seem to be at the mercy of.
Sometimes you have to accept that things will not change. Then you can be sure that the Lord will come to you to strengthen you. In that sense Paul had also experienced that the Lord came to Him and encouraged him (Acts 18:9). If you have a vivid thought about the coming of the Lord, you will experience that He is with you.
The thing with patience is the same as the farmer who has sown. The only thing that is left for him to do, which he does after he has finished sowing, is to patiently wait until the delicious fruit of the land comes. For the growing of the seed and the ultimate fruit he is dependent on the rain from heaven (Deuteronomy 11:11; 14). He expects that from God.
Your life is a field in which God has sown the seed of His Word. His desire is that fruit will come out of that. He does not accelerate the process of growing, but He waters the soil with His Word and His Spirit. His Word is like rain (Deuteronomy 32:2). He wants to have delicious fruit for Himself out of your life.
That also applies to professing Christianity as a whole. At the beginning there was the “early” rain. You can apply that to the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:1). That is how the church has come into existence which was purposed by God to be bearing fruit for Him.
After the rapture of the church, there will be another outpouring of the Holy Spirit and that will be over the remnant of Israel (Joel 2:28-29). That is the application of the “latter” rain. When the remnant has received the latter rain, it will then surely produce delicious fruit for God.
James 5:8. The patience to wait is the opposite of the immediate satisfaction of need to which the rich deliver themselves. They want to have something and they want it right now. Such an attitude is inappropriate for a child of God. A child of God is not supposed to expect that his desires will be directly fulfilled. He needs to learn to be patient. Therefore James, after the example of the farmer, repeats his exhortation to be patient.
He adds to that to strengthen their hearts and passes on the means of strengthening: the coming of the Lord. For the second time he refers to the coming of the Lord. The believer will only be satisfied in his desires when the Lord comes. And His coming is near. That thought gives the heart courage to persevere in the path of faith. As soon as you lose sight of the coming of the Lord, you will make an effort to make your life on earth as pleasant as possible. When the Israelites were tired of waiting on Moses, they demanded a gold calf to be made and therefore they fell into idolatry (Exodus 32:1). In a parable the Lord Jesus shows that the same danger is threatening the Christians (Matthew 24:48-49).
James 5:9. Looking forward to the coming of the Lord will therefore be a guarantee that we do not trouble one another, but on the contrary encourage and comfort one another with the view to that coming. How easily it occurs that we complain against one another about the injustice we suffer. If we complain against each other we quickly say things that are not appropriate or that are even untrue. It is possible that we accuse those who make our life difficult of much more than they in fact do. It is even possible that we blame God for our difficulties. We will then be judged for that at the coming of Him Who is on the edge of coming as Judge.
The coming of the Lord is not only a comforting event, through which there comes an end to all injustice that is done to us. The coming of the Lord also has the result that each person, you and I included, will have to give account of himself (2 Corinthians 5:10).
James 5:10. Instead of grumbling and complaining about our circumstances, we have to look at the prophets and follow their example. Haven’t they tolerated many who grumbled about them; not to mention the injustice that they had to suffer? They had the thankless task from God to reprimand the people for their sins. That was not something for which the people were grateful. On the contrary, the people mocked, despised and ridiculed them (2 Chronicles 36:15-16). What a lot of patience these prophets have shown. The people refused to listen, but they still went on to preach in the Name of the Lord.
James 5:11. If we notice endurance, a sense of admiration arises from our hearts. People who endure show character. They also achieve something. That definitely goes for us also when it comes down to the faith. Those who endure in faith, show that they possess something that is worthy of holding on to, right through all adversities. That is what the prophets have shown.
James points at another remarkable example of endurance and that is Job. What this man has shown in terms of endurance, can indeed be called unique. Consider all the sufferings he had to endure. All his possessions were taken away from him in a short time. He lost all his children and also his health. When he got into that situation he was even deprived from his wife’s support. As his help she should have been pointing him to God, but instead she encouraged him to say goodbye to God. From being a very wealthy and blessed man, Job in a short time turned into the most pitiable man on earth (Job 1:1-3; 12-19; Job 2:7-9; 11-13).
The readers of this letter are familiar with the matchless suffering of Job. James, however, does not write about the suffering of Job, but about the endurance of Job. They have heard about that and that had to be an encouragement for them. If Job has endured, shouldn’t they, who had to suffer to a lesser extent, also endure?
James adds another important detail. He does not tell us how gloriously Job overcame the tough afflictions. He writes about “the outcome of the Lord”, meaning the final result of the Lord’s purposes with Job (Job 42:7-17). In this way James emphasizes that the Lord has achieved His goal with Job.
All the time of Job’s suffering, also caused by the accusations of his friends, the Lord was “full of compassion and merciful” toward Job (cf. Exodus 34:6). It can be of comfort to us that if we feel rejected and lonely and that we have failed, to be reminded that the Lord is with us with His compassion and mercy.
James 5:12. After the examples of patience James also exhorts to be patient with the tongue. He sees the abuse of the tongue as the greatest danger, for he says that they “above all” should not swear. If someone is facing a suffering which seems to last endlessly, and if waiting for an answer becomes very hard, he is in great danger to swear. A person then may for instance promise to do things as long as the pain gets lighter or as long as the difficulty disappears. Also revenge can be sworn toward the person who is seen as the cause of this suffering or that problem.
Such expressions of the tongue show the mind of a heart that is not subjected to God. That heart does not strengthen itself in God or in grace, but gives in to impatience. The Lord and His majesty are forgotten and heaven or earth or other things are called upon to empower the own will. That is bad and judgment must come on that.
James speaks a lot about judgment. That’s because he approaches the Christian life practically and he calls the Christian to account for his responsibility. He often points at the tongue. Instead of using powerful terms we are to express ourselves by common words like ‘yes’ and ‘no’. We should not be ambiguous about these words. God and men must be able to rely on our words.
Now read James 5:7-12 again.
Reflection: What makes you to be quickly impatient? How realistic is the coming of the Lord to you?
1 John 4:8
Prayer
James 5:13. In James 5:13-14 you see three situations in which someone can find himself: 1. he can suffer, 2. he can be cheerful and 3. he can be sick.
These are situations that may trigger those who are in such a situation, to respond in a certain way. The point is: 1. in what way they respond to suffering, 2. how feelings of joy are dealt with and 3. how do people go through sickness.
The world tries to escape suffering, it loudly expresses its feelings of joy and it goes through sickness by grinding its teeth. The believer can respond to that totally differently. It is wonderful to see that in each of the three situations James refers to God as the refuge of the believer:
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He who suffers can go to God with his suffering by praying. In that way he will find comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3-7).
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He who lives in prosperity and is not plagued by adversities, can sing out his thanks to God. In that way he acknowledges God as the source of his prosperity and is prevented from forgetting God, due to prosperity. We are often willing to bring our sufferings to God, but we often forget to share our joy with Him.
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James 5:14. He who is sick can tell that to the elders of the church. That doesn’t mean that God is not involved here and that the sick person expects his healing from people (cf. 2 Chronicles 16:12), but this is the way that God shows. The elders are as it were His representatives.
That doesn’t mean that for each sickness the elders of the church should be called for. Timothy doesn’t get the advice to call the elders of Ephesus to pray for him and make him healthy. Paul gives him the simple advice to use a little wine (1 Timothy 5:23).
What follows here makes it clear that it is about a serious sickness that also may possibly be the consequence of certain sins. If that is the case, the sickness has revealed the sin. It is not enough that the sick keeps his sins between himself and God. The sickness is not a little flu. The word ‘sick’ that James uses, indicates that the sick is weak, without any power. It is also clear that the sick is not able to join the meetings, for he has to call for the elders. Another aspect that you find in the expression “the Lord will raise him up”, is that it is about someone who is bedridden, or housebound, while he lacks the power to arise.
When the sick has called for the elders, they are to pray over him. The sick is not supposed to pray. The elders must also anoint “him with oil in the name of the Lord”. A lot has been written and said about the effect of the oil or what it represents. Some possibilities that have appealed to me, I pass on to you for your consideration.
One possibility is that the oil is simply a medication (cf. Isaiah 1:6; Jeremiah 8:22; Luke 10:34). No miraculous effects should be attributed to that oil, any more than the fig cake that Hezekiah had to take to apply it to the boil (Isaiah 38:21). The Lord must bless the means. That is the reason why His Name is connected to it. The use of oil by elders may be a medical act that serves to give the sick person some relief in pain, without concluding that he will be healed. There is no question of a religious ritual.
Another possibility is that the use of the oil has a symbolic meaning. The anointing then has the meaning in the sense of honoring a person. You can also read about the anointing of the feet of the Lord (John 12:3) and the body of the Lord (Mark 16:1). The Lord rebukes Simon for holding back the proof of courtesy by not anointing Him (Luke 7:46).
This meaning of anointing is also plausible. It will make the sick, who may possibly be wondering whether God still cares about him, feel better by experiencing this anointing. In connection with Mark 6 (Mark 6:13) the oil perhaps can also be seen as a symbol of power or authority of the elders to pray the prayer for healing.
James 5:15. In any case, prayer and prayer alone produces blessing from God for the sick believers and the use of oil is in no way an essential part that would be necessary to receive that blessing. It is not the oil that works healing, but the prayer of the faith of the elders. That this prayer of faith is answered by the Lord, can be seen in the fact that He raises up the sick.
To the raising up of the sick forgiveness is connected in case the sick has sinned. Then there can be no blessing of healing without confession. Therefore confession must have preceded, for sins are only forgiven if they have been confessed. Here it is about the forgiveness by the elders. The sick will have had confessed his sins already to God and will have received forgiveness from God (1 John 1:9). It is also important that the elders speak out the forgiveness (cf. John 20:23; Matthew 18:18). As a result to that there is also a public restoration of fellowship with the believers.
James 5:16. The situation of the ‘sickbed prayer’ makes James underline the necessity of the confession of sins to one another, also if there is no mention of sickness. Confessing sins to one another has got nothing to do with the penance, as it is taught and practiced by the roman-catholic church. In that penance a person confesses his sins to a person who has nothing whatever to do with it and who arrogates the status of mediator between the sinner and God.
The call of James refers to situations in which we have sinned to one another. Sin always hinders the blessing of God. That hindrance is taken away by confession. When sin is confessed, blessing can flow freely again, and in case of sickness, healing and health can also come.
By the way, it is not wrong for a person to confess sins to a person against whom he has not sinned in case of pastoral counseling. A person may be tortured by a sin, but doesn’t know how to confess. It may possibly be the case that this person for instance has sinned against a person who does not live any more. Then it is a good thing that this person confesses the sin together with a confidential counselor and that the counselor also ensures him that forgiveness by God is certain and clear, because God has said that in His Word.
The power of prayer is awesome. The condition, however, is that it is prayed by a righteous person. By “a righteous man” James does not mean someone who through faith is righteous before God, but someone who lives righteously. If such a man comes to God with a fervent prayer God can and will surely hear it. He does not need to speak first with the one who prays about things that are not right in his life. A righteous man is associated with God, he is accustomed to it and that causes him to know the will of God.
You can be a righteous man. That is not a status that you achieve by living righteously, but you are that if, as far as you know, your life is pure before God. God wants to have your prayer involved in His actions. He listens to it and uses it to realize His plans.
James 5:17. As an example of a righteous man who prays an effective, fervent prayer James presents Elijah. Elijah is close to you and not above you, although you certainly will look up to him. At least I do. He truly is a man of God. Elijah also has had his weak moments. For that reason it is written here that he was “a man with a nature like ours”. Therefore you can also learn a lot from him. He was able to stand fearlessly before Ahab because he was aware that he was not standing before Ahab, but before God (1 Kings 17:1). There he made known that there would be no rain for years. In that announcement you do not read about a prayer. That’s what you read here. James is telling that a prayer preceded that announcement.
How could Elijah pray such a prayer which in fact is a judgment? He knew God’s thoughts and that’s why he prayed this remarkable prayer (Deuteronomy 11:16-17). He loved God’s people and he loved God. God wanted His people to turn back to Him and the only way to realize that was through the judgment of drought. It is a prayer to the Lord not to bless us, so that we may feel that we have turned away from Him. The prayer of Elijah was answered.
James 5:18. After a course of time he prayed again and this time he prayed for the rain to fall. He understood that the time of blessing had come because he had offered the offering and the people had spoken out the confession that Yahweh is God (1 Kings 18:38-39).
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is, especially in the last days, to pray. We are in need of people who know the will of God and who are convinced of the power of prayer. I hope that you may become a man of prayer. You do not need to have a gift for that, neither do you need to follow a training for that. You simply have got to do it. Think again about this prayer of Elijah and resolve to pray more often and also more fervently.
James 5:19. James concludes his letter with two verses about bringing back someone who has strayed from the truth. That is in line with Elijah. Elijah was also a restorer. By his prayer he brought back the people to God. You also can bring back someone to God by prayer. Do you know people, believers, who first were faithful in their service for the Lord, but now have a rather casual attitude to the truth? If they continue to do so they will end up in death. You may bring back such a person from that path of error by praying for him. If you pray in such a way for the straying one, the Lord can also make clear to you whether you should visit him and how to address him.
James 5:20. If you bring him back you save him from death and you also cover a multitude of sins. He will repent and confess his path of error. Then he may learn again that all his sins are forgiven, that they have been cast into the depths of the sea (Micah 7:19). By bringing back the straying one you also prevent him from being drawn further into the power of sin. Also in that sense you have made sure that a multitude of sins has been covered, for he is prevented to commit them. I sincerely hope that you have the desire that strayed believers will turn back to God.
Now read James 5:13-20 again.
Reflection: Commit yourself to pray for the restoration of deviated believers.
1 John 4:9
Prayer
James 5:13. In James 5:13-14 you see three situations in which someone can find himself: 1. he can suffer, 2. he can be cheerful and 3. he can be sick.
These are situations that may trigger those who are in such a situation, to respond in a certain way. The point is: 1. in what way they respond to suffering, 2. how feelings of joy are dealt with and 3. how do people go through sickness.
The world tries to escape suffering, it loudly expresses its feelings of joy and it goes through sickness by grinding its teeth. The believer can respond to that totally differently. It is wonderful to see that in each of the three situations James refers to God as the refuge of the believer:
-
He who suffers can go to God with his suffering by praying. In that way he will find comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3-7).
-
He who lives in prosperity and is not plagued by adversities, can sing out his thanks to God. In that way he acknowledges God as the source of his prosperity and is prevented from forgetting God, due to prosperity. We are often willing to bring our sufferings to God, but we often forget to share our joy with Him.
-
James 5:14. He who is sick can tell that to the elders of the church. That doesn’t mean that God is not involved here and that the sick person expects his healing from people (cf. 2 Chronicles 16:12), but this is the way that God shows. The elders are as it were His representatives.
That doesn’t mean that for each sickness the elders of the church should be called for. Timothy doesn’t get the advice to call the elders of Ephesus to pray for him and make him healthy. Paul gives him the simple advice to use a little wine (1 Timothy 5:23).
What follows here makes it clear that it is about a serious sickness that also may possibly be the consequence of certain sins. If that is the case, the sickness has revealed the sin. It is not enough that the sick keeps his sins between himself and God. The sickness is not a little flu. The word ‘sick’ that James uses, indicates that the sick is weak, without any power. It is also clear that the sick is not able to join the meetings, for he has to call for the elders. Another aspect that you find in the expression “the Lord will raise him up”, is that it is about someone who is bedridden, or housebound, while he lacks the power to arise.
When the sick has called for the elders, they are to pray over him. The sick is not supposed to pray. The elders must also anoint “him with oil in the name of the Lord”. A lot has been written and said about the effect of the oil or what it represents. Some possibilities that have appealed to me, I pass on to you for your consideration.
One possibility is that the oil is simply a medication (cf. Isaiah 1:6; Jeremiah 8:22; Luke 10:34). No miraculous effects should be attributed to that oil, any more than the fig cake that Hezekiah had to take to apply it to the boil (Isaiah 38:21). The Lord must bless the means. That is the reason why His Name is connected to it. The use of oil by elders may be a medical act that serves to give the sick person some relief in pain, without concluding that he will be healed. There is no question of a religious ritual.
Another possibility is that the use of the oil has a symbolic meaning. The anointing then has the meaning in the sense of honoring a person. You can also read about the anointing of the feet of the Lord (John 12:3) and the body of the Lord (Mark 16:1). The Lord rebukes Simon for holding back the proof of courtesy by not anointing Him (Luke 7:46).
This meaning of anointing is also plausible. It will make the sick, who may possibly be wondering whether God still cares about him, feel better by experiencing this anointing. In connection with Mark 6 (Mark 6:13) the oil perhaps can also be seen as a symbol of power or authority of the elders to pray the prayer for healing.
James 5:15. In any case, prayer and prayer alone produces blessing from God for the sick believers and the use of oil is in no way an essential part that would be necessary to receive that blessing. It is not the oil that works healing, but the prayer of the faith of the elders. That this prayer of faith is answered by the Lord, can be seen in the fact that He raises up the sick.
To the raising up of the sick forgiveness is connected in case the sick has sinned. Then there can be no blessing of healing without confession. Therefore confession must have preceded, for sins are only forgiven if they have been confessed. Here it is about the forgiveness by the elders. The sick will have had confessed his sins already to God and will have received forgiveness from God (1 John 1:9). It is also important that the elders speak out the forgiveness (cf. John 20:23; Matthew 18:18). As a result to that there is also a public restoration of fellowship with the believers.
James 5:16. The situation of the ‘sickbed prayer’ makes James underline the necessity of the confession of sins to one another, also if there is no mention of sickness. Confessing sins to one another has got nothing to do with the penance, as it is taught and practiced by the roman-catholic church. In that penance a person confesses his sins to a person who has nothing whatever to do with it and who arrogates the status of mediator between the sinner and God.
The call of James refers to situations in which we have sinned to one another. Sin always hinders the blessing of God. That hindrance is taken away by confession. When sin is confessed, blessing can flow freely again, and in case of sickness, healing and health can also come.
By the way, it is not wrong for a person to confess sins to a person against whom he has not sinned in case of pastoral counseling. A person may be tortured by a sin, but doesn’t know how to confess. It may possibly be the case that this person for instance has sinned against a person who does not live any more. Then it is a good thing that this person confesses the sin together with a confidential counselor and that the counselor also ensures him that forgiveness by God is certain and clear, because God has said that in His Word.
The power of prayer is awesome. The condition, however, is that it is prayed by a righteous person. By “a righteous man” James does not mean someone who through faith is righteous before God, but someone who lives righteously. If such a man comes to God with a fervent prayer God can and will surely hear it. He does not need to speak first with the one who prays about things that are not right in his life. A righteous man is associated with God, he is accustomed to it and that causes him to know the will of God.
You can be a righteous man. That is not a status that you achieve by living righteously, but you are that if, as far as you know, your life is pure before God. God wants to have your prayer involved in His actions. He listens to it and uses it to realize His plans.
James 5:17. As an example of a righteous man who prays an effective, fervent prayer James presents Elijah. Elijah is close to you and not above you, although you certainly will look up to him. At least I do. He truly is a man of God. Elijah also has had his weak moments. For that reason it is written here that he was “a man with a nature like ours”. Therefore you can also learn a lot from him. He was able to stand fearlessly before Ahab because he was aware that he was not standing before Ahab, but before God (1 Kings 17:1). There he made known that there would be no rain for years. In that announcement you do not read about a prayer. That’s what you read here. James is telling that a prayer preceded that announcement.
How could Elijah pray such a prayer which in fact is a judgment? He knew God’s thoughts and that’s why he prayed this remarkable prayer (Deuteronomy 11:16-17). He loved God’s people and he loved God. God wanted His people to turn back to Him and the only way to realize that was through the judgment of drought. It is a prayer to the Lord not to bless us, so that we may feel that we have turned away from Him. The prayer of Elijah was answered.
James 5:18. After a course of time he prayed again and this time he prayed for the rain to fall. He understood that the time of blessing had come because he had offered the offering and the people had spoken out the confession that Yahweh is God (1 Kings 18:38-39).
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is, especially in the last days, to pray. We are in need of people who know the will of God and who are convinced of the power of prayer. I hope that you may become a man of prayer. You do not need to have a gift for that, neither do you need to follow a training for that. You simply have got to do it. Think again about this prayer of Elijah and resolve to pray more often and also more fervently.
James 5:19. James concludes his letter with two verses about bringing back someone who has strayed from the truth. That is in line with Elijah. Elijah was also a restorer. By his prayer he brought back the people to God. You also can bring back someone to God by prayer. Do you know people, believers, who first were faithful in their service for the Lord, but now have a rather casual attitude to the truth? If they continue to do so they will end up in death. You may bring back such a person from that path of error by praying for him. If you pray in such a way for the straying one, the Lord can also make clear to you whether you should visit him and how to address him.
James 5:20. If you bring him back you save him from death and you also cover a multitude of sins. He will repent and confess his path of error. Then he may learn again that all his sins are forgiven, that they have been cast into the depths of the sea (Micah 7:19). By bringing back the straying one you also prevent him from being drawn further into the power of sin. Also in that sense you have made sure that a multitude of sins has been covered, for he is prevented to commit them. I sincerely hope that you have the desire that strayed believers will turn back to God.
Now read James 5:13-20 again.
Reflection: Commit yourself to pray for the restoration of deviated believers.
1 John 4:10
Prayer
James 5:13. In James 5:13-14 you see three situations in which someone can find himself: 1. he can suffer, 2. he can be cheerful and 3. he can be sick.
These are situations that may trigger those who are in such a situation, to respond in a certain way. The point is: 1. in what way they respond to suffering, 2. how feelings of joy are dealt with and 3. how do people go through sickness.
The world tries to escape suffering, it loudly expresses its feelings of joy and it goes through sickness by grinding its teeth. The believer can respond to that totally differently. It is wonderful to see that in each of the three situations James refers to God as the refuge of the believer:
-
He who suffers can go to God with his suffering by praying. In that way he will find comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3-7).
-
He who lives in prosperity and is not plagued by adversities, can sing out his thanks to God. In that way he acknowledges God as the source of his prosperity and is prevented from forgetting God, due to prosperity. We are often willing to bring our sufferings to God, but we often forget to share our joy with Him.
-
James 5:14. He who is sick can tell that to the elders of the church. That doesn’t mean that God is not involved here and that the sick person expects his healing from people (cf. 2 Chronicles 16:12), but this is the way that God shows. The elders are as it were His representatives.
That doesn’t mean that for each sickness the elders of the church should be called for. Timothy doesn’t get the advice to call the elders of Ephesus to pray for him and make him healthy. Paul gives him the simple advice to use a little wine (1 Timothy 5:23).
What follows here makes it clear that it is about a serious sickness that also may possibly be the consequence of certain sins. If that is the case, the sickness has revealed the sin. It is not enough that the sick keeps his sins between himself and God. The sickness is not a little flu. The word ‘sick’ that James uses, indicates that the sick is weak, without any power. It is also clear that the sick is not able to join the meetings, for he has to call for the elders. Another aspect that you find in the expression “the Lord will raise him up”, is that it is about someone who is bedridden, or housebound, while he lacks the power to arise.
When the sick has called for the elders, they are to pray over him. The sick is not supposed to pray. The elders must also anoint “him with oil in the name of the Lord”. A lot has been written and said about the effect of the oil or what it represents. Some possibilities that have appealed to me, I pass on to you for your consideration.
One possibility is that the oil is simply a medication (cf. Isaiah 1:6; Jeremiah 8:22; Luke 10:34). No miraculous effects should be attributed to that oil, any more than the fig cake that Hezekiah had to take to apply it to the boil (Isaiah 38:21). The Lord must bless the means. That is the reason why His Name is connected to it. The use of oil by elders may be a medical act that serves to give the sick person some relief in pain, without concluding that he will be healed. There is no question of a religious ritual.
Another possibility is that the use of the oil has a symbolic meaning. The anointing then has the meaning in the sense of honoring a person. You can also read about the anointing of the feet of the Lord (John 12:3) and the body of the Lord (Mark 16:1). The Lord rebukes Simon for holding back the proof of courtesy by not anointing Him (Luke 7:46).
This meaning of anointing is also plausible. It will make the sick, who may possibly be wondering whether God still cares about him, feel better by experiencing this anointing. In connection with Mark 6 (Mark 6:13) the oil perhaps can also be seen as a symbol of power or authority of the elders to pray the prayer for healing.
James 5:15. In any case, prayer and prayer alone produces blessing from God for the sick believers and the use of oil is in no way an essential part that would be necessary to receive that blessing. It is not the oil that works healing, but the prayer of the faith of the elders. That this prayer of faith is answered by the Lord, can be seen in the fact that He raises up the sick.
To the raising up of the sick forgiveness is connected in case the sick has sinned. Then there can be no blessing of healing without confession. Therefore confession must have preceded, for sins are only forgiven if they have been confessed. Here it is about the forgiveness by the elders. The sick will have had confessed his sins already to God and will have received forgiveness from God (1 John 1:9). It is also important that the elders speak out the forgiveness (cf. John 20:23; Matthew 18:18). As a result to that there is also a public restoration of fellowship with the believers.
James 5:16. The situation of the ‘sickbed prayer’ makes James underline the necessity of the confession of sins to one another, also if there is no mention of sickness. Confessing sins to one another has got nothing to do with the penance, as it is taught and practiced by the roman-catholic church. In that penance a person confesses his sins to a person who has nothing whatever to do with it and who arrogates the status of mediator between the sinner and God.
The call of James refers to situations in which we have sinned to one another. Sin always hinders the blessing of God. That hindrance is taken away by confession. When sin is confessed, blessing can flow freely again, and in case of sickness, healing and health can also come.
By the way, it is not wrong for a person to confess sins to a person against whom he has not sinned in case of pastoral counseling. A person may be tortured by a sin, but doesn’t know how to confess. It may possibly be the case that this person for instance has sinned against a person who does not live any more. Then it is a good thing that this person confesses the sin together with a confidential counselor and that the counselor also ensures him that forgiveness by God is certain and clear, because God has said that in His Word.
The power of prayer is awesome. The condition, however, is that it is prayed by a righteous person. By “a righteous man” James does not mean someone who through faith is righteous before God, but someone who lives righteously. If such a man comes to God with a fervent prayer God can and will surely hear it. He does not need to speak first with the one who prays about things that are not right in his life. A righteous man is associated with God, he is accustomed to it and that causes him to know the will of God.
You can be a righteous man. That is not a status that you achieve by living righteously, but you are that if, as far as you know, your life is pure before God. God wants to have your prayer involved in His actions. He listens to it and uses it to realize His plans.
James 5:17. As an example of a righteous man who prays an effective, fervent prayer James presents Elijah. Elijah is close to you and not above you, although you certainly will look up to him. At least I do. He truly is a man of God. Elijah also has had his weak moments. For that reason it is written here that he was “a man with a nature like ours”. Therefore you can also learn a lot from him. He was able to stand fearlessly before Ahab because he was aware that he was not standing before Ahab, but before God (1 Kings 17:1). There he made known that there would be no rain for years. In that announcement you do not read about a prayer. That’s what you read here. James is telling that a prayer preceded that announcement.
How could Elijah pray such a prayer which in fact is a judgment? He knew God’s thoughts and that’s why he prayed this remarkable prayer (Deuteronomy 11:16-17). He loved God’s people and he loved God. God wanted His people to turn back to Him and the only way to realize that was through the judgment of drought. It is a prayer to the Lord not to bless us, so that we may feel that we have turned away from Him. The prayer of Elijah was answered.
James 5:18. After a course of time he prayed again and this time he prayed for the rain to fall. He understood that the time of blessing had come because he had offered the offering and the people had spoken out the confession that Yahweh is God (1 Kings 18:38-39).
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is, especially in the last days, to pray. We are in need of people who know the will of God and who are convinced of the power of prayer. I hope that you may become a man of prayer. You do not need to have a gift for that, neither do you need to follow a training for that. You simply have got to do it. Think again about this prayer of Elijah and resolve to pray more often and also more fervently.
James 5:19. James concludes his letter with two verses about bringing back someone who has strayed from the truth. That is in line with Elijah. Elijah was also a restorer. By his prayer he brought back the people to God. You also can bring back someone to God by prayer. Do you know people, believers, who first were faithful in their service for the Lord, but now have a rather casual attitude to the truth? If they continue to do so they will end up in death. You may bring back such a person from that path of error by praying for him. If you pray in such a way for the straying one, the Lord can also make clear to you whether you should visit him and how to address him.
James 5:20. If you bring him back you save him from death and you also cover a multitude of sins. He will repent and confess his path of error. Then he may learn again that all his sins are forgiven, that they have been cast into the depths of the sea (Micah 7:19). By bringing back the straying one you also prevent him from being drawn further into the power of sin. Also in that sense you have made sure that a multitude of sins has been covered, for he is prevented to commit them. I sincerely hope that you have the desire that strayed believers will turn back to God.
Now read James 5:13-20 again.
Reflection: Commit yourself to pray for the restoration of deviated believers.
1 John 4:11
Prayer
James 5:13. In James 5:13-14 you see three situations in which someone can find himself: 1. he can suffer, 2. he can be cheerful and 3. he can be sick.
These are situations that may trigger those who are in such a situation, to respond in a certain way. The point is: 1. in what way they respond to suffering, 2. how feelings of joy are dealt with and 3. how do people go through sickness.
The world tries to escape suffering, it loudly expresses its feelings of joy and it goes through sickness by grinding its teeth. The believer can respond to that totally differently. It is wonderful to see that in each of the three situations James refers to God as the refuge of the believer:
-
He who suffers can go to God with his suffering by praying. In that way he will find comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3-7).
-
He who lives in prosperity and is not plagued by adversities, can sing out his thanks to God. In that way he acknowledges God as the source of his prosperity and is prevented from forgetting God, due to prosperity. We are often willing to bring our sufferings to God, but we often forget to share our joy with Him.
-
James 5:14. He who is sick can tell that to the elders of the church. That doesn’t mean that God is not involved here and that the sick person expects his healing from people (cf. 2 Chronicles 16:12), but this is the way that God shows. The elders are as it were His representatives.
That doesn’t mean that for each sickness the elders of the church should be called for. Timothy doesn’t get the advice to call the elders of Ephesus to pray for him and make him healthy. Paul gives him the simple advice to use a little wine (1 Timothy 5:23).
What follows here makes it clear that it is about a serious sickness that also may possibly be the consequence of certain sins. If that is the case, the sickness has revealed the sin. It is not enough that the sick keeps his sins between himself and God. The sickness is not a little flu. The word ‘sick’ that James uses, indicates that the sick is weak, without any power. It is also clear that the sick is not able to join the meetings, for he has to call for the elders. Another aspect that you find in the expression “the Lord will raise him up”, is that it is about someone who is bedridden, or housebound, while he lacks the power to arise.
When the sick has called for the elders, they are to pray over him. The sick is not supposed to pray. The elders must also anoint “him with oil in the name of the Lord”. A lot has been written and said about the effect of the oil or what it represents. Some possibilities that have appealed to me, I pass on to you for your consideration.
One possibility is that the oil is simply a medication (cf. Isaiah 1:6; Jeremiah 8:22; Luke 10:34). No miraculous effects should be attributed to that oil, any more than the fig cake that Hezekiah had to take to apply it to the boil (Isaiah 38:21). The Lord must bless the means. That is the reason why His Name is connected to it. The use of oil by elders may be a medical act that serves to give the sick person some relief in pain, without concluding that he will be healed. There is no question of a religious ritual.
Another possibility is that the use of the oil has a symbolic meaning. The anointing then has the meaning in the sense of honoring a person. You can also read about the anointing of the feet of the Lord (John 12:3) and the body of the Lord (Mark 16:1). The Lord rebukes Simon for holding back the proof of courtesy by not anointing Him (Luke 7:46).
This meaning of anointing is also plausible. It will make the sick, who may possibly be wondering whether God still cares about him, feel better by experiencing this anointing. In connection with Mark 6 (Mark 6:13) the oil perhaps can also be seen as a symbol of power or authority of the elders to pray the prayer for healing.
James 5:15. In any case, prayer and prayer alone produces blessing from God for the sick believers and the use of oil is in no way an essential part that would be necessary to receive that blessing. It is not the oil that works healing, but the prayer of the faith of the elders. That this prayer of faith is answered by the Lord, can be seen in the fact that He raises up the sick.
To the raising up of the sick forgiveness is connected in case the sick has sinned. Then there can be no blessing of healing without confession. Therefore confession must have preceded, for sins are only forgiven if they have been confessed. Here it is about the forgiveness by the elders. The sick will have had confessed his sins already to God and will have received forgiveness from God (1 John 1:9). It is also important that the elders speak out the forgiveness (cf. John 20:23; Matthew 18:18). As a result to that there is also a public restoration of fellowship with the believers.
James 5:16. The situation of the ‘sickbed prayer’ makes James underline the necessity of the confession of sins to one another, also if there is no mention of sickness. Confessing sins to one another has got nothing to do with the penance, as it is taught and practiced by the roman-catholic church. In that penance a person confesses his sins to a person who has nothing whatever to do with it and who arrogates the status of mediator between the sinner and God.
The call of James refers to situations in which we have sinned to one another. Sin always hinders the blessing of God. That hindrance is taken away by confession. When sin is confessed, blessing can flow freely again, and in case of sickness, healing and health can also come.
By the way, it is not wrong for a person to confess sins to a person against whom he has not sinned in case of pastoral counseling. A person may be tortured by a sin, but doesn’t know how to confess. It may possibly be the case that this person for instance has sinned against a person who does not live any more. Then it is a good thing that this person confesses the sin together with a confidential counselor and that the counselor also ensures him that forgiveness by God is certain and clear, because God has said that in His Word.
The power of prayer is awesome. The condition, however, is that it is prayed by a righteous person. By “a righteous man” James does not mean someone who through faith is righteous before God, but someone who lives righteously. If such a man comes to God with a fervent prayer God can and will surely hear it. He does not need to speak first with the one who prays about things that are not right in his life. A righteous man is associated with God, he is accustomed to it and that causes him to know the will of God.
You can be a righteous man. That is not a status that you achieve by living righteously, but you are that if, as far as you know, your life is pure before God. God wants to have your prayer involved in His actions. He listens to it and uses it to realize His plans.
James 5:17. As an example of a righteous man who prays an effective, fervent prayer James presents Elijah. Elijah is close to you and not above you, although you certainly will look up to him. At least I do. He truly is a man of God. Elijah also has had his weak moments. For that reason it is written here that he was “a man with a nature like ours”. Therefore you can also learn a lot from him. He was able to stand fearlessly before Ahab because he was aware that he was not standing before Ahab, but before God (1 Kings 17:1). There he made known that there would be no rain for years. In that announcement you do not read about a prayer. That’s what you read here. James is telling that a prayer preceded that announcement.
How could Elijah pray such a prayer which in fact is a judgment? He knew God’s thoughts and that’s why he prayed this remarkable prayer (Deuteronomy 11:16-17). He loved God’s people and he loved God. God wanted His people to turn back to Him and the only way to realize that was through the judgment of drought. It is a prayer to the Lord not to bless us, so that we may feel that we have turned away from Him. The prayer of Elijah was answered.
James 5:18. After a course of time he prayed again and this time he prayed for the rain to fall. He understood that the time of blessing had come because he had offered the offering and the people had spoken out the confession that Yahweh is God (1 Kings 18:38-39).
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is, especially in the last days, to pray. We are in need of people who know the will of God and who are convinced of the power of prayer. I hope that you may become a man of prayer. You do not need to have a gift for that, neither do you need to follow a training for that. You simply have got to do it. Think again about this prayer of Elijah and resolve to pray more often and also more fervently.
James 5:19. James concludes his letter with two verses about bringing back someone who has strayed from the truth. That is in line with Elijah. Elijah was also a restorer. By his prayer he brought back the people to God. You also can bring back someone to God by prayer. Do you know people, believers, who first were faithful in their service for the Lord, but now have a rather casual attitude to the truth? If they continue to do so they will end up in death. You may bring back such a person from that path of error by praying for him. If you pray in such a way for the straying one, the Lord can also make clear to you whether you should visit him and how to address him.
James 5:20. If you bring him back you save him from death and you also cover a multitude of sins. He will repent and confess his path of error. Then he may learn again that all his sins are forgiven, that they have been cast into the depths of the sea (Micah 7:19). By bringing back the straying one you also prevent him from being drawn further into the power of sin. Also in that sense you have made sure that a multitude of sins has been covered, for he is prevented to commit them. I sincerely hope that you have the desire that strayed believers will turn back to God.
Now read James 5:13-20 again.
Reflection: Commit yourself to pray for the restoration of deviated believers.
1 John 4:12
Prayer
James 5:13. In James 5:13-14 you see three situations in which someone can find himself: 1. he can suffer, 2. he can be cheerful and 3. he can be sick.
These are situations that may trigger those who are in such a situation, to respond in a certain way. The point is: 1. in what way they respond to suffering, 2. how feelings of joy are dealt with and 3. how do people go through sickness.
The world tries to escape suffering, it loudly expresses its feelings of joy and it goes through sickness by grinding its teeth. The believer can respond to that totally differently. It is wonderful to see that in each of the three situations James refers to God as the refuge of the believer:
-
He who suffers can go to God with his suffering by praying. In that way he will find comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3-7).
-
He who lives in prosperity and is not plagued by adversities, can sing out his thanks to God. In that way he acknowledges God as the source of his prosperity and is prevented from forgetting God, due to prosperity. We are often willing to bring our sufferings to God, but we often forget to share our joy with Him.
-
James 5:14. He who is sick can tell that to the elders of the church. That doesn’t mean that God is not involved here and that the sick person expects his healing from people (cf. 2 Chronicles 16:12), but this is the way that God shows. The elders are as it were His representatives.
That doesn’t mean that for each sickness the elders of the church should be called for. Timothy doesn’t get the advice to call the elders of Ephesus to pray for him and make him healthy. Paul gives him the simple advice to use a little wine (1 Timothy 5:23).
What follows here makes it clear that it is about a serious sickness that also may possibly be the consequence of certain sins. If that is the case, the sickness has revealed the sin. It is not enough that the sick keeps his sins between himself and God. The sickness is not a little flu. The word ‘sick’ that James uses, indicates that the sick is weak, without any power. It is also clear that the sick is not able to join the meetings, for he has to call for the elders. Another aspect that you find in the expression “the Lord will raise him up”, is that it is about someone who is bedridden, or housebound, while he lacks the power to arise.
When the sick has called for the elders, they are to pray over him. The sick is not supposed to pray. The elders must also anoint “him with oil in the name of the Lord”. A lot has been written and said about the effect of the oil or what it represents. Some possibilities that have appealed to me, I pass on to you for your consideration.
One possibility is that the oil is simply a medication (cf. Isaiah 1:6; Jeremiah 8:22; Luke 10:34). No miraculous effects should be attributed to that oil, any more than the fig cake that Hezekiah had to take to apply it to the boil (Isaiah 38:21). The Lord must bless the means. That is the reason why His Name is connected to it. The use of oil by elders may be a medical act that serves to give the sick person some relief in pain, without concluding that he will be healed. There is no question of a religious ritual.
Another possibility is that the use of the oil has a symbolic meaning. The anointing then has the meaning in the sense of honoring a person. You can also read about the anointing of the feet of the Lord (John 12:3) and the body of the Lord (Mark 16:1). The Lord rebukes Simon for holding back the proof of courtesy by not anointing Him (Luke 7:46).
This meaning of anointing is also plausible. It will make the sick, who may possibly be wondering whether God still cares about him, feel better by experiencing this anointing. In connection with Mark 6 (Mark 6:13) the oil perhaps can also be seen as a symbol of power or authority of the elders to pray the prayer for healing.
James 5:15. In any case, prayer and prayer alone produces blessing from God for the sick believers and the use of oil is in no way an essential part that would be necessary to receive that blessing. It is not the oil that works healing, but the prayer of the faith of the elders. That this prayer of faith is answered by the Lord, can be seen in the fact that He raises up the sick.
To the raising up of the sick forgiveness is connected in case the sick has sinned. Then there can be no blessing of healing without confession. Therefore confession must have preceded, for sins are only forgiven if they have been confessed. Here it is about the forgiveness by the elders. The sick will have had confessed his sins already to God and will have received forgiveness from God (1 John 1:9). It is also important that the elders speak out the forgiveness (cf. John 20:23; Matthew 18:18). As a result to that there is also a public restoration of fellowship with the believers.
James 5:16. The situation of the ‘sickbed prayer’ makes James underline the necessity of the confession of sins to one another, also if there is no mention of sickness. Confessing sins to one another has got nothing to do with the penance, as it is taught and practiced by the roman-catholic church. In that penance a person confesses his sins to a person who has nothing whatever to do with it and who arrogates the status of mediator between the sinner and God.
The call of James refers to situations in which we have sinned to one another. Sin always hinders the blessing of God. That hindrance is taken away by confession. When sin is confessed, blessing can flow freely again, and in case of sickness, healing and health can also come.
By the way, it is not wrong for a person to confess sins to a person against whom he has not sinned in case of pastoral counseling. A person may be tortured by a sin, but doesn’t know how to confess. It may possibly be the case that this person for instance has sinned against a person who does not live any more. Then it is a good thing that this person confesses the sin together with a confidential counselor and that the counselor also ensures him that forgiveness by God is certain and clear, because God has said that in His Word.
The power of prayer is awesome. The condition, however, is that it is prayed by a righteous person. By “a righteous man” James does not mean someone who through faith is righteous before God, but someone who lives righteously. If such a man comes to God with a fervent prayer God can and will surely hear it. He does not need to speak first with the one who prays about things that are not right in his life. A righteous man is associated with God, he is accustomed to it and that causes him to know the will of God.
You can be a righteous man. That is not a status that you achieve by living righteously, but you are that if, as far as you know, your life is pure before God. God wants to have your prayer involved in His actions. He listens to it and uses it to realize His plans.
James 5:17. As an example of a righteous man who prays an effective, fervent prayer James presents Elijah. Elijah is close to you and not above you, although you certainly will look up to him. At least I do. He truly is a man of God. Elijah also has had his weak moments. For that reason it is written here that he was “a man with a nature like ours”. Therefore you can also learn a lot from him. He was able to stand fearlessly before Ahab because he was aware that he was not standing before Ahab, but before God (1 Kings 17:1). There he made known that there would be no rain for years. In that announcement you do not read about a prayer. That’s what you read here. James is telling that a prayer preceded that announcement.
How could Elijah pray such a prayer which in fact is a judgment? He knew God’s thoughts and that’s why he prayed this remarkable prayer (Deuteronomy 11:16-17). He loved God’s people and he loved God. God wanted His people to turn back to Him and the only way to realize that was through the judgment of drought. It is a prayer to the Lord not to bless us, so that we may feel that we have turned away from Him. The prayer of Elijah was answered.
James 5:18. After a course of time he prayed again and this time he prayed for the rain to fall. He understood that the time of blessing had come because he had offered the offering and the people had spoken out the confession that Yahweh is God (1 Kings 18:38-39).
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is, especially in the last days, to pray. We are in need of people who know the will of God and who are convinced of the power of prayer. I hope that you may become a man of prayer. You do not need to have a gift for that, neither do you need to follow a training for that. You simply have got to do it. Think again about this prayer of Elijah and resolve to pray more often and also more fervently.
James 5:19. James concludes his letter with two verses about bringing back someone who has strayed from the truth. That is in line with Elijah. Elijah was also a restorer. By his prayer he brought back the people to God. You also can bring back someone to God by prayer. Do you know people, believers, who first were faithful in their service for the Lord, but now have a rather casual attitude to the truth? If they continue to do so they will end up in death. You may bring back such a person from that path of error by praying for him. If you pray in such a way for the straying one, the Lord can also make clear to you whether you should visit him and how to address him.
James 5:20. If you bring him back you save him from death and you also cover a multitude of sins. He will repent and confess his path of error. Then he may learn again that all his sins are forgiven, that they have been cast into the depths of the sea (Micah 7:19). By bringing back the straying one you also prevent him from being drawn further into the power of sin. Also in that sense you have made sure that a multitude of sins has been covered, for he is prevented to commit them. I sincerely hope that you have the desire that strayed believers will turn back to God.
Now read James 5:13-20 again.
Reflection: Commit yourself to pray for the restoration of deviated believers.
1 John 4:13
Prayer
James 5:13. In James 5:13-14 you see three situations in which someone can find himself: 1. he can suffer, 2. he can be cheerful and 3. he can be sick.
These are situations that may trigger those who are in such a situation, to respond in a certain way. The point is: 1. in what way they respond to suffering, 2. how feelings of joy are dealt with and 3. how do people go through sickness.
The world tries to escape suffering, it loudly expresses its feelings of joy and it goes through sickness by grinding its teeth. The believer can respond to that totally differently. It is wonderful to see that in each of the three situations James refers to God as the refuge of the believer:
-
He who suffers can go to God with his suffering by praying. In that way he will find comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3-7).
-
He who lives in prosperity and is not plagued by adversities, can sing out his thanks to God. In that way he acknowledges God as the source of his prosperity and is prevented from forgetting God, due to prosperity. We are often willing to bring our sufferings to God, but we often forget to share our joy with Him.
-
James 5:14. He who is sick can tell that to the elders of the church. That doesn’t mean that God is not involved here and that the sick person expects his healing from people (cf. 2 Chronicles 16:12), but this is the way that God shows. The elders are as it were His representatives.
That doesn’t mean that for each sickness the elders of the church should be called for. Timothy doesn’t get the advice to call the elders of Ephesus to pray for him and make him healthy. Paul gives him the simple advice to use a little wine (1 Timothy 5:23).
What follows here makes it clear that it is about a serious sickness that also may possibly be the consequence of certain sins. If that is the case, the sickness has revealed the sin. It is not enough that the sick keeps his sins between himself and God. The sickness is not a little flu. The word ‘sick’ that James uses, indicates that the sick is weak, without any power. It is also clear that the sick is not able to join the meetings, for he has to call for the elders. Another aspect that you find in the expression “the Lord will raise him up”, is that it is about someone who is bedridden, or housebound, while he lacks the power to arise.
When the sick has called for the elders, they are to pray over him. The sick is not supposed to pray. The elders must also anoint “him with oil in the name of the Lord”. A lot has been written and said about the effect of the oil or what it represents. Some possibilities that have appealed to me, I pass on to you for your consideration.
One possibility is that the oil is simply a medication (cf. Isaiah 1:6; Jeremiah 8:22; Luke 10:34). No miraculous effects should be attributed to that oil, any more than the fig cake that Hezekiah had to take to apply it to the boil (Isaiah 38:21). The Lord must bless the means. That is the reason why His Name is connected to it. The use of oil by elders may be a medical act that serves to give the sick person some relief in pain, without concluding that he will be healed. There is no question of a religious ritual.
Another possibility is that the use of the oil has a symbolic meaning. The anointing then has the meaning in the sense of honoring a person. You can also read about the anointing of the feet of the Lord (John 12:3) and the body of the Lord (Mark 16:1). The Lord rebukes Simon for holding back the proof of courtesy by not anointing Him (Luke 7:46).
This meaning of anointing is also plausible. It will make the sick, who may possibly be wondering whether God still cares about him, feel better by experiencing this anointing. In connection with Mark 6 (Mark 6:13) the oil perhaps can also be seen as a symbol of power or authority of the elders to pray the prayer for healing.
James 5:15. In any case, prayer and prayer alone produces blessing from God for the sick believers and the use of oil is in no way an essential part that would be necessary to receive that blessing. It is not the oil that works healing, but the prayer of the faith of the elders. That this prayer of faith is answered by the Lord, can be seen in the fact that He raises up the sick.
To the raising up of the sick forgiveness is connected in case the sick has sinned. Then there can be no blessing of healing without confession. Therefore confession must have preceded, for sins are only forgiven if they have been confessed. Here it is about the forgiveness by the elders. The sick will have had confessed his sins already to God and will have received forgiveness from God (1 John 1:9). It is also important that the elders speak out the forgiveness (cf. John 20:23; Matthew 18:18). As a result to that there is also a public restoration of fellowship with the believers.
James 5:16. The situation of the ‘sickbed prayer’ makes James underline the necessity of the confession of sins to one another, also if there is no mention of sickness. Confessing sins to one another has got nothing to do with the penance, as it is taught and practiced by the roman-catholic church. In that penance a person confesses his sins to a person who has nothing whatever to do with it and who arrogates the status of mediator between the sinner and God.
The call of James refers to situations in which we have sinned to one another. Sin always hinders the blessing of God. That hindrance is taken away by confession. When sin is confessed, blessing can flow freely again, and in case of sickness, healing and health can also come.
By the way, it is not wrong for a person to confess sins to a person against whom he has not sinned in case of pastoral counseling. A person may be tortured by a sin, but doesn’t know how to confess. It may possibly be the case that this person for instance has sinned against a person who does not live any more. Then it is a good thing that this person confesses the sin together with a confidential counselor and that the counselor also ensures him that forgiveness by God is certain and clear, because God has said that in His Word.
The power of prayer is awesome. The condition, however, is that it is prayed by a righteous person. By “a righteous man” James does not mean someone who through faith is righteous before God, but someone who lives righteously. If such a man comes to God with a fervent prayer God can and will surely hear it. He does not need to speak first with the one who prays about things that are not right in his life. A righteous man is associated with God, he is accustomed to it and that causes him to know the will of God.
You can be a righteous man. That is not a status that you achieve by living righteously, but you are that if, as far as you know, your life is pure before God. God wants to have your prayer involved in His actions. He listens to it and uses it to realize His plans.
James 5:17. As an example of a righteous man who prays an effective, fervent prayer James presents Elijah. Elijah is close to you and not above you, although you certainly will look up to him. At least I do. He truly is a man of God. Elijah also has had his weak moments. For that reason it is written here that he was “a man with a nature like ours”. Therefore you can also learn a lot from him. He was able to stand fearlessly before Ahab because he was aware that he was not standing before Ahab, but before God (1 Kings 17:1). There he made known that there would be no rain for years. In that announcement you do not read about a prayer. That’s what you read here. James is telling that a prayer preceded that announcement.
How could Elijah pray such a prayer which in fact is a judgment? He knew God’s thoughts and that’s why he prayed this remarkable prayer (Deuteronomy 11:16-17). He loved God’s people and he loved God. God wanted His people to turn back to Him and the only way to realize that was through the judgment of drought. It is a prayer to the Lord not to bless us, so that we may feel that we have turned away from Him. The prayer of Elijah was answered.
James 5:18. After a course of time he prayed again and this time he prayed for the rain to fall. He understood that the time of blessing had come because he had offered the offering and the people had spoken out the confession that Yahweh is God (1 Kings 18:38-39).
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is, especially in the last days, to pray. We are in need of people who know the will of God and who are convinced of the power of prayer. I hope that you may become a man of prayer. You do not need to have a gift for that, neither do you need to follow a training for that. You simply have got to do it. Think again about this prayer of Elijah and resolve to pray more often and also more fervently.
James 5:19. James concludes his letter with two verses about bringing back someone who has strayed from the truth. That is in line with Elijah. Elijah was also a restorer. By his prayer he brought back the people to God. You also can bring back someone to God by prayer. Do you know people, believers, who first were faithful in their service for the Lord, but now have a rather casual attitude to the truth? If they continue to do so they will end up in death. You may bring back such a person from that path of error by praying for him. If you pray in such a way for the straying one, the Lord can also make clear to you whether you should visit him and how to address him.
James 5:20. If you bring him back you save him from death and you also cover a multitude of sins. He will repent and confess his path of error. Then he may learn again that all his sins are forgiven, that they have been cast into the depths of the sea (Micah 7:19). By bringing back the straying one you also prevent him from being drawn further into the power of sin. Also in that sense you have made sure that a multitude of sins has been covered, for he is prevented to commit them. I sincerely hope that you have the desire that strayed believers will turn back to God.
Now read James 5:13-20 again.
Reflection: Commit yourself to pray for the restoration of deviated believers.
1 John 4:14
Prayer
James 5:13. In James 5:13-14 you see three situations in which someone can find himself: 1. he can suffer, 2. he can be cheerful and 3. he can be sick.
These are situations that may trigger those who are in such a situation, to respond in a certain way. The point is: 1. in what way they respond to suffering, 2. how feelings of joy are dealt with and 3. how do people go through sickness.
The world tries to escape suffering, it loudly expresses its feelings of joy and it goes through sickness by grinding its teeth. The believer can respond to that totally differently. It is wonderful to see that in each of the three situations James refers to God as the refuge of the believer:
-
He who suffers can go to God with his suffering by praying. In that way he will find comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3-7).
-
He who lives in prosperity and is not plagued by adversities, can sing out his thanks to God. In that way he acknowledges God as the source of his prosperity and is prevented from forgetting God, due to prosperity. We are often willing to bring our sufferings to God, but we often forget to share our joy with Him.
-
James 5:14. He who is sick can tell that to the elders of the church. That doesn’t mean that God is not involved here and that the sick person expects his healing from people (cf. 2 Chronicles 16:12), but this is the way that God shows. The elders are as it were His representatives.
That doesn’t mean that for each sickness the elders of the church should be called for. Timothy doesn’t get the advice to call the elders of Ephesus to pray for him and make him healthy. Paul gives him the simple advice to use a little wine (1 Timothy 5:23).
What follows here makes it clear that it is about a serious sickness that also may possibly be the consequence of certain sins. If that is the case, the sickness has revealed the sin. It is not enough that the sick keeps his sins between himself and God. The sickness is not a little flu. The word ‘sick’ that James uses, indicates that the sick is weak, without any power. It is also clear that the sick is not able to join the meetings, for he has to call for the elders. Another aspect that you find in the expression “the Lord will raise him up”, is that it is about someone who is bedridden, or housebound, while he lacks the power to arise.
When the sick has called for the elders, they are to pray over him. The sick is not supposed to pray. The elders must also anoint “him with oil in the name of the Lord”. A lot has been written and said about the effect of the oil or what it represents. Some possibilities that have appealed to me, I pass on to you for your consideration.
One possibility is that the oil is simply a medication (cf. Isaiah 1:6; Jeremiah 8:22; Luke 10:34). No miraculous effects should be attributed to that oil, any more than the fig cake that Hezekiah had to take to apply it to the boil (Isaiah 38:21). The Lord must bless the means. That is the reason why His Name is connected to it. The use of oil by elders may be a medical act that serves to give the sick person some relief in pain, without concluding that he will be healed. There is no question of a religious ritual.
Another possibility is that the use of the oil has a symbolic meaning. The anointing then has the meaning in the sense of honoring a person. You can also read about the anointing of the feet of the Lord (John 12:3) and the body of the Lord (Mark 16:1). The Lord rebukes Simon for holding back the proof of courtesy by not anointing Him (Luke 7:46).
This meaning of anointing is also plausible. It will make the sick, who may possibly be wondering whether God still cares about him, feel better by experiencing this anointing. In connection with Mark 6 (Mark 6:13) the oil perhaps can also be seen as a symbol of power or authority of the elders to pray the prayer for healing.
James 5:15. In any case, prayer and prayer alone produces blessing from God for the sick believers and the use of oil is in no way an essential part that would be necessary to receive that blessing. It is not the oil that works healing, but the prayer of the faith of the elders. That this prayer of faith is answered by the Lord, can be seen in the fact that He raises up the sick.
To the raising up of the sick forgiveness is connected in case the sick has sinned. Then there can be no blessing of healing without confession. Therefore confession must have preceded, for sins are only forgiven if they have been confessed. Here it is about the forgiveness by the elders. The sick will have had confessed his sins already to God and will have received forgiveness from God (1 John 1:9). It is also important that the elders speak out the forgiveness (cf. John 20:23; Matthew 18:18). As a result to that there is also a public restoration of fellowship with the believers.
James 5:16. The situation of the ‘sickbed prayer’ makes James underline the necessity of the confession of sins to one another, also if there is no mention of sickness. Confessing sins to one another has got nothing to do with the penance, as it is taught and practiced by the roman-catholic church. In that penance a person confesses his sins to a person who has nothing whatever to do with it and who arrogates the status of mediator between the sinner and God.
The call of James refers to situations in which we have sinned to one another. Sin always hinders the blessing of God. That hindrance is taken away by confession. When sin is confessed, blessing can flow freely again, and in case of sickness, healing and health can also come.
By the way, it is not wrong for a person to confess sins to a person against whom he has not sinned in case of pastoral counseling. A person may be tortured by a sin, but doesn’t know how to confess. It may possibly be the case that this person for instance has sinned against a person who does not live any more. Then it is a good thing that this person confesses the sin together with a confidential counselor and that the counselor also ensures him that forgiveness by God is certain and clear, because God has said that in His Word.
The power of prayer is awesome. The condition, however, is that it is prayed by a righteous person. By “a righteous man” James does not mean someone who through faith is righteous before God, but someone who lives righteously. If such a man comes to God with a fervent prayer God can and will surely hear it. He does not need to speak first with the one who prays about things that are not right in his life. A righteous man is associated with God, he is accustomed to it and that causes him to know the will of God.
You can be a righteous man. That is not a status that you achieve by living righteously, but you are that if, as far as you know, your life is pure before God. God wants to have your prayer involved in His actions. He listens to it and uses it to realize His plans.
James 5:17. As an example of a righteous man who prays an effective, fervent prayer James presents Elijah. Elijah is close to you and not above you, although you certainly will look up to him. At least I do. He truly is a man of God. Elijah also has had his weak moments. For that reason it is written here that he was “a man with a nature like ours”. Therefore you can also learn a lot from him. He was able to stand fearlessly before Ahab because he was aware that he was not standing before Ahab, but before God (1 Kings 17:1). There he made known that there would be no rain for years. In that announcement you do not read about a prayer. That’s what you read here. James is telling that a prayer preceded that announcement.
How could Elijah pray such a prayer which in fact is a judgment? He knew God’s thoughts and that’s why he prayed this remarkable prayer (Deuteronomy 11:16-17). He loved God’s people and he loved God. God wanted His people to turn back to Him and the only way to realize that was through the judgment of drought. It is a prayer to the Lord not to bless us, so that we may feel that we have turned away from Him. The prayer of Elijah was answered.
James 5:18. After a course of time he prayed again and this time he prayed for the rain to fall. He understood that the time of blessing had come because he had offered the offering and the people had spoken out the confession that Yahweh is God (1 Kings 18:38-39).
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is, especially in the last days, to pray. We are in need of people who know the will of God and who are convinced of the power of prayer. I hope that you may become a man of prayer. You do not need to have a gift for that, neither do you need to follow a training for that. You simply have got to do it. Think again about this prayer of Elijah and resolve to pray more often and also more fervently.
James 5:19. James concludes his letter with two verses about bringing back someone who has strayed from the truth. That is in line with Elijah. Elijah was also a restorer. By his prayer he brought back the people to God. You also can bring back someone to God by prayer. Do you know people, believers, who first were faithful in their service for the Lord, but now have a rather casual attitude to the truth? If they continue to do so they will end up in death. You may bring back such a person from that path of error by praying for him. If you pray in such a way for the straying one, the Lord can also make clear to you whether you should visit him and how to address him.
James 5:20. If you bring him back you save him from death and you also cover a multitude of sins. He will repent and confess his path of error. Then he may learn again that all his sins are forgiven, that they have been cast into the depths of the sea (Micah 7:19). By bringing back the straying one you also prevent him from being drawn further into the power of sin. Also in that sense you have made sure that a multitude of sins has been covered, for he is prevented to commit them. I sincerely hope that you have the desire that strayed believers will turn back to God.
Now read James 5:13-20 again.
Reflection: Commit yourself to pray for the restoration of deviated believers.
1 John 4:15
Prayer
James 5:13. In James 5:13-14 you see three situations in which someone can find himself: 1. he can suffer, 2. he can be cheerful and 3. he can be sick.
These are situations that may trigger those who are in such a situation, to respond in a certain way. The point is: 1. in what way they respond to suffering, 2. how feelings of joy are dealt with and 3. how do people go through sickness.
The world tries to escape suffering, it loudly expresses its feelings of joy and it goes through sickness by grinding its teeth. The believer can respond to that totally differently. It is wonderful to see that in each of the three situations James refers to God as the refuge of the believer:
-
He who suffers can go to God with his suffering by praying. In that way he will find comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3-7).
-
He who lives in prosperity and is not plagued by adversities, can sing out his thanks to God. In that way he acknowledges God as the source of his prosperity and is prevented from forgetting God, due to prosperity. We are often willing to bring our sufferings to God, but we often forget to share our joy with Him.
-
James 5:14. He who is sick can tell that to the elders of the church. That doesn’t mean that God is not involved here and that the sick person expects his healing from people (cf. 2 Chronicles 16:12), but this is the way that God shows. The elders are as it were His representatives.
That doesn’t mean that for each sickness the elders of the church should be called for. Timothy doesn’t get the advice to call the elders of Ephesus to pray for him and make him healthy. Paul gives him the simple advice to use a little wine (1 Timothy 5:23).
What follows here makes it clear that it is about a serious sickness that also may possibly be the consequence of certain sins. If that is the case, the sickness has revealed the sin. It is not enough that the sick keeps his sins between himself and God. The sickness is not a little flu. The word ‘sick’ that James uses, indicates that the sick is weak, without any power. It is also clear that the sick is not able to join the meetings, for he has to call for the elders. Another aspect that you find in the expression “the Lord will raise him up”, is that it is about someone who is bedridden, or housebound, while he lacks the power to arise.
When the sick has called for the elders, they are to pray over him. The sick is not supposed to pray. The elders must also anoint “him with oil in the name of the Lord”. A lot has been written and said about the effect of the oil or what it represents. Some possibilities that have appealed to me, I pass on to you for your consideration.
One possibility is that the oil is simply a medication (cf. Isaiah 1:6; Jeremiah 8:22; Luke 10:34). No miraculous effects should be attributed to that oil, any more than the fig cake that Hezekiah had to take to apply it to the boil (Isaiah 38:21). The Lord must bless the means. That is the reason why His Name is connected to it. The use of oil by elders may be a medical act that serves to give the sick person some relief in pain, without concluding that he will be healed. There is no question of a religious ritual.
Another possibility is that the use of the oil has a symbolic meaning. The anointing then has the meaning in the sense of honoring a person. You can also read about the anointing of the feet of the Lord (John 12:3) and the body of the Lord (Mark 16:1). The Lord rebukes Simon for holding back the proof of courtesy by not anointing Him (Luke 7:46).
This meaning of anointing is also plausible. It will make the sick, who may possibly be wondering whether God still cares about him, feel better by experiencing this anointing. In connection with Mark 6 (Mark 6:13) the oil perhaps can also be seen as a symbol of power or authority of the elders to pray the prayer for healing.
James 5:15. In any case, prayer and prayer alone produces blessing from God for the sick believers and the use of oil is in no way an essential part that would be necessary to receive that blessing. It is not the oil that works healing, but the prayer of the faith of the elders. That this prayer of faith is answered by the Lord, can be seen in the fact that He raises up the sick.
To the raising up of the sick forgiveness is connected in case the sick has sinned. Then there can be no blessing of healing without confession. Therefore confession must have preceded, for sins are only forgiven if they have been confessed. Here it is about the forgiveness by the elders. The sick will have had confessed his sins already to God and will have received forgiveness from God (1 John 1:9). It is also important that the elders speak out the forgiveness (cf. John 20:23; Matthew 18:18). As a result to that there is also a public restoration of fellowship with the believers.
James 5:16. The situation of the ‘sickbed prayer’ makes James underline the necessity of the confession of sins to one another, also if there is no mention of sickness. Confessing sins to one another has got nothing to do with the penance, as it is taught and practiced by the roman-catholic church. In that penance a person confesses his sins to a person who has nothing whatever to do with it and who arrogates the status of mediator between the sinner and God.
The call of James refers to situations in which we have sinned to one another. Sin always hinders the blessing of God. That hindrance is taken away by confession. When sin is confessed, blessing can flow freely again, and in case of sickness, healing and health can also come.
By the way, it is not wrong for a person to confess sins to a person against whom he has not sinned in case of pastoral counseling. A person may be tortured by a sin, but doesn’t know how to confess. It may possibly be the case that this person for instance has sinned against a person who does not live any more. Then it is a good thing that this person confesses the sin together with a confidential counselor and that the counselor also ensures him that forgiveness by God is certain and clear, because God has said that in His Word.
The power of prayer is awesome. The condition, however, is that it is prayed by a righteous person. By “a righteous man” James does not mean someone who through faith is righteous before God, but someone who lives righteously. If such a man comes to God with a fervent prayer God can and will surely hear it. He does not need to speak first with the one who prays about things that are not right in his life. A righteous man is associated with God, he is accustomed to it and that causes him to know the will of God.
You can be a righteous man. That is not a status that you achieve by living righteously, but you are that if, as far as you know, your life is pure before God. God wants to have your prayer involved in His actions. He listens to it and uses it to realize His plans.
James 5:17. As an example of a righteous man who prays an effective, fervent prayer James presents Elijah. Elijah is close to you and not above you, although you certainly will look up to him. At least I do. He truly is a man of God. Elijah also has had his weak moments. For that reason it is written here that he was “a man with a nature like ours”. Therefore you can also learn a lot from him. He was able to stand fearlessly before Ahab because he was aware that he was not standing before Ahab, but before God (1 Kings 17:1). There he made known that there would be no rain for years. In that announcement you do not read about a prayer. That’s what you read here. James is telling that a prayer preceded that announcement.
How could Elijah pray such a prayer which in fact is a judgment? He knew God’s thoughts and that’s why he prayed this remarkable prayer (Deuteronomy 11:16-17). He loved God’s people and he loved God. God wanted His people to turn back to Him and the only way to realize that was through the judgment of drought. It is a prayer to the Lord not to bless us, so that we may feel that we have turned away from Him. The prayer of Elijah was answered.
James 5:18. After a course of time he prayed again and this time he prayed for the rain to fall. He understood that the time of blessing had come because he had offered the offering and the people had spoken out the confession that Yahweh is God (1 Kings 18:38-39).
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is, especially in the last days, to pray. We are in need of people who know the will of God and who are convinced of the power of prayer. I hope that you may become a man of prayer. You do not need to have a gift for that, neither do you need to follow a training for that. You simply have got to do it. Think again about this prayer of Elijah and resolve to pray more often and also more fervently.
James 5:19. James concludes his letter with two verses about bringing back someone who has strayed from the truth. That is in line with Elijah. Elijah was also a restorer. By his prayer he brought back the people to God. You also can bring back someone to God by prayer. Do you know people, believers, who first were faithful in their service for the Lord, but now have a rather casual attitude to the truth? If they continue to do so they will end up in death. You may bring back such a person from that path of error by praying for him. If you pray in such a way for the straying one, the Lord can also make clear to you whether you should visit him and how to address him.
James 5:20. If you bring him back you save him from death and you also cover a multitude of sins. He will repent and confess his path of error. Then he may learn again that all his sins are forgiven, that they have been cast into the depths of the sea (Micah 7:19). By bringing back the straying one you also prevent him from being drawn further into the power of sin. Also in that sense you have made sure that a multitude of sins has been covered, for he is prevented to commit them. I sincerely hope that you have the desire that strayed believers will turn back to God.
Now read James 5:13-20 again.
Reflection: Commit yourself to pray for the restoration of deviated believers.
1 John 4:18
Introduction
After the many letters of Paul and the one letter of James you now have a letter of another writer before you. The writer is the apostle Peter. Of all the disciples who traveled through Israel with the Lord Jesus, he is the one about whom the most is written in the four Gospels. He has also received from the Lord the special task to strengthen and encourage his brothers. These are in the first place his Jewish fellow believers. Peter receives the apostleship to the circumcised, i.e. the Jews (Galatians 2:7). By the writing of his two letters Peter fulfills the order of the Lord: “Strengthen your brothers” (Luke 22:32b).
To be able to fulfill this ministry he had to be educated and shaped. For that purpose God also used satan. Satan demanded permission from God to sift the disciples like wheat (Luke 22:31). He got God’s permission to do that, whereby as with all temptations, God determines the limits. In that way satan had been an instrument in God’s hand to carry out His plans with Peter. The painful experience Peter had to undergo – he denied his Lord – was used by the Lord to make him fit for the ministry He had for him. The Lord made sure by His prayer that Peter’s faith may not fail (Luke 22:32a). The evidence of this are his letters.
Peter has learnt a lot from his fall and restoration. He knows from own experience that satan is a terrible enemy and he knows God’s restoring hand that leads out of the depth. His failure reminds him of how great the grace and faithfulness of God are. That is also the way he concludes his letter. As a kind of conclusion he says to his readers “that this is the true grace of God. Stand firm in it” (1 Peter 5:12). His whole letter testifies to that grace. What God wants to teach you with the grace He shows, is that you may subject yourself to His will. That was the case with Peter.
After Peter’s restoration in the midst of the other disciples, he receives from the Lord his threefold task (John 21:15-17). The lambs and sheep the Lord entrusts to him He emphatically calls: “My lambs” and “My sheep”. It refers to the lambs and the sheep of the fold of Israel. The Lord knew about what His sheep would have to fear from the unbelieving Israelites. That’s why He entrusted them to Peter, who had gone astray like a lost sheep himself, but has returned (Psalms 119:176).
Peter calls the sheep that the Lord entrusts to him “those who reside as aliens, scattered throughout …” (1 Peter 1:1). Scattering is a judgment of God because of the unfaithfulness of His people. At the same time the grace of God had taken care of them, for the promises of the Old Testament were made to them. They returned, not to the land, but to “the Shepherd and Guardian” of their souls (1 Peter 2:25). Peter can help and guide his brothers, who came from a people that just as he had denied the Lord (Acts 3:13) and who now live outside of Israel.
Just like the other apostles Peter also has a special subject that characterizes his letters. Paul often presents the believers as members of the church, which means as members of the body of Christ. John sees the believers as members of the family of God. Peter can be called the apostle of the kingdom of God. ‘The kingdom of God’ is the great subject of both of his letters, although the expression itself does not appear in them. That is, he views and addresses the believers as subjects in the kingdom of God.
Paul also has spoken about the kingdom of God, but Peter is the one who received the keys of the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 16:16-19). (Just for the sake of clarity: the kingdom of God and the kingdom of heaven are the same, but with a different accent.) He used the keys in the book of Acts in order to open the door of the kingdom successively for the Jews (Acts 2), the Samaritans (Acts 8) and the Gentiles (Acts 10).
In that way Peter has not been made the head of the church or the gate keeper of heaven. The kingdom of heaven or the kingdom of God is a kingdom on earth. But what is that kingdom? When you think of a kingdom you think of a king and subjects. The kingdom of God is the kingdom that is ruled by God. He rules over everything that is His; that is the universe with everything that belongs to it.
You cannot see that yet, but it is the purpose of God to soon put everything under the feet of the Son of Man. What you do see is that the Lord Jesus has already been crowned as King (Hebrews 2:8-9). In the Old Testament the kingdom of God is something to come, for it is related to the coming of the King, the Messiah, the Lord Jesus (Daniel 7:13-14). The Lord Jesus is the Heir of all things. But when He came to earth He was rejected. Therefore the kingdom in its announced form, in which the Messiah will publicly reign, has been delayed for an indefinite time.
Nevertheless the kingdom exists, but in a special form. This form is unexpected and is not announced by the prophets. The particular thing about it is that the kingdom is not public, but hidden. Therefore, the Lord Jesus speaks about the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 13:11). It is a hidden realm because the King of that realm is hidden. The subjects, those who confess the Lord Jesus as Lord, are not hidden, but He, to Whom they subject themselves, is.
The world doesn’t see the living Lord of Whom the Christians are subjects, for the world has rejected and crucified Him. The world is not subjected yet. The world is still hostile and now turns against the believers as it once did against the Lord Jesus. Peter is focusing the eyes of the readers on the glorified Lord and on the future, when He will appear to reward the ones who are His – and to judge His enemies, but he will write about that in his second letter.
Another theme is the suffering of the believer because of his identification with the rejected Lord. Suffering is presented in such a way that you can conclude that it is a suffering in imitation of Christ. Thereby you can discern different kinds that you encounter in this letter: 1. Suffering as a test of faith (1 Peter 1:6-7); 2. suffering for the sake of conscience (1 Peter 2:19); 3. suffering for the sake of righteousness (1 Peter 3:14); 4. suffering for the sake of Christ and for His Name’s sake (1 Peter 4:13-14); 5. suffering from the side of satan (1 Peter 5:8-9).
As the prophets already announced, suffering is an intermediate step toward glory. Just as the Lord Jesus came to glory through suffering, so do you. Therefore you are pointed to the inheritance that lies before you. The glory in this letter is not the Father’s house, but that you will be sharing Christ’s glory in the kingdom. As you suffer with the Rejected One now, you will soon reign with the glorified Christ after His return.
To understand the letter well, you should always consider that it is addressed to Jewish Christians. They know the Old Testament, they are looking forward to the kingdom and the glory of the Messiah and His government; they know about the judgment on the enemies. Now they believe in a Messiah Who they cannot see, while the wicked ones of the people have not been judged. On the contrary, both the wicked Jews and the Gentiles cause the Jewish Christians to suffer. Everything is so much different than what they have believed from their childhood. They are mocked with why their Messiah does not give salvation. Then their faith may begin to falter.
You are not in the same position, but there are many similarities between your position and that of them. It can also be hard for you to continue to trust in an invisible Lord. That trust in the invisible Lord can also result in different forms of suffering. It applies also to you that through this letter Peter focuses your heart on Him Whom you have come to love, though you do not see Him now.
Blessing
1 Peter 1:1. “Peter” presents himself as the sender of the letter to his readers. He calls himself by the name that the Lord has given to him (John 1:42). Then he makes it clear that he writes as “an apostle of Jesus Christ”. In that way his letter has authority. It doesn’t mean that he addresses them from an exalted position, but to ensure his readers that this writing has great significance. An apostle is a representative who speaks or writes on behalf of another person. Therefore he does not write this letter out of courtesy, but it is a letter that he writes on behalf of Jesus Christ. In this letter he passes on the love of the Lord Jesus to His own.
The recipients are addressed as “aliens, scattered”. The readers, the believing Jews, are pilgrims in the areas to which they have been scattered by the persecution that had erupted because of Stephen (Acts 8:1; 4; Acts 11:19). ‘Aliens’ or ‘pilgrims’ find themselves in tough circumstances, far from their native country. The fact that they were ‘scattered’ implies that they were under the judgment of God. If they had remained faithful to what God had told them, they would have enjoyed God’s blessings in His land. That is out of the question now. Instead, they find themselves outside the promised land in strange countries.
You may say that these believers are pilgrims or strangers in two ways. They are to the Gentiles in the midst of whom they find themselves, while they are also that to their unbelieving compatriots through their faith in the Messiah.
Peter mentions the areas where the believing Jews were scattered. Those are the five provinces of the Roman empire that are in Asia Minor, in present Turkey. It is the area where Paul has worked often, as you can read in the book of Acts. Although it cannot be said with certainty, it is much likely that many have come to faith through his service.
Related to their scattering is that they must endure suffering. Another reason why Peter writes his letter, is to encourage them in that suffering. He nowhere appeals to resist against that suffering or to rebel against it.
Also today the children of God are scattered everywhere and endure suffering. If you consistently follow the Lord Jesus you do not count in the world. You cannot find anywhere an appeal to unite yourself with other Christians to overthrow governments or even exert any political influence. Neither did the Lord Jesus do that.
In their relation to the world the believers are strangers who are scattered here and there; in their relation to God things are totally different. Listen to what Peter has to say about their relationship to God. That are great blessings for the believers. The world has no part in that, the world doesn’t even know anything about it. Also the unbelieving Jews have no part in that. He is talking about “chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father” (1 Peter 1:2). He also talks about “sanctification of [the] Spirit, unto [the] obedience and sprinkling of [the] blood of Jesus Christ” (Darby Translation).
Here you see the triune God: God the Father, the Holy Spirit and Jesus Christ. The triune God is the Source of all these great blessings and He works that its objects indeed partake of that too.
Let us briefly examine these blessings one by one. First that of being chosen. Being chosen sounds familiar to the pilgrims in the dispersion. They know that they, regarding their national origin, belong to God’s chosen people. Only, that being chosen regards being chosen to be God’s people on earth (Deuteronomy 7:6). Because the people had rejected the Lord Jesus, Israel has lost that place. When Israel will repent in the future, it will be God’s people.
But at this time there is another being chosen, a higher, a heavenly one for the believers. The being chosen of a believer is destined for heaven and not for earth. Therefore the being chosen that Peter is talking about, stands opposite to the being chosen of God’s earthly people.
1 Peter 1:2. This being chosen happened “according to the foreknowledge of God the Father”. The Father has, according to His perfect foreknowledge of all things, chosen certain people to be His property (Ephesians 1:4). With God foreknowledge implies more than only knowing all things in advance. Nothing will ever happen that He did not know in advance. However, His foreknowledge is not passive, but it makes Him act in a certain way, like here concerning His choice.
For you, who may know to be chosen, that is an enormous encouragement, for it gives you the absolute guarantee that your being chosen has been established to eternity. To Peter it is also, with respect to the readers of his letter, a definite matter (cf. 2 Thessalonians 2:13). God says: ‘You belong to Me.’ Who can reverse that? Who is greater and mightier than God? Therefore being chosen doesn’t depend on your efforts, but on the counsel of God the Father, Who executes what He plans to do (Romans 8:28-30). Peter will deal later in this chapter with the responsibilities that are also related to that.
If you look at being chosen you see the same concerning the following aspect that Peter calls the “sanctification of the Spirit”. ‘To sanctify’ means ‘to set apart’. God’s earthly people Israel was set apart from the nations that surrounded them, by all kinds of outward statutes. Thereby the law functioned as a dividing wall (Ephesians 2:14). Peter talks about ‘sanctification of the Spirit’. The heavenly people where these believers (and we) belong to, have been set apart for God by the work of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit has worked the new life in them, separated them from the world and from Israel and connected them to their Messiah Who is in heaven.
The same goes for the next aspect, that of “obedience”. As Jews they were indebted to obey the law, with the promise of life. To them as believers another obedience has replaced that, namely the “obedience … of Jesus Christ” (Darby Translation). No one was able to fulfill the old standard of obedience, the law. But now they are able to fulfill the new standard by the new life they possess.
That new life is the Lord Jesus. In that way they are able to obey as the Lord Jesus has done. After all you read about the obedience of Jesus Christ. It is not about obeying the law. To the believer the standard of obedience is not the law, but Christ. Look at Him, how He always obeyed His Father in love and you will surely learn to be obedient like that. That obedience goes much further than obeying the law.
As a final aspect – an aspect that, like obedience, is related to Jesus Christ – Peter points to the “sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ”. Here you find the blood of Christ as the foundation to obey. The blood gives the perfect assurance that before God everything is well.
This aspect also forms a great contrast to what God has given to His people in the past. In the Old Testament indeed blood is mentioned as the basis for atonement, but that blood is related to animals. However, that blood cannot take away sins and cannot give anyone a perfect conscience before God. Only the blood of Christ can (Hebrews 10:4-14). The blood of Christ places you in perfect purity in the presence of God. Through the blood of Christ you have peace with God (Ephesians 2:13; Colossians 1:20; Romans 5:1). You may be sure of that position to be yours.
Next to that Peter adds a wish. He wishes that “grace and peace be yours in the fullest measure” or that “grace and peace may be multiplied” to the believers. By that he means that you will expect more and more from God’s grace and you will trust less and less in your own power. God’s grace will always be there to help you to do anything you have to do. If that awareness is present and also increases, you will surely experience the peace that Peter then wishes the believers.
God wants you to grow, that today you rejoice more in Him than yesterday, in spite of or maybe owing to the hardships that you experience. When your faith is put to the test you get the chance to multiply in knowing the grace that God gives to you and in the peace that God Himself has.
Now read 1 Peter 1:1-2 again.
Reflection: In what blessings, according to these verses, may you rejoice?
1 John 4:19
Introduction
After the many letters of Paul and the one letter of James you now have a letter of another writer before you. The writer is the apostle Peter. Of all the disciples who traveled through Israel with the Lord Jesus, he is the one about whom the most is written in the four Gospels. He has also received from the Lord the special task to strengthen and encourage his brothers. These are in the first place his Jewish fellow believers. Peter receives the apostleship to the circumcised, i.e. the Jews (Galatians 2:7). By the writing of his two letters Peter fulfills the order of the Lord: “Strengthen your brothers” (Luke 22:32b).
To be able to fulfill this ministry he had to be educated and shaped. For that purpose God also used satan. Satan demanded permission from God to sift the disciples like wheat (Luke 22:31). He got God’s permission to do that, whereby as with all temptations, God determines the limits. In that way satan had been an instrument in God’s hand to carry out His plans with Peter. The painful experience Peter had to undergo – he denied his Lord – was used by the Lord to make him fit for the ministry He had for him. The Lord made sure by His prayer that Peter’s faith may not fail (Luke 22:32a). The evidence of this are his letters.
Peter has learnt a lot from his fall and restoration. He knows from own experience that satan is a terrible enemy and he knows God’s restoring hand that leads out of the depth. His failure reminds him of how great the grace and faithfulness of God are. That is also the way he concludes his letter. As a kind of conclusion he says to his readers “that this is the true grace of God. Stand firm in it” (1 Peter 5:12). His whole letter testifies to that grace. What God wants to teach you with the grace He shows, is that you may subject yourself to His will. That was the case with Peter.
After Peter’s restoration in the midst of the other disciples, he receives from the Lord his threefold task (John 21:15-17). The lambs and sheep the Lord entrusts to him He emphatically calls: “My lambs” and “My sheep”. It refers to the lambs and the sheep of the fold of Israel. The Lord knew about what His sheep would have to fear from the unbelieving Israelites. That’s why He entrusted them to Peter, who had gone astray like a lost sheep himself, but has returned (Psalms 119:176).
Peter calls the sheep that the Lord entrusts to him “those who reside as aliens, scattered throughout …” (1 Peter 1:1). Scattering is a judgment of God because of the unfaithfulness of His people. At the same time the grace of God had taken care of them, for the promises of the Old Testament were made to them. They returned, not to the land, but to “the Shepherd and Guardian” of their souls (1 Peter 2:25). Peter can help and guide his brothers, who came from a people that just as he had denied the Lord (Acts 3:13) and who now live outside of Israel.
Just like the other apostles Peter also has a special subject that characterizes his letters. Paul often presents the believers as members of the church, which means as members of the body of Christ. John sees the believers as members of the family of God. Peter can be called the apostle of the kingdom of God. ‘The kingdom of God’ is the great subject of both of his letters, although the expression itself does not appear in them. That is, he views and addresses the believers as subjects in the kingdom of God.
Paul also has spoken about the kingdom of God, but Peter is the one who received the keys of the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 16:16-19). (Just for the sake of clarity: the kingdom of God and the kingdom of heaven are the same, but with a different accent.) He used the keys in the book of Acts in order to open the door of the kingdom successively for the Jews (Acts 2), the Samaritans (Acts 8) and the Gentiles (Acts 10).
In that way Peter has not been made the head of the church or the gate keeper of heaven. The kingdom of heaven or the kingdom of God is a kingdom on earth. But what is that kingdom? When you think of a kingdom you think of a king and subjects. The kingdom of God is the kingdom that is ruled by God. He rules over everything that is His; that is the universe with everything that belongs to it.
You cannot see that yet, but it is the purpose of God to soon put everything under the feet of the Son of Man. What you do see is that the Lord Jesus has already been crowned as King (Hebrews 2:8-9). In the Old Testament the kingdom of God is something to come, for it is related to the coming of the King, the Messiah, the Lord Jesus (Daniel 7:13-14). The Lord Jesus is the Heir of all things. But when He came to earth He was rejected. Therefore the kingdom in its announced form, in which the Messiah will publicly reign, has been delayed for an indefinite time.
Nevertheless the kingdom exists, but in a special form. This form is unexpected and is not announced by the prophets. The particular thing about it is that the kingdom is not public, but hidden. Therefore, the Lord Jesus speaks about the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 13:11). It is a hidden realm because the King of that realm is hidden. The subjects, those who confess the Lord Jesus as Lord, are not hidden, but He, to Whom they subject themselves, is.
The world doesn’t see the living Lord of Whom the Christians are subjects, for the world has rejected and crucified Him. The world is not subjected yet. The world is still hostile and now turns against the believers as it once did against the Lord Jesus. Peter is focusing the eyes of the readers on the glorified Lord and on the future, when He will appear to reward the ones who are His – and to judge His enemies, but he will write about that in his second letter.
Another theme is the suffering of the believer because of his identification with the rejected Lord. Suffering is presented in such a way that you can conclude that it is a suffering in imitation of Christ. Thereby you can discern different kinds that you encounter in this letter: 1. Suffering as a test of faith (1 Peter 1:6-7); 2. suffering for the sake of conscience (1 Peter 2:19); 3. suffering for the sake of righteousness (1 Peter 3:14); 4. suffering for the sake of Christ and for His Name’s sake (1 Peter 4:13-14); 5. suffering from the side of satan (1 Peter 5:8-9).
As the prophets already announced, suffering is an intermediate step toward glory. Just as the Lord Jesus came to glory through suffering, so do you. Therefore you are pointed to the inheritance that lies before you. The glory in this letter is not the Father’s house, but that you will be sharing Christ’s glory in the kingdom. As you suffer with the Rejected One now, you will soon reign with the glorified Christ after His return.
To understand the letter well, you should always consider that it is addressed to Jewish Christians. They know the Old Testament, they are looking forward to the kingdom and the glory of the Messiah and His government; they know about the judgment on the enemies. Now they believe in a Messiah Who they cannot see, while the wicked ones of the people have not been judged. On the contrary, both the wicked Jews and the Gentiles cause the Jewish Christians to suffer. Everything is so much different than what they have believed from their childhood. They are mocked with why their Messiah does not give salvation. Then their faith may begin to falter.
You are not in the same position, but there are many similarities between your position and that of them. It can also be hard for you to continue to trust in an invisible Lord. That trust in the invisible Lord can also result in different forms of suffering. It applies also to you that through this letter Peter focuses your heart on Him Whom you have come to love, though you do not see Him now.
Blessing
1 Peter 1:1. “Peter” presents himself as the sender of the letter to his readers. He calls himself by the name that the Lord has given to him (John 1:42). Then he makes it clear that he writes as “an apostle of Jesus Christ”. In that way his letter has authority. It doesn’t mean that he addresses them from an exalted position, but to ensure his readers that this writing has great significance. An apostle is a representative who speaks or writes on behalf of another person. Therefore he does not write this letter out of courtesy, but it is a letter that he writes on behalf of Jesus Christ. In this letter he passes on the love of the Lord Jesus to His own.
The recipients are addressed as “aliens, scattered”. The readers, the believing Jews, are pilgrims in the areas to which they have been scattered by the persecution that had erupted because of Stephen (Acts 8:1; 4; Acts 11:19). ‘Aliens’ or ‘pilgrims’ find themselves in tough circumstances, far from their native country. The fact that they were ‘scattered’ implies that they were under the judgment of God. If they had remained faithful to what God had told them, they would have enjoyed God’s blessings in His land. That is out of the question now. Instead, they find themselves outside the promised land in strange countries.
You may say that these believers are pilgrims or strangers in two ways. They are to the Gentiles in the midst of whom they find themselves, while they are also that to their unbelieving compatriots through their faith in the Messiah.
Peter mentions the areas where the believing Jews were scattered. Those are the five provinces of the Roman empire that are in Asia Minor, in present Turkey. It is the area where Paul has worked often, as you can read in the book of Acts. Although it cannot be said with certainty, it is much likely that many have come to faith through his service.
Related to their scattering is that they must endure suffering. Another reason why Peter writes his letter, is to encourage them in that suffering. He nowhere appeals to resist against that suffering or to rebel against it.
Also today the children of God are scattered everywhere and endure suffering. If you consistently follow the Lord Jesus you do not count in the world. You cannot find anywhere an appeal to unite yourself with other Christians to overthrow governments or even exert any political influence. Neither did the Lord Jesus do that.
In their relation to the world the believers are strangers who are scattered here and there; in their relation to God things are totally different. Listen to what Peter has to say about their relationship to God. That are great blessings for the believers. The world has no part in that, the world doesn’t even know anything about it. Also the unbelieving Jews have no part in that. He is talking about “chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father” (1 Peter 1:2). He also talks about “sanctification of [the] Spirit, unto [the] obedience and sprinkling of [the] blood of Jesus Christ” (Darby Translation).
Here you see the triune God: God the Father, the Holy Spirit and Jesus Christ. The triune God is the Source of all these great blessings and He works that its objects indeed partake of that too.
Let us briefly examine these blessings one by one. First that of being chosen. Being chosen sounds familiar to the pilgrims in the dispersion. They know that they, regarding their national origin, belong to God’s chosen people. Only, that being chosen regards being chosen to be God’s people on earth (Deuteronomy 7:6). Because the people had rejected the Lord Jesus, Israel has lost that place. When Israel will repent in the future, it will be God’s people.
But at this time there is another being chosen, a higher, a heavenly one for the believers. The being chosen of a believer is destined for heaven and not for earth. Therefore the being chosen that Peter is talking about, stands opposite to the being chosen of God’s earthly people.
1 Peter 1:2. This being chosen happened “according to the foreknowledge of God the Father”. The Father has, according to His perfect foreknowledge of all things, chosen certain people to be His property (Ephesians 1:4). With God foreknowledge implies more than only knowing all things in advance. Nothing will ever happen that He did not know in advance. However, His foreknowledge is not passive, but it makes Him act in a certain way, like here concerning His choice.
For you, who may know to be chosen, that is an enormous encouragement, for it gives you the absolute guarantee that your being chosen has been established to eternity. To Peter it is also, with respect to the readers of his letter, a definite matter (cf. 2 Thessalonians 2:13). God says: ‘You belong to Me.’ Who can reverse that? Who is greater and mightier than God? Therefore being chosen doesn’t depend on your efforts, but on the counsel of God the Father, Who executes what He plans to do (Romans 8:28-30). Peter will deal later in this chapter with the responsibilities that are also related to that.
If you look at being chosen you see the same concerning the following aspect that Peter calls the “sanctification of the Spirit”. ‘To sanctify’ means ‘to set apart’. God’s earthly people Israel was set apart from the nations that surrounded them, by all kinds of outward statutes. Thereby the law functioned as a dividing wall (Ephesians 2:14). Peter talks about ‘sanctification of the Spirit’. The heavenly people where these believers (and we) belong to, have been set apart for God by the work of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit has worked the new life in them, separated them from the world and from Israel and connected them to their Messiah Who is in heaven.
The same goes for the next aspect, that of “obedience”. As Jews they were indebted to obey the law, with the promise of life. To them as believers another obedience has replaced that, namely the “obedience … of Jesus Christ” (Darby Translation). No one was able to fulfill the old standard of obedience, the law. But now they are able to fulfill the new standard by the new life they possess.
That new life is the Lord Jesus. In that way they are able to obey as the Lord Jesus has done. After all you read about the obedience of Jesus Christ. It is not about obeying the law. To the believer the standard of obedience is not the law, but Christ. Look at Him, how He always obeyed His Father in love and you will surely learn to be obedient like that. That obedience goes much further than obeying the law.
As a final aspect – an aspect that, like obedience, is related to Jesus Christ – Peter points to the “sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ”. Here you find the blood of Christ as the foundation to obey. The blood gives the perfect assurance that before God everything is well.
This aspect also forms a great contrast to what God has given to His people in the past. In the Old Testament indeed blood is mentioned as the basis for atonement, but that blood is related to animals. However, that blood cannot take away sins and cannot give anyone a perfect conscience before God. Only the blood of Christ can (Hebrews 10:4-14). The blood of Christ places you in perfect purity in the presence of God. Through the blood of Christ you have peace with God (Ephesians 2:13; Colossians 1:20; Romans 5:1). You may be sure of that position to be yours.
Next to that Peter adds a wish. He wishes that “grace and peace be yours in the fullest measure” or that “grace and peace may be multiplied” to the believers. By that he means that you will expect more and more from God’s grace and you will trust less and less in your own power. God’s grace will always be there to help you to do anything you have to do. If that awareness is present and also increases, you will surely experience the peace that Peter then wishes the believers.
God wants you to grow, that today you rejoice more in Him than yesterday, in spite of or maybe owing to the hardships that you experience. When your faith is put to the test you get the chance to multiply in knowing the grace that God gives to you and in the peace that God Himself has.
Now read 1 Peter 1:1-2 again.
Reflection: In what blessings, according to these verses, may you rejoice?
1 John 4:20
A Living Hope
1 Peter 1:3. After his introductory words wherein he highlighted the greatness and the work of the triune God, Peter speaks out a praise. He is full of what the God and Father of the Lord Jesus has done. He cannot do anything else but worship Him. That is what always happens when you come under the impression of Who God is.
Because he is full of God he sees more of God, of Who He is and what He has done. He speaks in full admiration about God’s “great mercy” through which He did great things which can only amaze us. ‘Mercy’ is compassion for people whose need is so great that they are in danger of ruin, while they themselves have no possibility at all to come out of that need. It is about totally helpless people who in no way could become partakers of the blessing of God. That is the opportunity for God to show His ‘great mercy’.
Peter speaks about great mercy in relation to the being born again of a sinner and the blessings attached to it. The God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ “has caused us to be born again”. That is truly great mercy! You have felt your misery and despondency and also your total incapacity to change anything about it. You were standing totally outside of God’s blessings. But God was very compassionate about you and He gave you new life.
The fact that you are born again implies that the origin of your new life is ‘from above’ (John 3:3, footnote). You have been begotten of God. You yourself could do nothing about that, just as you couldn’t do anything about your natural birth.
You indeed received life through your natural birth, but no hope at all for a happy future. On the contrary, you were brought forth in iniquity and conceived in sin (Psalms 51:5). The results have also become visible in your life. Death and hell were therefore your final destination. Because God has worked in you new life according to “His great mercy”, a radical change has happened in that final destination. You now have been born again “to a living hope”.
The hope that Peter presents here is totally different than the view to death and hell. This hope also goes much further than the prospect of a kingdom on earth under the government of the Messiah to which God’s earthly people always had looked forward to and is still looking forward to. The living hope is in fact related to a Jesus Christ Who is risen from the dead. The living hope that Peter presents here is not an earthly but a heavenly hope and therefore doesn’t look forward to the inheritance of the land of Canaan. “Through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead” the eye is focused on a portion in another world.
Christ not only has given His blood and died, but He is also risen. You see a living Lord. Thereby you have a living hope, and beyond death you see everything there that is related to Him. Without His resurrection there would be no hope (1 Corinthians 15:19-20). A living hope is a hope that is vividly before your eyes. It is not about something insecure, but contrarily this hope is an absolute assurance. Through the new life you are sure about that hope.
You can consider this hope both objectively and subjectively. By that I mean that you can see that hope as something that is before you, something you look forward to. That is the inheritance that is presented in the next verses. You can see that hope also as something that is in you, something you feel and experience. That is the hope for that inheritance, the desire for it that makes you to be motivated to joyfully move on through life as a pilgrim.
1 Peter 1:4. Through the resurrection of the Lord Jesus the hope for the inheritance has become your part. It is an inheritance that with perfect assurance will be your possession. It is reserved for you and it cannot be defiled by anything or robbed by anyone. The inheritance is fixed in heaven and is preserved there for you in Jesus Christ, the risen and glorified Man.
Nothing has the power to diminish the value of that inheritance: 1. It is “imperishable”, therefore not to be harmed by death, through which it would ultimately be destroyed. 2. It is also “undefiled”, therefore free from every spot and also not to be damaged by anything attached to sin. 3. It also “will not fade away” and is therefore without any flaw or even a little reduction of its beauty and is not to be damaged by any test of time.
This inheritance is attached to ‘the heir of all things’ (Hebrews 1:2). Therefore it is untouchable for death, filthiness and decay.
The inheritance is the kingdom of the Lord Jesus that these Israelites, whom Peter is addressing, will once enter, as will you and me. However, it does not concern the kingdom on earth or the earthly part of the kingdom, which certainly will also be there, but the heavenly part of the kingdom. When the Lord Jesus will openly reign over heaven and earth, all believers who have died or have been taken up before the millennial kingdom comes, will be allowed to reign together with Him from heaven over all who are in heaven (angels, 1 Corinthians 6:3) and who are on earth and over all things that are on earth (1 Corinthians 6:2). It is the best part that you can ever imagine in the kingdom.
1 Peter 1:5. The inheritance is therefore reserved for you by God in a place where no thief and moth and rust can take it away or tarnish it. But what about the heirs? Surely these are weak and powerless to preserve themselves. Therefore Peter also has an encouraging word for the heirs. They are protected by the power of God for the inheritance. Therefore you can be sure that the inheritance is reserved for you and that you are preserved for the inheritance.
And how does that happen? By nothing less than the “power of God”. As weak as you are, as strong is God. You are protected by a guard that is continuously there and which cannot be misguided or overpowered. That is quite an assurance for you as an heir that you will possess the inheritance!
The mention of ‘protected’ indicates that there is danger. That is something you should be aware of. The guard is not supposed to make you careless. You may know – and that is supposed to give you rest – that you are kept by the faithfulness and power of God. At the same time there is also something you should do. To experience God’s protecting power “faith” is needed from your side. Faith ascribes to God the place He is worthy of and it keeps you in the place of trust in Him. Thereby you hold on to the statements of His Word. Faith is essential until the inheritance will be obtained.
The fact that His protection happens by the means of faith, means that it is only applied to believers. It also means that believers have the responsibility to entrust themselves to Him for that protection. After all, faith means to have confidence. He doesn’t take His own by the hand to drag them along and in this way bring them to the final goal. He works by faith, whereby He also makes sure that your faith does not fail. Peter experienced that protection. After he denied the Lord he got restored because the Lord had prayed for him that his faith would not fail (Luke 22:32).
As it is said, faith is needed as long as we are on the way to the final goal. Peter calls that final goal “salvation ready to be revealed in the last time”. Therefore the salvation here is still to come. The salvation is what will be our ultimate part when we are with the Lord and then come to earth together with Him.
That the salvation is ready, implies that everything that is necessary for it has been done already. That the salvation has not come yet has got to do with the longsuffering of God, Who is not wishing for any to perish (2 Peter 3:9).
With “the last time” Peter means that when the salvation indeed comes, the fullness of the times has come. It is the millennial kingdom of peace in which all times will find their fulfillment (Ephesians 1:10). Then the salvation will be revealed, it will become visible. After the millennial kingdom there will be no period of time anymore, but eternity will start.
Now read 1 Peter 1:3-5 again.
Reflection: To what degree is ‘the living hope’ that you have received, alive?
1 John 4:21
A Living Hope
1 Peter 1:3. After his introductory words wherein he highlighted the greatness and the work of the triune God, Peter speaks out a praise. He is full of what the God and Father of the Lord Jesus has done. He cannot do anything else but worship Him. That is what always happens when you come under the impression of Who God is.
Because he is full of God he sees more of God, of Who He is and what He has done. He speaks in full admiration about God’s “great mercy” through which He did great things which can only amaze us. ‘Mercy’ is compassion for people whose need is so great that they are in danger of ruin, while they themselves have no possibility at all to come out of that need. It is about totally helpless people who in no way could become partakers of the blessing of God. That is the opportunity for God to show His ‘great mercy’.
Peter speaks about great mercy in relation to the being born again of a sinner and the blessings attached to it. The God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ “has caused us to be born again”. That is truly great mercy! You have felt your misery and despondency and also your total incapacity to change anything about it. You were standing totally outside of God’s blessings. But God was very compassionate about you and He gave you new life.
The fact that you are born again implies that the origin of your new life is ‘from above’ (John 3:3, footnote). You have been begotten of God. You yourself could do nothing about that, just as you couldn’t do anything about your natural birth.
You indeed received life through your natural birth, but no hope at all for a happy future. On the contrary, you were brought forth in iniquity and conceived in sin (Psalms 51:5). The results have also become visible in your life. Death and hell were therefore your final destination. Because God has worked in you new life according to “His great mercy”, a radical change has happened in that final destination. You now have been born again “to a living hope”.
The hope that Peter presents here is totally different than the view to death and hell. This hope also goes much further than the prospect of a kingdom on earth under the government of the Messiah to which God’s earthly people always had looked forward to and is still looking forward to. The living hope is in fact related to a Jesus Christ Who is risen from the dead. The living hope that Peter presents here is not an earthly but a heavenly hope and therefore doesn’t look forward to the inheritance of the land of Canaan. “Through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead” the eye is focused on a portion in another world.
Christ not only has given His blood and died, but He is also risen. You see a living Lord. Thereby you have a living hope, and beyond death you see everything there that is related to Him. Without His resurrection there would be no hope (1 Corinthians 15:19-20). A living hope is a hope that is vividly before your eyes. It is not about something insecure, but contrarily this hope is an absolute assurance. Through the new life you are sure about that hope.
You can consider this hope both objectively and subjectively. By that I mean that you can see that hope as something that is before you, something you look forward to. That is the inheritance that is presented in the next verses. You can see that hope also as something that is in you, something you feel and experience. That is the hope for that inheritance, the desire for it that makes you to be motivated to joyfully move on through life as a pilgrim.
1 Peter 1:4. Through the resurrection of the Lord Jesus the hope for the inheritance has become your part. It is an inheritance that with perfect assurance will be your possession. It is reserved for you and it cannot be defiled by anything or robbed by anyone. The inheritance is fixed in heaven and is preserved there for you in Jesus Christ, the risen and glorified Man.
Nothing has the power to diminish the value of that inheritance: 1. It is “imperishable”, therefore not to be harmed by death, through which it would ultimately be destroyed. 2. It is also “undefiled”, therefore free from every spot and also not to be damaged by anything attached to sin. 3. It also “will not fade away” and is therefore without any flaw or even a little reduction of its beauty and is not to be damaged by any test of time.
This inheritance is attached to ‘the heir of all things’ (Hebrews 1:2). Therefore it is untouchable for death, filthiness and decay.
The inheritance is the kingdom of the Lord Jesus that these Israelites, whom Peter is addressing, will once enter, as will you and me. However, it does not concern the kingdom on earth or the earthly part of the kingdom, which certainly will also be there, but the heavenly part of the kingdom. When the Lord Jesus will openly reign over heaven and earth, all believers who have died or have been taken up before the millennial kingdom comes, will be allowed to reign together with Him from heaven over all who are in heaven (angels, 1 Corinthians 6:3) and who are on earth and over all things that are on earth (1 Corinthians 6:2). It is the best part that you can ever imagine in the kingdom.
1 Peter 1:5. The inheritance is therefore reserved for you by God in a place where no thief and moth and rust can take it away or tarnish it. But what about the heirs? Surely these are weak and powerless to preserve themselves. Therefore Peter also has an encouraging word for the heirs. They are protected by the power of God for the inheritance. Therefore you can be sure that the inheritance is reserved for you and that you are preserved for the inheritance.
And how does that happen? By nothing less than the “power of God”. As weak as you are, as strong is God. You are protected by a guard that is continuously there and which cannot be misguided or overpowered. That is quite an assurance for you as an heir that you will possess the inheritance!
The mention of ‘protected’ indicates that there is danger. That is something you should be aware of. The guard is not supposed to make you careless. You may know – and that is supposed to give you rest – that you are kept by the faithfulness and power of God. At the same time there is also something you should do. To experience God’s protecting power “faith” is needed from your side. Faith ascribes to God the place He is worthy of and it keeps you in the place of trust in Him. Thereby you hold on to the statements of His Word. Faith is essential until the inheritance will be obtained.
The fact that His protection happens by the means of faith, means that it is only applied to believers. It also means that believers have the responsibility to entrust themselves to Him for that protection. After all, faith means to have confidence. He doesn’t take His own by the hand to drag them along and in this way bring them to the final goal. He works by faith, whereby He also makes sure that your faith does not fail. Peter experienced that protection. After he denied the Lord he got restored because the Lord had prayed for him that his faith would not fail (Luke 22:32).
As it is said, faith is needed as long as we are on the way to the final goal. Peter calls that final goal “salvation ready to be revealed in the last time”. Therefore the salvation here is still to come. The salvation is what will be our ultimate part when we are with the Lord and then come to earth together with Him.
That the salvation is ready, implies that everything that is necessary for it has been done already. That the salvation has not come yet has got to do with the longsuffering of God, Who is not wishing for any to perish (2 Peter 3:9).
With “the last time” Peter means that when the salvation indeed comes, the fullness of the times has come. It is the millennial kingdom of peace in which all times will find their fulfillment (Ephesians 1:10). Then the salvation will be revealed, it will become visible. After the millennial kingdom there will be no period of time anymore, but eternity will start.
Now read 1 Peter 1:3-5 again.
Reflection: To what degree is ‘the living hope’ that you have received, alive?
