James tells us that when we're excited about the world, more than Jesus our prayer life goes haywire. We don't get what we want, because we don't ask, and even when we do ask, we ask wrongly, 'to spend it on our passions.'
When we do this, we are cheating on God. That’s what verses 4 tells us. ‘you adulterous people.’ Isn’t that what adultery is? Going behind the back of the person you said you’d love and be faithful to? Using a spouse for what you can gain from them while you chase other loves? When we are friends with the world, when we use God to get what we want in the world, we are spiritual adulterers. That’s pretty shocking isn’t it? Well it gets even worse, James says that if we’re friends with the world, if we’re going behind God’s back and having a relationship with the world when we said we’d be faithful to Him, we are His enemies. His enemies. James doesn't pull any punches does he?
So what does God do to these enemies and adulterers? We think we know the answer don’t we? We think that He’d judge them, cast them off, throw them in the lake of fire. But what do verses 5 and 6 tell us? He yearns jealously over the spirit He has made to dwell within them. When God’s people are more excited about the world than they should be, God yearns for them. When you’re far from God, He wants you to come home, He is passionate about you. And He gives you more grace. Friends, there is always more grace. More grace in God than sin in you, and if you’re anything like me, there is a lot of sin in you!
God's grace is the turning point in this passage, as it's the turning point in your life.
This is the grace that gives us an excitement about the things of God. It makes us excited to open our Bibles, excited to be at church, excited to share our faith. Three times in these verses James tell us that being passionate about God makes us humble. Humility is what happens when we know that God is God and we are not, and that we are helpless without Him. We know that our hands are empty. And because we know that we show our humility by submitting to God. By obeying Him, by asking for His help, by accepting that at all times, in all seasons and in all ways He knows best. If you’re humble you’re submitting. If you have a hard time following God and submitting to God, you need to pray for that humility.
And what does a life full of humble submissive excitement look like? An endless string of mission adventures and angelic visions? No, says James, in verses 11-12 it looks like loving your brother and listening to the Bible. Much more mundane, much more Christlike!
Thank God for more grace. "Great is his faithfulness; his mercies begin afresh each morning" (Lamentations 3:23)
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