Saturday, September 29, 2012

Faithful Responses


Sunday, September 30, 2012
Ordinary 26/Pentecost 18B
Jerusalem Baptist Church (Emmerton), Warsaw VA
Text: James 5:13-20

13Are any among you suffering? They should pray. Are any cheerful? They should sing songs of praise. 14Are any among you sick? They should call for the elders of the church and have them pray over them, anointing them with oil in the name of the Lord. 15The prayer of faith will save the sick, and the Lord will raise them up; and anyone who has committed sins will be forgiven. 16Therefore confess your sins to one another, and pray for one another, so that you may be healed. The prayer of the righteous is powerful and effective. 17Elijah was a human being like us, and he prayed fervently that it might not rain, and for three years and six months it did not rain on the earth. 18Then he prayed again, and the heaven gave rain and the earth yielded its harvest. 19My brothers and sisters, if anyone among you wanders from the truth and is brought back by another, 20you should know that whoever brings back a sinner from wandering will save the sinner’s soul from death and will cover a multitude of sins.

So this morning is our last foray into James’ letter to his congregation… or congregations… we’ve gotten a clear sense over the last few weeks (at least I HOPE we have) of how practical James is in approaching his folks with the ‘how’ of living the life of a follower of Christ.

This morning’s passage, for US anyway, may seem to hit a little off center on first read. There is just enough in it that goes against our western, science-based worldview that it seems a little too … ‘out there’ … too … faith-healy and supernatural for us to feel completely comfortable with it.

I would invite us to set aside the specifics and look at what James is encouraging his folks to do in the broader sense of the word.

Going verse by verse: he goes through a series of situations and answers them with the appropriate responses.

Are you suffering? Pray. Are you happy? Sing! Are you sick? Ask for the elders – in our context, these would be our deacons – and have them come and pray and anoint you with oil.  He then goes into a commentary on that specific topic. But there is an interesting twist to it: after his initial comment, he goes on to say “and anyone who has committed sins will be forgiven.” He is categorizing illness and sin together, it would seem.

It gives us insight into our current view of various sins as forms of addictive illnesses. If we were to approach our sins in that fashion – not ONLY as allowing our wills to cave in to the temptations we might be faced with at any given moment, but as symptoms of an illness … it fills out another aspect of what it means to be slaves to sin, doesn’t it?

He follows with a word of encouragement: the prayers of the righteous are powerful and effective (availeth much, is what we might be replaying in our minds from the King James), and BECAUSE they are powerful and effective, all the more reason to follow Elijah’s example and pray for a miracle. The encouragement is in the fact that by this time, Elijah the prophet has reached mythic proportions in the pantheon of Hebrew prophets, an almost-unattainable level of faithfulness and obedience to God. But James, in just a few words, brings him down to the same level as the folks that he’s writing to: ‘Elijah was a human being like us,’ and then he goes on to present exactly how ‘powerful and effective’ Elijah’s prayers WERE.

His final entreaty in the passage speaks clearly to what I think has been his intent all along:

19My brothers and sisters, if anyone among you wanders from the truth and is brought back by another, 20you should know that whoever brings back a sinner from wandering will save the sinner’s soul from death and will cover a multitude of sins.

What is the image we get here? It is of brothers and sisters caring enough about each other to reach out to each other and reconnect – to remain in relationship – to maybe instruct, persuade, or point out – however you want to phrase it – when someone you love and care about is … misdirected? Straying? Lost? Confused? James’ wording here is comfortable for us if we’ve grown up speaking Christianese, but probably not so much if we’ve not – or if we are trying to communicate this idea to someone who was not raised speaking the same language of this subculture we live in.
To put it in terms that (hopefully) don’t immediately set off judgment alarms in the ears of those with whom we are trying to communicate simply due to the word choice:

‘Brothers and sisters, if someone you love and care about is doing things that are ultimately self-destructive and unhealthy and chaotic for their spirit and their life, and through your persuasion or presence in their lives they begin to get their life back on track, back in the direction of wholeness and integration, back towards acknowledging that God is God and they are not, and that Christ is Lord and that he is MORE than just savior, you will have saved them from a death that they would have experienced long before their heart stopped beating, and you will have put them on track to correct wrongs that were going far beyond simply themselves.

That last, I think, is the greater task – the much greater task. To be able to relate not simply to each other – that is hopefully understood to be a baseline for us – but to also be able to relate to those who are either on the periphery of our community or who are part of the greater community that surrounds us – we have that designation on our prayer list, if you’ve noticed – people who are not necessarily directly connected to us but of whom we are still aware and for whom we still care and most importantly, whom we still love.

What does this mean for Jerusalem Baptist Church at Emmerton?

This is where our faithful responses come into play. Whatever situation we find ourselves in – whether we are suffering, or cheerful, sick, troubled, angry, whatever it is – because we have this family that we are a part of, this community of faith, this band of pilgrims with whom we’ve chosen to travel this voyage alongside, all of these experiences are experiences that we do not face alone, that we do not bear in solitude, that we are actually CALLED to share in the life of the community.

Insofar as we allow the walls that society tells us to build between us to stand, it is to that degree that we are diminishing the Kingdom’s ability to shine through in the way we live together. So James’ admonition is, just like Christ’s, to make this way of living so compellingly brilliant (in the ‘shiny’ sense of the word) that it would draw people in to that central light of Christ just as it has drawn us in.

Let’s pray.


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