We are all God’s creation, and although we all have the potential of becoming God’s children, purchased with a price, reborn, and reconciled to Him, not all who walk the earth are His children. It’s obvious, given all the darkness in the world and how little light remains. If the universalists were right, and we all end up in the same place regardless of whether or not Christ is Lord and King of our lives, then God sending His Son to die hanging on a tree would have been needlessly cruel.
Jesus laying down His life for the sheep was not one option
among many; it was the only option. It was the only way that we who received
Him denied ourselves, picked up our crosses, and followed after Him could
attain everlasting life. To say that there is more than one way, more than one
path, is to minimize Christ, what He did, and the sacrifice He made on behalf
of mankind.
In order to understand what James is saying at the beginning
of the fifth chapter, you must read it within the context of the tail end of
the fourth chapter. When he wrote his epistle, and that goes for all the New
and Old Testament writers, the books were not divided into chapters, and there
was no delineation or separation between the writings. They were all written as
one continuous letter but were later divided into chapters and verses sometime
in the early 1200s.
Although it makes for easier reading, when we fail to consider
that the original letters were one continuous text, we neglect to properly
contextualize an idea or see it in an erroneous light. What would seem easy
enough to understand had we accounted for the continuity of the text becomes
muddled and easily exploited by those who would weave an entire doctrine out of
a handful of verses.
James 5:1-6, “Come now, you rich, weep and howl for your
miseries that are coming upon you! Your riches are corrupted, and your garments
are moth-eaten. Your gold and silver are corroded, and their corrosion will be
a witness against you and will eat your flesh like fire. You have heaped up
treasure in the last days. Indeed the wages of the laborers who mowed your
fields, which you kept back by fraud, cry out; and the cries of the reapers
have reached the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth. You have lived on the earth in
pleasure and luxury; you have fattened your hearts as in a day of slaughter.
You have condemned, you have murdered the just; he does not resist you.”
If you read these six verses without the benefit of having
read the previous chapter, you would tend to throw anyone who doesn’t live
paycheck to paycheck into the same pot and be done with it. Poverty is not a
sign of righteousness. Righteousness is a sign of righteousness. There are poor
wretched sinners, just as there are rich miserable sinners. The opposite is
true as well. The rich James is referring to are those he described in the
previous chapter as those who boast in their arrogance and those who know to do
good and do not do it.
If God hated the rich, as some insist, then Abraham could
never have been God’s friend, and Job could never have been a man after God’s
own heart. They were, after all, some of the wealthiest men of their time, yet
their wealth did not define them, and their desire did not revolve around amassing
more of the wealth they’d been blessed with.
James refers to those who trust in their gold and silver, exploit
the poor, and defraud their laborers while being closed-fisted and
closed-hearted to the cries of the poor and needy.
But what about the rich man and the camel and the eye of a
needle? Didn’t Jesus say that it was easier for a camel to go through the eye
of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God? Yes, He did, but
it’s not because of their wealth, but rather because their hearts are consumed
by it; they prioritize it above all else, and they feel as though they’ve
insulated themselves from the hardships of life with the wealth they’ve
amassed. It’s a heart issue, not a money issue, and yes, those who have amassed
fortunes or inherited them are less likely to be open to their need for a
savior.
It’s not exclusive to the rich. Even the poor live their
lives with no thought of eternity or the hereafter, but it’s easier for a rich
man to adopt the mindset of everything being about living in the moment and
doing what pleases the flesh. James says as much when he condemns those who
have lived on the earth in pleasure and luxury and fattened their hearts as in
a day of slaughter.
Is Jesus Lord of your life, or does money lord over you? Do you
extend your hand to the poor, or do you close your fist to those in need? Are
you fair and honest in your dealings, or do you exploit those who labor on your
behalf? These are the questions that need answering; these are the questions
that matter, not whether you’re over the threshold of what is considered rich
or not.
Who rules your heart? That is the question, and if Jesus is Lord of your heart, then when He blesses you, you will bless others, and when a season of famine arrives, you will praise Him just as readily because it wasn’t about what He gave you but who He is.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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