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Here is the sermon from September 23rd, "Godly Wisdom", from James 3:
“Godly Wisdom”
James 3:13-4:3, 7-8a (CEB)
September 23, 2018 (18th Sunday after
Pentecost)
Fort Oglethorpe UMC, Simpson UMC
James
3:13-4:3, 7-8a (CEB)
13 Are any of you wise and understanding? Show that your actions are good with a humble lifestyle that comes from wisdom. 14 However, if you have bitter jealousy and selfish ambition in your heart, then stop bragging and living in ways that deny the truth. 15 This is not the wisdom that comes down from above. Instead, it is from the earth, natural and demonic. 16 Wherever there is jealousy and selfish ambition, there is disorder and everything that is evil. 17 What of the wisdom from above? First, it is pure, and then peaceful, gentle, obedient, filled with mercy and good actions, fair, and genuine. 18 Those who make peace sow the seeds of justice by their peaceful acts.
4 What is the source of
conflict among you? What is the source of your disputes? Don’t they come from
your cravings that are at war in your own lives? 2 You
long for something you don’t have, so you commit murder. You are jealous for
something you can’t get, so you struggle and fight. You don’t have because you
don’t ask. 3 You ask and
don’t have because you ask with evil intentions, to waste it on your own
cravings.
7 Therefore,
submit to God. Resist the devil, and he will run away from you.8 Come
near to God, and he will come near to you. Wash your hands, you sinners. Purify
your hearts, you double-minded. (This
includes all of 8.)
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THIS
IS THE WORD OF GOD FOR THE PEOPLE OF GOD.
THANKS BE TO GOD.
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We
have been working our way through James this month and we have seen that James
doesn’t mince words. He tells it like it
is. We have learned that if our God-talk doesn’t match our God-acts, then it
doesn’t mean anything. Last week we
heard about the tongue and the power of words to build up or tear down.
If
we thought James was through with us, we were wrong. In fact, it seems James was just getting
warmed up in the previous portions of his message and now we are getting the
full attention, “both barrels”, so to speak.
James
brings up several questions for us in this passage.
First,
what is the “Godly Wisdom” that is spoken of in today’s passage and how can we
take it and apply it to our lives personally and to our church and community?
The
wisdom that comes from above, godly wisdom, is described in verse 17:
- pure
- peaceful
- gentle
- obedient
- filled with mercy and good actions
- fair
- genuine
What practices or habits can we live into
to help us live into God’s wisdom? We
can practice what John Wesley calls the “Means of Grace”, what we’ve come to
call spiritual disciplines or practices.
As a reminder, the Wesleyan Means of Grace are broken down thus:
Works of Piety
Individual
Practices – reading, meditating and
studying the scriptures, prayer, fasting, regularly attending worship, healthy
living, and sharing our faith with others
Communal
Practices – regularly share in the
sacraments, Christian conferencing (accountability to one another), and Bible
study
Works of Mercy
Individual
Practices - doing good works, visiting
the sick, visiting those in prison, feeding the hungry, and giving generously
to the needs of others
Communal
Practices – seeking justice, ending
oppression and discrimination (for instance Wesley challenged Methodists to end
slavery), and addressing the needs of the poor
As we practice living into godly wisdom,
we will live into verse 18--“Those who make peace sow the seeds of justice by
their peaceful acts.”
On
a side note, this past Friday, September 21st was International
Peace day. On the official website,
“internationaldayofpeace.org”, I learned this about it: “Established in 1981 by unanimous United Nations resolution,
Peace Day provides a globally shared date for all humanity to commit to Peace
above all differences and to contribute to building a Culture of Peace.” https://internationaldayofpeace.org/
As citizens of the world, this is a
wonderful goal. As citizens of the
kingdom of Christ, our responsibility goes beyond one day a year for us to sow
seeds of justice by our peaceful acts.
Another question James touches on is this:
where does conflict and dispute originate?
While we recognize that disagreement and conflict is normal and will
come up in any relationship, family, or community, it is another matter if
there is ongoing and systemic conflict and dispute.
Beginning in 4:1 and going through verse 3
James addresses this question: “What is the source of conflict among you? What
is the source of your disputes? Don’t they come from your cravings that are at
war in your own lives? 2 You long for something you don’t have, so
you commit murder. You are jealous for something you can’t get, so you struggle
and fight. You don’t have because you don’t ask. 3 You
ask and don’t have because you ask with evil intentions, to waste it on your
own cravings.”
James is clear that conflict and dispute
arise from seeking to do things in a manner that are not consistent with the
ways of God or from seeking and following God.
Though it wasn’t a true conflict or
dispute, I found myself craving/coveting something on Friday. My spiritual director shared with me that she
will be going on a cruise in October and making a stopover in Cuba. I wasn’t jealous over the cruise, as I was
Cuba. That has been my dream country
since I was a little kid and my grandfather told me stories of his days as
state forester of Georgia and his trips to Cuba. After telling my spiritual director I was
jealous, I saw a morning prayer a colleague had posted:
“Save us from envy, God
our Redeemer,
and deliver us from the chains of wealth,
that, ransomed through your Son,
we may inherit the crown of everlasting life;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
and deliver us from the chains of wealth,
that, ransomed through your Son,
we may inherit the crown of everlasting life;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
Praying to God to save us from envy is a way to guard our hearts from
jealousy and coveting.
Being jealous of someone going to Cuba may
not be your issue. Whatever pushes your
buttons to cause the conflicts, struggles, and fights, we find that James addresses
a third question that provides a solution for us all: “what does God want?”
We see in verse 7 that we are to submit to
God and in verse 8, we are to come near to God:
“7 Therefore,
submit to God. Resist the devil, and he will run away from you.8 Come
near to God, and he will come near to you. Wash your hands, you sinners. Purify
your hearts, you double-minded.”
This submitting to God is
repentance, a turning away of our wants and desires and allowing God to be in
control, to lead, to guide. After all,
we have submitted ourselves to God as followers in our creeds, in our songs, so
why not do so in our daily living?
It is a daily choice to
draw near to God. We choose to draw near
to God daily as individuals as we live into godly wisdom, practicing the
spiritual disciplines we mentioned earlier.
What does life look like
in the church community? In my studies
this week, this quote stood out to me: “Our primary identity is measured by our
closeness to God…” (Feasting on the Word,
Kathy Dawson, 90)
For us as individuals and
for us as a church community, if our primary identity is measured by our
closeness to God, how are we doing?
The shepherd king David
gives us a great example of how to respond when we slip away from God. In Psalm 51, verses 10-12 he prays to God, saying:
Create in me a clean
heart, O God,
and put a new and right spirit within me.
11 Do not cast me away from your presence,
and do not take your holy spirit from me.
12 Restore to me the joy of your salvation,
and sustain in me a willing spirit. (NRSV)
and put a new and right spirit within me.
11 Do not cast me away from your presence,
and do not take your holy spirit from me.
12 Restore to me the joy of your salvation,
and sustain in me a willing spirit. (NRSV)
May, we, like David, be
willing to admit when we’ve done wrong and make right our relationship with
God.
Will you pray with me?
God, as we seek to grow
in godly wisdom, we ask that you remove all bitterness, envy, strife,
disloyalty, and every other kind of evil from us. Create in us clean hearts so that we may love
you and others as we love ourselves, as beloved children of God. Help us to serve you wholeheartedly, to
submit to your ways and your plans, and to continually draw near to you. May we grow as disciples of Christ so we can
make disciples of Christ for the transformation of the world. Amen.
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LINKS TO RECORDED SERMONS:Click here to listen to the recorded sermon at Fort Oglethorpe UMC.
Click here to listen to the recorded at sermon at Simpson UMC.
BULLETIN COVERS:
Worship music at Fort Oglethorpe UMC:
"Leaning on the Everlasting Arms", UMH 133
"Open the Eyes of My Heart, Lord"
"Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing", UMH #400
"Blessed Assurance", UMH #369
Special music: "Christ is Enough", sung by Stacy Wells. Here is a YouTube video of the song:
Music at Simpson UMC:
"Lord, I Want to be a Christian" -- UMH 402
"I Am Thine, O Lord", UMH #419
Anthem by Susan Peel and Paul Stone: "Come Unto Me"
"Near to the Heart of God", UMH #472
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