James 3:13-18 · Two Kinds of Wisdom
The Problem with ‘Hail Mary’ Moments
James 3:13-18
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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The end of September means . . . [you might want to Go Live here and ask your congregation to fill in the blank] . . . we are hip deep in football season. So despite the crisp fall weather, and the fashion show of turning leaves, it is not time for weekend afternoon hikes. It is time for the weekend afternoon call of “Hike, Hike!”

That means every week for the next couple of months, along with tailgate food festivals and ritual chest painting, yet another “religious” ritual will be enacted by somebody, somewhere: the heaving of a “Hail Mary” pass.

A “Hail Mary is of course a desperate, last second decision to jettison the ball down the field, as far away from the opponents scoring territory as possible, while praying that somebody from your team might be down there to catch it. Maybe even they will score a touchdown and save your team from defeat. There are always a few spectacular “Hail Mary” passes every season. But there are a lot more of those frantic flings that nose-dive into nowhere or — even worse — get intercepted and run back, giving the opposing team an even greater advantage. “Hail Mary’s” are unplanned, last-ditch, furtive efforts to “save the day.” They are exciting, but rarely work.

Guess what? Just as “Hail Mary’s” don’t work out too well for football teams, they also don’t work out too well as a prayer plan for everyday life. A life lived in faith, committed to Christ, should not have to depend on the “EMT” of a “Hail Mary” prayer. Our prayer life should not be a series of 911 calls. Our prayer life should be #1 on our spiritual “speed dial” — the place we punch into on our heart and soul every day, all the time, under all circumstances, whether bad or good.

Grandma had a heart attack — Spiritual Speedial.
Got an “F” on the Algebra exam — 911, Please, God.
There is no money in the account and it is the 15th — Hail Mary.
My children are the joy of my life and thank you for their presence—-Instant Message.
The biopsy came back positive 911, my Lord and my God!
Where is my family? Where are You? — Hail Mary.

Life is unpredictable. Stuff happens — bad and good — all the time, every day. Life is unfair. That is why our connection to the Holy Spirit, to the living presence of Christ, cannot subsist on “emergency” moments. Our prayer life needs to keep us connected every day in every way for every challenge.

That connection is the deciding difference between what James calls “earthly wisdom” and wisdom that comes “from above.” “Earthly wisdom” inspires ambition, envy, selfishness, and a get-ahead at-any-cost mentality. Earthly wisdom teaches that if you’re not first, you are last — and a loser.

But the wisdom James recommends this week was a “heavenly wisdom” — a look at life that is focused from an entirely different perspective: A heavenly perspective. Heavenly wisdom is a way of looking at life and looking at your neighbor that was not based upon envy and ambition or “what can this get me”, but that looked down from heaven and viewed a community of saints who had been offered the love of Christ and the hope of peace.

The community of faith is not supposed to be yet another dog-fight for supremacy. The Christbody community is called to be more like a sleeping puppy pile — where members trust and love one another enough to embrace one another completely. The difference between “earthly” wisdom — which teaches us to fight for supremacy and to be “top dog”” - and “heavenly” wisdom that offers meekness, mercy, and peace (the “world’s “loser list”) as the highest form of commitment and love for the body of Christ is the difference between a vicious dog fight and a peaceful puppy pile-up.

The world will never understand what those who live a life transformed by faith feel every day. To live outside the “win/loss” column of violence and victory is to live a life in the spirit of humility and wisdom. And no one outside the community of faith will ever be able fathom that such a life is fulfilled and overflowing.

The transforming power of prayer — of a life connected and committed flummoxes the world. We simply do not make any “sense” to those who are sensory bound to envy, ambition and self-advancement. When Christians accept Christ as their Savior, as the wholly new regulator for their lives, it is a miraculous moment of “justification.” Everything changes in life.

Yet, nothing changes in the earthly world. The same old stuff confronts us every day.

A bad job.
An unhappy family member.
Overdue bills.
An under-water mortgage.
A frightening lab report.

It is all still here in the world. To deal with the ongoing onslaught of life takes more than a momentary commitment to Christ. It takes more than a once-in-a lifetime jolt of justification through pure grace.

To bathe in the presence of Christ everyday takes an everyday connection. The community of faith cannot subsist on “Hail Mary” moments. We need to be in hourly, moment-to-moment prayer with the power that can transform our lives. Earlier church tradition has called this daily growth “sanctification” — the ongoing communion with Christ and continued development in discipleship that creates a community of faith steeped in “heavenly” wisdom. Today, maybe we should just call it “life support” — the divine power that makes it possible for us to feel grace and embody goodness every day, whatever comes our way.

We do not ask to be set free from trouble, anxiety, life’s stress and strain any more than we ask to be set free from being ourselves. But there is an alchemy of hope that is part of the heavenly wisdom: God can work all things together for good for those who love and are called according to God’s purposes.

Back in the middle of the 19th century, someone wrote a hymn that was popular in the first half of the 20th century, but has been left behind by history. Some of you may remember it. But those of you who will be hearing its words for the first time, listen carefully to the sense of divine presence in every facet of our lives.

1 Day by day and with each passing moment,
strength I find to meet my trials here;
trusting in my Father’s wise bestowment,
I’ve no cause for worry or for fear.
He whose heart is kind beyond all measure
gives unto each day what he deems best —
lovingly, its part of pain and pleasure,
mingling toil with peace and rest.

2 Every day, the Lord himself is near me,
with a special mercy for each hour;
all my cares he wants to bear, to cheer me,
he whose name is Counselor and Power.
The protection of his child and treasure
is a charge that on himself he laid:
“As your days, your strength shall be in measure,”
this the pledge to me he made.

3 Help me then in every tribulation
so to trust thy promises, O Lord,
that I lose not faith’s sweet consolation
offered me within thy holy Word.
Help me, Lord, when toil and trouble meeting,
e'er to take, as from a father’s hand,
one by one, the days, the moments fleeting,
till I reach the promised land.


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COMMENTARY

The blare of political rhetoric continues to crescendo as our next wave of would-be leaders toot their own horns ever longer and louder. When the candidates come together in their debates, you can brace yourself for the noise of clashing egos to be worse than the deafening decibels bleated out by those annoying plastic “vuvuzalas” at the World cup soccer matches.

Of course, this is hardly surprising — since what politicians run for is the opportunity to be “large and in charge.” In this week’s epistle text James offers a very different criteria for the faith community. He declares that those who claim to possess “wisdom” will be identified by something other than their own desires and ambitions.

James first offers the ironic question, “Who is wise and understanding among you?” The question is ironic because, as James will reveal, any who would boldly step forward and claim for themselves such a title reveals they are in fact lacking in the unique wisdom that “comes down from above” (v.15). Instead of any sort of self-proclamation James asserts that those with genuine wisdom will be revealed by their “good life,” by a daily expression of good works and obedience to God, and by an attitude of “prautes” “gentleness” or “humility” or meekness.

The notion that humility or gentleness was a positive virtue set the first-century Christian community firmly apart from the Greco-Roman culture. There humility smacked of subservience and weakness. But Christians were called to celebrate a humble spirit, imitating Christ who declared himself to be “meek” (Matthew 11:29) and who blessed the meek (Matthew 5:5). In today’s gospel text, Jesus celebrates the last being first and holds up a little child as the image of faithfulness for his bickering disciples (Mark 9:30-37). James now declares that this meekness itself is a sign of genuine “wisdom.”

Those without this uniquely humble attitude, those who instead exhibit the all too familiar human traits of “envy” and “selfish ambition” (“eritheia”) are, by James’ definition “not wise.” The bitterness and strife (“eris”) brought into the faith community by such attitudes demonstrate their lack of wisdom. Those who “boast” about their own wisdom while displaying such attitudes are promoting a false truth, a wrong example of wisdom.

That wrong-headed proclamation, James continues, is not “from above.” It is not heavenly-gifted wisdom from God, but rather is “earthly.” And even more subterranean than “earthly,” it is “devilish” (“daimoniodes”—“pertaining to demons.”). The fruits of such “anti-wisdom” (earthly, unspiritual, and demonic) are, as should be expected, “disorder and wickedness of every kind.” This “disorder” (“akatastasia”) is a chaotic and self-serving state where the envy and ambition of others makes fertile ground for every imaginable evil practice.

In stark contrast, James now itemizes the characteristics of true wisdom, the divinely-gifted wisdom that comes “from above.” This “wisdom” is not just a theological attitude, but is identifiable by its actions. First, while false wisdom brings “wickedness of every kind,” wisdom from above is “pure” (“hagnos”), innocent, blameless, and without blemish.

Likewise, the other traits exhibited by genuine wisdom stand in opposition to the envy, selfishness, and ambition false wisdom engenders. Instead of bitter strife true wisdom is “peaceable” or “peace-loving” (“eirenike”). To reach this peaceful state the wise will also exhibit a spirit of “consideration” and “submission” (“epieikes” and “eupeithes”) or “gentleness” and “yielding.” The peace loving humility of true wisdom is acted out with a willingness to consider the needs of others, to take the back seat instead of the driver’s seat (or even to give up “shotgun”), in order to foster peace within the faith community. Offering “mercy” (see James 2:8 ff.) and goodness, impartiality and sincerity — all informed by divinely–gifted wisdom, rounds out James’ definition of one who lives according to that true wisdom.

Instead of tumult and discord, disorder and wickedness, the final harvest of these “fruits” will be peace and righteousness, and a community faith that is pleasing to God (v.18). While some commentaries see a division between James’ discussion between 3:18 and 4:1, the epistle writer seems to continue his thoughts on the need for those steeped in true wisdom to continue their acts of peacemaking within the community. The examples James uses in 4:1-3 are so startling, shocking even, that they have led many commentators to suggest that his descriptions are metaphorical, not describing actual events. The literal reading of the epistle writer’s words seems to describe a Christian community engaged in disputes that were truly “battles,” and confrontations that ended in nothing less than “murder,”

While there are records of some Jewish zealots killing fellow Jews who were “sleeping with the enemy,” there are no such records from first century Christian congregations. The lack of historical evidence, and James’ relatively slight attention given to the actions of “battles” and “killings,” suggest that he is probably not describing some actual, physical widespread community condition. James is, however, very sensitive to the “violent” damage that can be done by a bad spirit, an un-checked tongue, or a false sense of wisdom. He sees the damage logged by these “virtually violent” actions as every bit as destructive as the blows of a fist or the slash of a sword. James describes the ultimate “fruit” of such earthly, unspiritual, demoniac “wisdom” in the violent language of warfare and murder.

The root cause of all this bad behavior is once again described by James not as any theological misunderstanding, but as a direct failure for individuals to take action. Those consumed by envy and covetousness do not “have” because they have not asked. They have not asked for the wisdom and love and forgiveness God has offered through Jesus Christ. They have only asked for “things,” for greedy goodies that will bring them “pleasure” for a moment, not for the divine connection that give them wisdom for a lifetime.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet