James 5:7-11. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on Father’s Day, June 21, 2020.
It is always my goal to encourage moms and dads in continuing the hard work of being a parent, whether you have young kids, or adult children who have their own. So, my message to fathers today is simply, don’t quit. Your family needs you whether it feels like it or not, and whether it looks like it or not. Don’t quit!
In James 5:7-11, the section serves as a conclusion to a problem described in the earlier verses of this chapter, an unjust world. James warns the rich, who are defrauding their workers of their wages, as well as condemning and murdering those who have no power to stand against them. He tells them, “You have lived on the earth in pleasure and luxury; you have fattened your hearts in a day of slaughter.” (NKJV).
It would be easy to be overwhelmed in such a case. Christians typically were not from the rich class and were quite used to dealing with injustice. Everyone can reach a point where they feel like quitting in any endeavor. Now, quitting a bad thing is good and conforms to the biblical message of repentance. However, quitting on the Lord, His commands and plan, only leaves us without hope. The world talks a good game, but it always delivers injustice.
James is reminding us that the ultimate judge is coming, the Lord Jesus. 2 Timothy 4:1 says, “I charge you therefore before God and the Lord Jesus Christ, who will judge the living and the dead at His appearing and His kingdom…” (NKJV). Jesus came to earth, suffered and died as a human. It is God the Father’s decree that the man Jesus is to judge all of humanity and all of the heavenly beings as well. It is fitting that we be judge by one who has been where we have been, and by one who can identify with all that ails us as humans. He is the perfect and righteous judge.
Don’t join the scoffers who laugh and deride the idea that Jesus will ever come back. And, don’t join the scoffers, who mock our faith in Jesus, as a pipe dream that makes us fodder for those who aren’t restrained by God’s Word. Yes, Jesus turned the other cheek and they killed him for it. We are not promised justice in this life because this world is the result of the choices of humans and fallen spirits. What we are promised is a day in which all the righteous of every generation will be vindicated and God will settle all accounts through Jesus. This is not the time to lose your faith in Jesus. There is no hope in this world that will actually survive the increasing chaos into which we are plummeting. Only Jesus can help us.
James then gives us the image of a farmer. The farmer does a lot of work in order to plant seeds, and then he must be patient. WE don’t always see an immediate effect from our hard work. This world is hard work: making a living, becoming one with a spouse, raising your children, and growing old. The encouragement is that it takes time for hard work that is good to bear fruit.
There is a proper season for all things. When your kids are young, it is critical to plant good seeds in their life. You can’t look at your kid in the terrible two’s and say, “I quit; it’s not working!” I guess you can, but you really shouldn’t. You shouldn’t look at that angry teenager and quit parenting, if you really care about them. Yes, kids often do not listen to their parents, and it is easy for parents to become offended, perhaps retreat from the hard work. This is called immaturity. There is a whole world around us suffering and just one of the reasons is this. People in their lives quit trusting the Lord and that the hard work of doing the right thing would eventually bear fruit. There are many things that will bear fruit in this life, but ultimately, the greatest fruit of trusting the Lord will be reaped at the Second Coming of Jesus.
In verse 8, James tells us to establish, or strengthen, our hearts. This speaks of fixing yourself internally upon a certain course. In Luke 9:51, this same word is used of Jesus. “Now it came to pass, when the time had come for Him to be received up, that He steadfastly set His face to go to Jerusalem.” (NKJV).
We need to have a firm resolve and we need to maintenance that resolve. In a way, the whole book of the Psalms is a case study in righteous people maintaining their faith in God’s ways, even though they were tired of the injustice in the world. We strengthen our hearts when we spend time in the Word of God and praying. We strengthen our hearts when we encourage one another. Anytime I talk with someone who has failed in this area, they confess that they were not maintaining their faith like they should have. God help us to fix our eyes upon the task at hand and to simultaneously see the finish line where our reward truly lies.
The devil’s design is to wear you down in this world until you just surrender to the system. You either go along in order to get yours, or you fight against the system in your flesh. Both choices are a choice to surrender to him instead of God. I would rather live surrendered to the plans and purposes of Jesus than anyone else on this planet, myself included.
It is God’s intention that fathers would have good fathers themselves, role models that would be a source of strength. In this day, it is becoming scarcer and scarcer. In verses 10 and 11, James reminds us about the examples we have in God’s Word. If you didn’t have a good, earthly father then know this. You have good, fatherly examples in God’s Word because your heavenly Father knew that you would need encouragement and a model to follow. Whether Jesus himself, or the man Job, we look up to these men because they endured great hardship. They were faithful to God when it didn’t seem to help them.
The concept of patience is used several times in this passage. In verse 8, “Be patient,” the word is literally to be long fused, that is not easily angered. It is the patience of keeping ourselves from exploding in anger. However, in verse 10, patience is a Greek synonym that means to remain under the load, that is endurance or perseverance under pressure. Both are important to patience. The first is the temptation of our emotions to throw everything aside and protect ourselves. It is a temptation to do something bad rather than the good you are doing. In the second, patience is focused on continuing to do the good work, which is a long hard work of persevering things. We can do so more easily because God has promised us good things on the other side of the hard work.
So, what do you do if you have failed in this area? Quit quitting! When Jesus found Peter fishing after the resurrection, he told him, “Satan has asked for you, that he may sift you as wheat. But I have prayed for you, that your faith should not fail; and when you have returned to Me, strengthen your brethren.” (NKJV). Yes, in this world you will have trouble, but fear not, Jesus has overcome the world! May God strengthen us to get up each day and do the hard work of being a father to those whom God has placed in our life.