This week we are looking at a letter that was written by
the half brother of Jesus and recorded for us in the New Testament of the Bible
called the book of James. Yesterday, we saw James reveal for us a timeless and
true principle when it comes to the faith that works in that the faith that
works embraces and engages in prayer.
We talked about the reality that prayer, simply put, is
entering into communion and communication with God. Prayer is creating space to
enter into God’s personal presence and spend time with God. Prayer was
divinely designed as an opportunity to spend time with God. Prayer is divinely
designed to be the vehicle by which we experience life with Jesus and life
change by Jesus.
And in James 5:13-18, we see
James reveal for us four different ways that the faith that works embraces and
engages in prayer. First, in James 5:13, we saw that the faith that works embraces and engages in prayer because
prayer provides the opportunity to engage God. When we pray we are creating
space to engage God. We are creating space where we can engage God with the
difficult circumstances that are causing suffering in our lives. And we are
creating space to engage God by praising Him for that happiness and joy that we
may be experiencing as a result of our circumstances.
Prayer is about engaging God in a way that results in us
experiencing God’s presence in the midst of whatever circumstances that we find
ourselves in. Prayer is about experiencing God’s presence, whether God chooses
to take us out of our circumstances or whether He chooses to take us through
our circumstances. Today, we will see James reveal a second way that the faith
that works embraces and engages in prayer in James 5:14-15:
Is anyone
among you sick? Then he must
call for the elders of the church and they are to pray over him, anointing him
with oil in the name of the Lord; and the prayer offered in faith will restore
the one who is sick, and the Lord will raise him up, and if he has committed
sins, they will be forgiven him.
Now these two verses are two of
the most discussed and debated verses in the entire Bible when it comes to the
issue of prayer and the issue of healing. And over time, there have been four differing
views when it comes to how these verses are to be understood. So what I would
like to do is to guide us through a process by which we look at these verses in
a way that asks and answers the questions that are necessary so that we can
come to understand what James is communicating in these verses.
James begins verse 14 by asking
the question: “Is anyone among you sick?” Now that leads us to the first
question that we need to ask and answer, which is “what kind of sickness is
James referring to?” Now the word sick here, in the language that this letter
was originally written in can refer to a debilitating physical illness. Or the
word sick can mean to be weak. So which one is it? In verse 13, James is
referring to those who were suffering emotionally or spiritually and those who
were experiencing joy and happiness as a result of their circumstances. However, that does not mean that James could
not also be referring here to someone who is physically suffering.
Now a natural question that
arises here is “Well Dave, how can we know whether James is talking about
physical, emotional, or spiritual suffering?” Great question. And the answer
would be to keep reading on to see if what James says next helps us answer that
question. In the next part of verse 14, James answers his question by
commanding the person who is sick “to call for the elders of the church and
they are to pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the
Lord”.
Now when James refers to the
Elders of the church, he is referring to those in the leadership of the church
who have been given the leadership responsibility to protect, care, lead, feed
those who are a part of the church. As the leaders of the church, the Elders
are to pray over the person who is sick, anointing them with oil in the name of
the Lord. The oil that was used was olive oil. Now that leads us to the next
question that we need to ask and answer which is “what is the purpose and point
of anointing with oil?”
There have been four different
views when it comes to the point and purpose of the anointing with oil. The
first view is referred to as the medicinal view, which maintains that the olive
oil served to have a medicinal purpose in the physical healing of a person. The
problem with this view, however, is that there is no evidence that anointing
with oil was used for any medical problem. In addition, why would James only
mention one remedy when many other physical illnesses could be encountered? Why
wouldn’t James say “if you encounter this physical disease use olive oil, but
if you encounter that physical disease use this treatment?”
The second view is referred to
as the pastoral view. This view maintains that the anointing of oil was
designed to stimulate the faith of the sick person. In other words, the oil
served to jump-start the faith of the person so that the person would be
healed. The problem with this view, however, is that while Jesus sometimes used
a physical prop in his healings that stimulated the faith of the one who was
healed, the value of the anointing here does not lie in any physical connection
between the anointing and the illness, as was the case in Jesus healings.
The third view is referred to
as the sacramental view, which maintains that the anointing is mandated by God
as a physical element through which He works the grace of healing in the sick
believer. This view is maintained by the Catholic Church and is called “the
anointing of the sick, or, extreme unction. However, the problem with this view
is that, as we will see in a few minutes, James insistence that the sick are
healed through the prayer of faith suggests that the anointing itself does not
convey the grace of healing power.
The fourth view views the
anointing of oil as a physical action with symbolic significance. As the Elders
pray, they are to anoint the sick person with oil in order to symbolize that
the person is being set apart for God’s special attention and care. As the
Elders pray asking God to heal the sick person, the oil serves as a symbol to
acknowledge that this person is being set apart, by the Elders, for God’s special
intervention and healing.
This view seems to relate best
to what James says next, which is that “and the prayer offered in faith will
restore the one who is sick, and the Lord will raise him up, and if he has
committed sins, they will be forgiven him." You see, the focus is not on
the anointing oil; the focus is on the prayer of faith. James point is that the
prayer of faith, which as we saw in the previous phrase, was offered in the
name of the Lord, will restore the one who is sick and the Lord will raise him
up.
Now that leads us to the next
set of questions that we need to ask and answer, which is “what is the prayer
of faith? And how are they restored and raised up? Physically, spiritually, or emotionally?
Is James here saying that the prayer of faith guarantees physical healing here
on earth?” Now there is a stream of
Christianity, which is referred to as the Prosperity Gospel movement that would
say just that.
Proponents of prosperity theology and the prosperity
gospel maintain that God desires that everyone prosper financially and
physically as a result of their spirituality. Prosperity theology maintains what is called a “name it and claim it” mentality when it comes to a
person’s health and wealth. In other words, if you just have enough faith, you
can ask God for large material or physical blessings and He will provide. All
you need is faith. “Just name it by faith and you can claim it by faith”. Those
who embrace prosperity theology will refer to themselves as being “word of
faith communities”. So, for the person who is sick, if they just have enough
faith, their prayer of faith would provide healing.
However, there is a huge problem with prosperity
theology. And that problem is this: any theological category that is true to
the message and teachings of Jesus must be able to have Jesus fit into that
category. Because, when you look at the definition of a spiritually mature
person in prosperity gospel; that a spiritually mature person was wealthy, with
good relationships and without pain or anxiety, that definition excludes Jesus.
Prosperity theology maintains that the spiritually mature
will be blessed physically, yet, when we read the accounts of Jesus life that
are recorded for us in the Bible, we discover that Jesus was beaten and
crucified. So did Jesus not have enough faith? Did Jesus have sin in His life?
Was Jesus spiritually immature? You see, Jesus would not be welcomed into the
prosperity gospel movement as being spiritually mature. And if Jesus cannot fit
into your theology, then your theology is faulty. Those who say that people who are not healed because they
did not have enough faith are looking at faith and its results in a way that is
profoundly unbiblical.
In addition, did you notice who
is doing the praying in this verse. The prayer of faith that heals is not the
prayer of the one who is sick; the prayer of faith that heals is the prayer of
the Elders. Are the Elders therefore at fault if the prayer for healing does
not bring healing in a reasonable amount of time? Would the healing have taken
place if the Elders just had more faith?
The key to understanding what
James is communicating here is to connect the phrase “in the name of the Lord”
with the phrase “the prayer offered in faith”. You see, to ask for something in
the name of the Lord, to pray for healing in Jesus name, does not simply mean
that we utter Jesus name like it is a magic formula. Instead, to pray in Jesus
name is to pray in a way that takes into account Jesus will. We see this
reality revealed by James half-brother Jesus in John 14:12-14:
"Truly,
truly, I say to you, he who believes in Me, the works that I do, he will do
also; and greater works than
these he will do; because I go to the Father. "Whatever you ask in My
name, that will I do, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son. "If
you ask Me anything in My name, I will do it.
Notice what Jesus says here: "Whatever
you ask in My name, that will I do, so that the Father may be glorified in the
Son.” Jesus point is that God will respond to the prayer that is focused on
accomplishing the mission of God in a way that advances God’s kingdom and makes
much of God. You see, the faith that James is talking about in these verses;
the faith exercised in this prayer is the faith in the God who sovereignly
exercises His will.
The New Testament clearly
demonstrates that God does not always will to heal the believer. For example,
in John chapter 5, Jesus walked past multitudes who were praying to be healed
to heal a person who did not even demonstrate faith in Jesus. And 2 Corinthians
12:7-9, God rejected Paul’s request to be healed because in Paul’s physical
weakness God would be glorified. The prayer of faith is the prayer that
confidently trusts in God’s ability to heal and that believes that when its
God’s will for that healing to occur, the faith, which in itself is a gift from
God, will be present.
But that still brings us back
to the question “what kind of healing are we talking about?” On the one hand, I
do not believe that James is simply and only talking about physical healing.
Because if James was only talking about physical healing, why would he mention
the last part of verse 15: “and if he has committed sins, they will be forgiven
him." On the other hand, I do not necessarily believe that James is only
talking about emotional or spiritual healing.
Instead, I believe that James
is revealing for us the reality that the faith that works embraces and engages
in prayer because prayer provides the opportunity for healing. When we pray we
are creating space to engage God in a way that provides the opportunity for God
to bring healing in our lives as a result of the difficult circumstances that
are causing suffering in our lives, whether that suffering is physical,
emotional, or spiritual. And we are creating space to engage God in a way that
confidently trusts in God’s ability to heal and that trusts in God’s will to
either bring us out of or through the suffering that we are experiencing,
whether that suffering is physical, emotional, or spiritual in nature.
The letters in the Bible are
filled with faithful and prayerful people who made much of Jesus through His
healing power over their physical, spiritual and emotional suffering. And the
letters of the Bible are filled with faithful and prayerful people who made
much of Jesus through their lives of suffering. Remember, prayer is about
experiencing God’s presence, whether God chooses to take us out of our
circumstances or whether He chooses to take us through our circumstances.
Tomorrow, we will see James reveal
a third way that the faith that works embraces and engages in prayer...
Amen! Prayer is the key to life. Thank you for your post!
ReplyDeleteOur ministry believes in the power of prayer also. God bless you!