06 What James Means by ‘Faith Without Works Is Dead’ (James 2:14-20) episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 15, 2012 · 36 MIN

06 What James Means by ‘Faith Without Works Is Dead’ (James 2:14-20)

from Wednesday in the Word · host Krisan Marotta

James 2:14–20 puts a sharp edge on a question that runs through the whole letter: what kind of “faith” actually saves? In this episode, we look at James’s “problem passage” alongside Paul, and see that James is not contradicting justification by faith alone, but clarifying what real, saving faith looks like when it shows up in the real world—under pressure, in community, and in the quiet details of how we treat one another. In this week’s episode, we explore:How the context of trials, the “law of liberty,” and James’s earlier warnings about partiality set the stage for his question: “Can that faith save him?”Why Paul in Galatians and James in this passage are answering different problems—one insisting that works cannot earn us favor with God, the other insisting that genuine faith will inevitably produce a changed lifeJames’s first illustration: a poorly clothed, hungry brother or sister in the church, and what it reveals when our words (“be warmed and filled”) and our actions pull in opposite directionsWhat James means by “dead” or “useless” faith, and why he is not talking about believers who still sin, but about a settled pattern of life that consistently contradicts the gospel we claim to believeThe second illustration: demons who have entirely accurate theology about God, and why their belief exposes the danger of a barren orthodoxy that knows the right answers but refuses to repent or trustHow James’s teaching guards us from two opposite errors: self-righteousness when we spot evidence of growth, and despair when we see our remaining sinWhy any evidence of change in our lives is a gift from God, not a merit badge to boast in or a measuring stick to use against othersAfter listening, you’ll come away with a clearer sense of how James and Paul stand together, and what it actually means to have a “living” faith. You’ll be invited to examine where your own beliefs and actions may be drifting apart, without collapsing into either pride or hopelessness, and to ask God to keep growing in you a faith that not only thinks rightly about the gospel, but increasingly lives as though it were true.Series: James: The Gospel in Shoe LeatherMost people fail at Bible study because no one ever taught them how. Bible Study Boot Camp fixes that: one short email a day for a week, plus a worksheet you can use on any passage for the rest of your life.Sign up for Bible Study Boot Camp

James 2:14–20 puts a sharp edge on a question that runs through the whole letter: what kind of “faith” actually saves? In this episode, we look at James’s “problem passage” alongside Paul, and see that James is not contradicting justification by faith alone, but clarifying what real, saving faith looks like when it shows up in the real world—under pressure, in community, and in the quiet details of how we treat one another. In this week’s episode, we explore: How the context of trials, ...

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06 What James Means by ‘Faith Without Works Is Dead’ (James 2:14-20)

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James 2:14–20 puts a sharp edge on a question that runs through the whole letter: what kind of “faith” actually saves? In this episode, we look at James’s “problem passage” alongside Paul, and see that James is not contradicting justification by...

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