August 3, 2025 - Genuine Love Rises Above the Discrimination of Others episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 3, 2025 · 53 MIN

August 3, 2025 - Genuine Love Rises Above the Discrimination of Others

from Living Stones Church, Red Deer, Alberta · host Living Stones Church

A few weeks ago, Patty and I viewed a documentary on Ed Sullivan, the host of the Sunday Evening Hour, which was a variety show that he oversaw for 27 years. One of the things that Ed Sullivan was noted for was helping to integrate into his program African American entertainers during a time of deep segregation and prejudice, particularly in the deep south of the U. S. One of the reasons for his commitment to this concern came from his family background as they were Irish immigrants to the U.S. He knew firsthand the pain of discrimination and favoritism. In James 2, James is deeply concerned about the believer’s actions as they reveal what a person believes. For James, the way we treat people reveals the true condition of the heart and the work of grace or lack within it. How do we see and treat people? The greater question is how God treat people. When we view the life of Christ, we know the pattern or the model for how we should treat others. Jesus reached out to the marginalized and social and racial outcasts and brought them into his kingdom. What needs to happen in our lives for us to treat others like Jesus? James was not only impacted by the example of Jesus but also knew the Old Testament texts in considering the nature of God’s dealings with people, particularly the vulnerable.   Leviticus 19:15 ‘Do not pervert justice; do not show partiality to the poor or favouritism to the great but judge your neighbour fairly. T. scholar, Douglas Moo, explains what James is challenging us with. “In his typically practical manner, James, in this paragraph, gives voice to an important Christian value: the equal worth of all people in the sight of God. Worldly culture is marked by distinctions: between one ethnic group and another, men and women, rich and poor, and so on. These distinctions are not erased in the church, but they are relativized in light of the revelation of God’s radical grace to all humans in Christ. ‘There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus’ (Gal. 3:28).” There is an equality of personhood we discover from Scripture. Every human being is created in God’s image and should be treated with respect. Here in James 2, we find three aspects of this issue of favouritism or discrimination. He begins with an exhortation, gives an example, and then explains the ramifications. 

A few weeks ago, Patty and I viewed a documentary on Ed Sullivan, the host of the Sunday Evening Hour, which was a variety show that he oversaw for 27 years. One of the things that Ed Sullivan was noted for was helping to integrate into his program African American entertainers during a time of deep segregation and prejudice, particularly in the deep south of the U. S. One of the reasons for his commitment to this concern came from his family background as they were Irish immigrants to the U.S. He knew firsthand the pain of discrimination and favoritism. In James 2, James is deeply concerned about the believer’s actions as they reveal what a person believes. For James, the way we treat people reveals the true condition of the heart and the work of grace or lack within it. How do we see and treat people? The greater question is how God treat people. When we view the life of Christ, we know the pattern or the model for how we should treat others. Jesus reached out to the marginalized and social and racial outcasts and brought them into his kingdom. What needs to happen in our lives for us to treat others like Jesus? James was not only impacted by the example of Jesus but also knew the Old Testament texts in considering the nature of God’s dealings with people, particularly the vulnerable.   Leviticus 19:15 ‘Do not pervert justice; do not show partiality to the poor or favouritism to the great but judge your neighbour fairly. T. scholar, Douglas Moo, explains what James is challenging us with. “In his typically practical manner, James, in this paragraph, gives voice to an important Christian value: the equal worth of all people in the sight of God. Worldly culture is marked by distinctions: between one ethnic group and another, men and women, rich and poor, and so on. These distinctions are not erased in the church, but they are relativized in light of the revelation of God’s radical grace to all humans in Christ. ‘There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus’ (Gal. 3:28).” There is an equality of personhood we discover from Scripture. Every human being is created in God’s image and should be treated with respect. Here in James 2, we find three aspects of this issue of favouritism or discrimination. He begins with an exhortation, gives an example, and then explains the ramifications.

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August 3, 2025 - Genuine Love Rises Above the Discrimination of Others

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This episode was published on August 3, 2025.

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A few weeks ago, Patty and I viewed a documentary on Ed Sullivan, the host of the Sunday Evening Hour, which was a variety show that he oversaw for 27 years. One of the things that Ed Sullivan was noted for was helping to integrate into his program...

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