Shaolin
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- Sep 18, 2021
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In James chapter 1 we read a telling passage...
James 1:12*
Blessed is the man who continues to cleave to God through temptation even if he fails, because when he has stood the test, he will receive the crown of life, which God has promised to those who love Him.
This is a direct rendering of the Greek with its full grammar intact, which is why it reads differently from most English word-for-word translations (because Greek cannot be accurately rendered into English on a word-for-word basis). What James is saying, is that the most important thing for a person to do, is remain clinging to God, even when he fails (ie; falls to sin). There is a difference between falling to sin and running to it, as John tells us in 1 John. He uses two different words for sin: hamartia, and hamartano. One means purposefully sinning with a high hand, without a care about what God says or thinks. The other means missing the mark, which is missing the mark of obedience.
These two terms speak of the will - one man wants to sin, he does not want to even try to curb his behavior; while the other man wants to walk in obedience to God, he wants to practice righteousness and holiness...but for whatever reason he falls to temptation (and there are numerous variables as to why a person falls to temptation). What John and James tell us together (or, rather, what the Holy Spirit tells us through these two apostles), is that there is a difference not only between falling to sin and running to commit sin, but also a difference of heart.
When you do not want to sin, but fall to temptation because of some weakness, the main thing is to not let satan bat you over the head constantly in repeated failure, but remember that in God's eyes, what He requires is that you desire to be sinless. That desire is what He looks at, and if we keep that in mind, He sees our hearts and does not condemn us. What He requires today under the new covenant in Christ, is that we do our best, and when we do, He takes care of the rest...
1 John 1:7
But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin.
The "test" that James talks about in his verse, is the test that you will cling to God no matter what: whether you rise up and defeat the temptation, or whether you succumb and fall to it. What God is looking for is that we do not quit Him. He has promised that as long as we do not quit Him, He will never quit us!
Blessings!
James 1:12*
Blessed is the man who continues to cleave to God through temptation even if he fails, because when he has stood the test, he will receive the crown of life, which God has promised to those who love Him.
This is a direct rendering of the Greek with its full grammar intact, which is why it reads differently from most English word-for-word translations (because Greek cannot be accurately rendered into English on a word-for-word basis). What James is saying, is that the most important thing for a person to do, is remain clinging to God, even when he fails (ie; falls to sin). There is a difference between falling to sin and running to it, as John tells us in 1 John. He uses two different words for sin: hamartia, and hamartano. One means purposefully sinning with a high hand, without a care about what God says or thinks. The other means missing the mark, which is missing the mark of obedience.
These two terms speak of the will - one man wants to sin, he does not want to even try to curb his behavior; while the other man wants to walk in obedience to God, he wants to practice righteousness and holiness...but for whatever reason he falls to temptation (and there are numerous variables as to why a person falls to temptation). What John and James tell us together (or, rather, what the Holy Spirit tells us through these two apostles), is that there is a difference not only between falling to sin and running to commit sin, but also a difference of heart.
When you do not want to sin, but fall to temptation because of some weakness, the main thing is to not let satan bat you over the head constantly in repeated failure, but remember that in God's eyes, what He requires is that you desire to be sinless. That desire is what He looks at, and if we keep that in mind, He sees our hearts and does not condemn us. What He requires today under the new covenant in Christ, is that we do our best, and when we do, He takes care of the rest...
1 John 1:7
But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin.
The "test" that James talks about in his verse, is the test that you will cling to God no matter what: whether you rise up and defeat the temptation, or whether you succumb and fall to it. What God is looking for is that we do not quit Him. He has promised that as long as we do not quit Him, He will never quit us!
Blessings!