If Anyone Wanders…

James 5:19-20

About the Sermon

James has written his letter with a central driving concern: to see wanderers brought back to God. He has been kind and he has been severe. He has addressed us as beloved brothers and he has called out our spiritual adultery. In all of this he holds out the prospect of God's forgiveness and grace. James 5:19–20 brings us to the concluding words of James' letter, a call to come to the rescue, to seek out those who are wandering, and to bring them back. How do we know when someone is wandering? How can we bring them back? These are the questions we will explore together with James' capable help.

About the Series

The book of James is beloved of Christians for its famously practical wisdom and instruction. But James is no less painful as it is practical, addressing our many problems with a simple diagnosis: double-mindedness. Our fractured relationships, James says, are symptoms of our fractured souls, souls in a fractured relationship with our Father. But James offers more than this searing diagnosis but a program and prescription for wholeness: “draw near to God and he will draw near to you.” The message of James is this: God offers double-minded people the possibility of wholeness through repentance and faith. Our God “yearns jealously” over us and “he gives more grace.”
The book of James is beloved of Christians for its famously practical wisdom and instruction. But James is no less painful as it is practical, addressing our many problems with a simple diagnosis: double-mindedness. Our fractured relationships, James says, are symptoms of our fractured souls, souls in a fractured relationship with our Father. But James offers more than this searing diagnosis but a program and prescription for wholeness: “draw near to God and he will draw near to you.” The message of James is this: God offers double-minded people the possibility of wholeness through repentance and faith. Our God “yearns jealously” over us and “he gives more grace.”

Sermons in the Series