Our Father’s Kind of Religion

James 1:26-27

About the Sermon

It runs in the family. We all know that phrase. And we all know what it means. It's true that children display characteristics and traits that reflect their parents. This is true of God's children as well. They know and reflect the Word and ways and love of their Father in heaven. That simple truth will go a long way to helping the churches to whom James writes with great concern. There are plenty who are faithful, but these churches are dangerously lax on the whole. Many care about looking religious more than looking like the Father. With God's help in this short passage, James 1:26–27, we will not only know ourselves better but the God who brought us forth by the Word of truth.

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