James 1:21-25 (NIV)
Do
not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says. Anyone who listens to the word but does not
do what it says is like a man who looks at his face in a mirror and, after
looking at himself, goes away and immediately forgets what he looks like. But the man who looks intently into the
perfect law that gives freedom, and continues to do this, not forgetting what
he has heard, but doing it—he will be blessed in what he does.
The
book of James has been called the most practical book of the Bible and these
verses are a good example of its practicality.
The focus here is action. It’s
not what you know or what you say, it’s what you do. James later says “faith without works is
dead”. The emphasis of James throughout
his 5-chapter book is conduct, what you do daily with your life, not what you
know or what you say. You can claim
anything about who you are, but the proof of who you are, what you contribute
and why others can believe that you are Christlike is what you do and how you
live your life.
There
are seven symbols of the Bible—sword (Hebrews 4:12), hammer (Jeremiah 23:29),
seed (I Peter 1:23), fire (Jeremiah
20:9), lamp (Psalm 119:105), food (I Peter 2:2), and a mirror (this
passage). What does a mirror do? It shows who you are; it reflects where you
need to make yourself more presentable.
Yet you have to do something about it.
If you look into the mirror, it may show that you need to shave, that
you have a pimple that needs to be popped and medicated, that your hair is a
mess and needs to be cleaned and combed.
But, the mirror does not make these changes for you; it does not make
you presentable to the world. You have
to react to what you see in the mirror.
You can ignore what the mirror shows you and go about living your life,
but the flaws that the mirror showed remain.
While
the mirror shows who you are physically, the Bible shows who you are
spiritually, morally, and ethically. The
Bible itself cannot change you, it can only point out where changes in your
life need to be made, but you have to take action to make those changes. You can ignore or forget what the spiritual
mirror shows you, but then you remain with all your flaws and weaknesses. A mirror for you is different than a mirror
for someone else. Rabbi Harold Kushner
said that God is like a mirror. The mirror never changes, but everybody who
looks at it sees something different.
So
what James is saying here is that when you hear the word of God preached, or
taught or read the Bible yourself, you will learn of aspects of your life that
you need to change or you need to do.
Then you have to take action and do what the word of God revealed to
you.
The next time you look at
yourself in a mirror, think about the following. Are you deceiving yourself morally and
spiritually? Are you ignoring what you
know the word of God is saying for you to start doing or stop doing? Are you a true believer or a hypocrite? Reacting positively to what the mirror of God
tells you will have its rewards. Note
what the end of this passage says---by continuing to allowing the mirror of
God—His Word—to have an impact on your life, by reacting to what you learn and
doing something about it, not ignoring or forgetting about it, you will be
blessed in what you do. May you
experience the wonderful blessings that happen to a person who is not a
forgetter, but a doer of the word of God.
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