22But prove yourselves doers of the word, and not merely hearers who delude themselves. 23For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man who looks at his natural face in a mirror; 24for once he has looked at himself and gone away, he has immediately forgotten what kind of person he was. 25But one who looks intently at the perfect law, the law of liberty, and abides by it, not having become a forgetful hearer but an effectual doer, this man will be blessed in what he does.
Is biblical Christianity too extreme an expression of spiritual life? Is a daily discipline of Scripture reading and obedience to God a bit overblown? Not if we take James’ teaching seriously and desire to be saved “from damage in this life.” But what is the connection?
The Word of God is our connection with the mind of God. It is our escape from entrapment from self-deception. But it is not the mind-knowledge of the Bible that makes the difference. Men of great intellect and scholarly study may know the Bible inside and out as they study it as literature and philosophy, but if they do not obey its teachings, it has no effect for life change—for them it is merely a collection of pithy sayings, heartwarming meditations, or spiritually comforting tidbits among the spiritual divines of other religions. But only the Bible can provide a worldview of reality as God created it. Anything else is a delusion.
So James appeals to his readers: prove the Word in your lives by being a “doer” of the Word. You see, the Bible is a workbook, a tool, a document of action. We should always look to it with the primary question: “What should we do with it?” Of course, this is predicated on believing the truths the Bible presents to us about God, ourselves, and life; we must dynamically orient our lives to what it tells us to do. Armchair theologians and spiritually sugarcoated, self-righteous, casual churchgoers, take warning! Bible thumpers shouting out condemnations of worldly decline, watch out! There is nothing worse than someone who has the Word, knows the Word, even preaches the Word, but is not living first and foremost by the Word.
Mere glancing at the Bible occasionally is insidiously harmful, for it encourages distortion of reality while fostering a pretense to Christian living. That is Christian hypocrisy! But consistent meditation on and living by God’s Word frees our souls and minds from distortion of our view of reality and of ourselves. This is God’s antidote to the lies of the world and of Satan, and by it God blesses us. This is not legalism but liberation—obedience to God.
Lord, I want to continually be a doer of Your word and not just a hearer of it.

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