Sermon on James 5:13-18, Pray, Sing, Invite, Confess

It was 1974.  Mary Ann and I had only been married less than a year when another young couple friend of ours, Joyce and Dwight Watts, faced an enormous challenge.  Joyce went into the hospital sick on the Tuesday before Easter, was diagnosed with leukemia and was pregnant at the same time.  Following the teaching of our passage for today, she called for the elders of the church to come and anoint her with oil and pray for her healing.  I remember one of the elders telling me he felt one hundred percent assurance that God was going to answer their prayer.  Joyce and her baby died on Easter Sunday.

I was so discouraged.  What does this passage mean, then, when it says the prayer of faith will save the sick?  How can James write so confidently?  Is he mistaken?  Was this for his era only?

Maybe you have had disappointing experiences with prayer for healing or for something else equally important or crucial.  Didn’t Jesus say that if we ask anything in faith, believing we have what we asked for, it will be granted?  Didn’t Matthew assert that our healing was guaranteed by Jesus’ atonement when he said, “By his stripes we are healed”?  And yet you have likely seen so little of this kind of answer to prayer.  However, here we are today, with this passage in James focused on Radical Prayer.

Maybe there are clues in the context of this passage that would help us get a handle on it, understand it better.  If, however, we decide that there is no guarantee that such healing prayer will save the sick, how do we ever believe for healing or other big things like that?

 

This passage hinges around three oughts or shoulds, and one command, which we can translate into four commands, therefore:  PRAY, SING, INVITE, CONFESS.  Then it finishes with what we’ve come to expect from James, an illustration meant to hammer home James’ point.

The first “should” or command is…

I. You Should Pray When You Are Suffering

13 Is anyone among you suffering? He should pray.

We might say to James, “Well, duh!”  But in fact we often do anything but pray when we’re suffering…

  • Complain
  • Moan and groan
  • Look for solutions

And all these things are natural and normal, but none of them goes far enough.  None of them acknowledges the most important thing about suffering, that it is intended to make us more like Christ.  We don’t like to suffer, but as true believers we like and desire to become more like Jesus, no matter what that takes.  So we should pray!

A little over a year ago I suffered a severe, non-ending gall bladder attack.  It was one of the most uncomfortable experiences of my life.  I tried changing positions, tried taking antacids, even went to the store to get some ingestible charcoal to see if it would alleviate my symptoms (the store was closed).  I was desperate.  I prayed to God and you can probably guess what I was asking Him for.  But I got no relief.  So I finally woke my wife around two in the morning and asked her to take me to the hospital.  I think that was the right thing to do.  But it was also right to pray, even though God didn’t answer my prayer with a miraculous healing.  I might suppose that He wanted me to go to the hospital.  And I did get healing and relief from surgery and the other care and therapy given me there.

James doesn’t directly say here that prayer in suffering will inevitably lead to relief from suffering, though he is leading us to the challenge of effective and healing prayer.  I’ll admit to some discouragement that night, that God did not heal me and instead I had to go to the hospital for help.  Did that process help make me more like Christ?  I think so, actually.  He knew what He was doing.

You should pray when you are suffering.

II. You Should Sing When You are Cheerful

13 Is anyone cheerful? He should sing praises.

And here again, we might say to James, “Well, yeah, of course, James!”  But that isn’t what we always do either, is it…

  • We reward ourselves with some goodie
  • We tell someone else how happy we are
  • We smile and congratulate ourselves

And again, these might all be fine, but once again we are failing to acknowledge the most important thing about good times, that they are from the hand of God and He is to be praised for them.

I like what one commentator said.  Charles Ellicott, the 19th century English bishop and scholar said, “the whole life is to revolve around the throne of God, whether in the night of grief or day of joy.”  That’s what James is telling us with these two commands, that the whole of life is about God.  For the true believer everything hinges on God, both the good and the bad.  He is the great obsession of our lives.  He is the biggest reality in our existence.  To not engage Him in everything is to live the atheistic life.  We have a relationship with the One who made and determines all things.  How could we not come to Him with all things?

So, You should pray when you are suffering and you should sing when you are cheerful.

Does this mean you shouldn’t pray when you are cheerful, or sing when you are suffering?  Of course not.  James said to consider it all joy when you encountered various trials.  Paul taught us, “In everything give thanks.”  We may certainly pray when we are cheerful, sharing our joyous hearts with God.  We may certainly sing when suffering.  Paul and Silas sang after being beaten and thrown in that dismal, dark dungeon and chained to the wall.  James is making generalized statements, not exclusive ones.  And that may help us when it comes to his third command.

III. You Should Invite the Elders to Pray for You When You Are Sick

14 Is anyone among you sick? He should call for the elders of the church, and they are to pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord. 15 The prayer of faith will save the sick person, and the Lord will raise him up; if he has committed sins, he will be forgiven.

A. Is this a promise of total healing?

I didn’t even think to call the elders of the church when I had my gall bladder attack.  I’m sure Adam, and David, and Eric, and Jason would have come and prayed for me.  And it wasn’t because I didn’t believe that the prayer of faith could heal me.  Maybe I should have called them.  That seems like it would have been a great inconvenience late at night or in the wee hours of the morning.  I don’t’ know why I didn’t.  I just did not think of it.  And maybe that is why James had to write it here in black and white, or whatever color his papyrus and ink were.  This is part of what it means to be a community of faith.  Our lives matter to one another, and we need one another.

But James’ instruction seems to come with a promise.  When we call for the elders of the church and they pray over us and anoint us with oil, the prayer of faith will save the sick person and the Lord will raise him up.  Is that as guaranteed as it seems to sound?  Was James really promising that?

I found it fascinating as I read some of the commentaries that many of them assumed James was making a blanket promise here but that such healing was confined to the first century, to that era of the early church, and that it no longer availed for us today.

But I question that view.  If such a definite outcome were always the case, even in the early church, then no one who had the elders pray over them would die.  And we know that all will die.   I think this statement of James is meant to cover the majority of cases, not all cases.  But even that, of course, raises concerns.  Do we really see that today?  If not, is it because we are not doing it right, or not having enough faith?

I’m a part of a ministry called The Forsaken Children.  We raise funds to help deliver the children of Ethiopia from the power of poverty.  One of our ministries is to girls caught up in the sex trade and the director of that ministry was recently trying to get to a meeting in the capital city of Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, and was basically lost.  He asked a man for directions and the man seemingly ignored him.  The man was deaf and when our guy, Nick, realized that, he tried communicating with him in sign language, which he doesn’t really know, and discovered the guy could communicate by writing.  He ended up sharing his testimony with the deaf guy and then prayed for the man, asking the Lord to open his ears.  The man asked, shocked, “How did you do that?”  He was able to hear out of one of his ears.

But I remember a time years earlier when I was in Addis at our ministry to street kids, and a guy came into our drop in center who could not speak.  I felt I was supposed to pray for his healing, but he was not healed.  Was it a matter of Nick’s faith versus my faith?  Maybe.  I’ve had other situations where I have prayed for people and they were healed.  This sounds kind of goofy when I say it, but for a while, several years ago, it seemed God heard my prayers of healing for people with headaches.  Why only headaches?

I remember once a woman at the church I was on staff with came for prayer, after the service, like we do here, saying she thought she had one condition but her doctor said it wasn’t that and so she was still suffering.  I felt led to ask her to listen to the Lord as we prayed, and she felt she heard the Lord say it was indeed the condition she thought it was and she needed surgery.  She went back to the doctor and had him test again and sure enough, that was the issue and it was healed with surgery.  Why didn’t God heal her Himself?  Why send her to the doctor?

Do you recall the experience of king Hezekiah?  The Lord told him, through the prophet Isaiah, that he was going to die and to prepare for it.  Hezekiah begged the Lord to spare him and God did.  He sent Isaiah to Hezekiah to tell him this and to tell Hezekiah to go the physicians and have a poultice applied.  A poultice is a cloth soaked in a substance that draws out infection.  When the poultice was applied to Hezekiah’s infection, he was healed.  So here, God used human means of healing as the way to heal Hezekiah.  I’m sure he had used the poultice prior to this, but this time it did the trick.

I’m rambling on about healing because I think James is telling us something we should be experiencing but we don’t experience it enough, for some reason, and I’m not sure why.  Look, we’ve all had to deal with the disappointment of God not healing what we feel He should have healed.  The ultimate disappointment will be our deaths.  No one will escape that.  God has not promised to deliver us from that.  It is the way of all flesh.  And there are times when God will not hear our prayers, prayers made in faith, for healing.

Paul is a prime example.  In 2 Corinthians 12 he tells us God sent him a messenger of Satan, a thorn in the flesh, because of his pride.  He asked the Lord three times to remove it.  Did Paul ask in faith?  You know he did.  But the Lord told him no, that he wanted Paul humbled, and to know that God’s strength was made perfect in Paul’s weakness.

God does not promise to always heal, and James knew that.

B. Is sickness always caused by sin?

James makes another interesting comment at this point, sort of an add on.  He says, “If the sick person has committed any sins, they will be forgiven.”  Is sin a cause for sickness?  Well, we just saw with Paul that it was.  Paul’s pride occasioned his thorn in the flesh, his physical ailment.  But in Paul’s case, though he undoubtedly had confessed this sin, God did not heal him.  Not all sickness is caused by sin, however.  That is why James said, “IF the sick person has committed any sins…”

Do you recall in John’s Gospel, chapter 9, when Jesus and the disciples came upon a man born blind, that the disciples asked, “Lord, who sinned, this man or his parents?”  It was kind of a dumb question, because how could the man have sinned before he was born.  Jesus answered that neither had sinned but that this man’s blindness was to display the glory of God when Jesus healed it.

But whenever I have participated in the elders being called to pray for someone’s healing, I have always taken opportunity to ask the one being prayed for if they need to confess any sin.  This may be a necessary part of their healing.  And this leads to James’ last command.

IV. You Should Confess Your Sins to One Another

16 Therefore, confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, so that you may be healed.

It is notable that James does not say you are to confess your sins to the elders, and certainly does not say to the priest.  Rather, we are to confess to one another.  Why?  That we might be healed.  And this seems a broader healing than just healing from illness.  So what are we supposed to do?  Tell everyone what our sins are every time we get together?  Well, you know, that would actually not be so bad.  It has worked for Alcoholics Anonymous.  It worked for the early Methodist movement.  The early converts of John and Charles Wesley were instructed to meet in small cadres weekly in which they challenged each other with the Scriptures and confessed their sins to one another.

I would say that it is the bane of the modern church that instead of interacting with one another in honesty and transparency, we most often put on a front that everything is going just great with us, even though we might really be dealing with stuff.

On the other hand, I’ve not found it helpful or healing to just willy nilly confess our faults to everyone.  It seems more effective and healing to confess to those we are in close relationship with.  This is what worked for the early Methodists.  We find healing by bringing the things we keep in the darkness out into the light.  It is hard for sin to live in the light.  It loses it’s power and we find forgiveness and encouragement to live more godly.

But we don’t want to hear our elders and pastors confess their sins do we?  We may not want to, but we need to.  No one is sinless, not even pastors.  What benefit is it to us to put them on pedestals?  This has been the struggle of many a pastor, that they cannot be honest about their own sins.  We all need to be able to admit what we’re struggling with that does not please the Lord.  We need that freedom.

 

So, Pray, Sing, Invite, and Confess.  And to encourage us in our prayers, James gives us the example of Elijah to help us believe that God answers prayers.

The prayer of a righteous person is very powerful in its effect. 17 Elijah was a human being as we are, and he prayed earnestly that it would not rain, and for three years and six months it did not rain on the land. 18 Then he prayed again, and the sky gave rain and the land produced its fruit.

Why choose Elijah as an example?  Well, Elijah made a pretty big and bold prayer request, that it not rain anymore on Israel until Israel repented.  Then, after his encounter with the prophets of Baal up on Mt. Carmel, when the people repented, he prayed for rain to once again come.  He prayed seven times before the rain came.  So it was a pretty big request.  But the other reason James chose Elijah was that he was a pretty flawed person, just like us.  His prayer wasn’t answered because he was a perfect person, but in spite of the fact that he wasn’t.  You remember his bout with depression.  What you probably don’t know, but James’ readers would likely have known, was that Elijah failed to obey God when he was told to return to Israel and anoint some people as kings and Elisha as his successor.  So Elijah was weak, just as we are, yet God answered his prayer.

Why does God answer prayer?  Why do we need to pray at all?  Hasn’t God already planned what is going to happen?  Well, I don’t know.  What I do know is that God has commanded us to pray.  And God has chosen to respond to our prayers.  How that all works out in the divine counsel is a mystery.  It is a mystery we are to count on.  The little breaths we utter become a mighty wind that alters the course of history.  He has given us the extraordinary privilege of shaping the future when we pray.

 

Are you suffering…PRAY.  Are you happy…SING.  Are you sick…INVITE the elders to pray for you.  And CONFESS your faults to one another, even if you are an elder or pastor.  If you want to do any of those actions today, come to us in the prayer ministry after service, even if you want to sing to us.  But especially if you want to find helpful prayer for suffering, healing for illness, or confession for forgiveness.

Randall Johnson

About the Author

Randall Johnson

A full-time pastor since 1979, Randall originally graduated from Dallas Theological Seminary (ThM) in 1979 and from Reformed Theological Seminary (DMin) in 1998. He is married with four grown children and a pile of epic grandchildren.

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