Thursday, October 26, 2023

Ask of God Who Giveth to All Liberally (James)

Patience

READ James 1:2-4 (including JST)

What is the relationship between affliction and perfection?

Affliction enables a trial of our faith.

Trying our faith results in our gaining patience.

“Patience’s work” is to perfect us – make us “entire” or complete – wanting nothing in the perfection of this mortal experience.

Some godly traits can only be learned or attained through suffering – to become a god, one must suffer through all these things.

In other words, the goal of this mortal experience is to gain more light – ultimately to be sealed up to eternal life – which requires us to be in an environment where we can be proved in difficult circumstances to see if we will have faith in Christ and be obedient to the Way – to see if we will sacrifice our whole souls and suffer (and possibly die) for a cause worth suffering for (the immortality and eternal life of man – others’ and our own).

The individual who suffered the most affliction, rose above it and obtained the greatest glory and perfection…there is a direct causal relationship between affliction and perfection.

 

 

Ask of God

READ James 1:5-7

What is the message of James 1:5?

You may actually ask God and get an answer.

Implied in the verse is that God cares about each soul, is not a respecter of persons and will reveal Himself to anyone.

It defines the entire message of the Restoration through Joseph Smith – the principle of continuing revelation from God to man.

Who lacks wisdom?

All of us.

If wisdom means understanding how truth (things as they really are, were and will be) applies to me, then all of us lack it unless we are filled with the Spirit and commune with God constantly.

Who do we need to have faith in when we pray: God to answer us, or our worthiness to approach Him and get an answer?

God to answer us.

And He will - He will give to all men liberally.

He doesn’t care about our worthiness or our calling in the Church – it’s about our faith in Him.  None of us are “worthy” to approach Him based on our own merits, so His extending grace to one messed up person is no different than His extending it to another only slightly less messed up person; if not being precisely like Christ (the prototype of the saved man) is the requirement (and it is – see LoF 7:9) then all of us are in need of vast quantities of mercy; and if God is no respecter of persons and has extended that mercy to one fool of a mortal, then He will also extend it to you, if you will just believe it.

But if we do not have faith, we constrain His ability to answer us.

What is the ultimate implication of James 1:5?

God wants a relationship with you.

God wants to tell you everything.

God wants you to rend the veil of your unbelief so that you can know Him in the flesh and He can take up His habitation again with you, as it was in heaven – which is eternal life, to know God and Christ as we are known by them.

 

STORY: Read the story of the dwarves who will not be “taken in” when thrown through the stable door into what they think is a dark room when in fact they are in Aslan’s Country (from C.S. Lewis’ The Last Battle, Ch. 13)

“Aslan,” said Lucy through her tears, “could you, will you, do something for these poor Dwarves?”  “Dearest,” said Aslan, “I will show you both what I can and what I cannot do.”  He came close to the Dwarves and gave a low growl: low but it set all the air shaking.  But the Dwarves (who are still imagining that they are in a pitch black stable) said to one another, “Hear that?  That’s the gang at the other end of the stable.  Trying to frighten us.  They do it with a machine of some kind.  Don’t take any notice.  They won’t take us in again!”…” You see,” said Aslan, “They will not let us help them.  They have chosen cunning instead of belief.  Their prison is only in their own minds, yet they are in that prison; and so afraid of being taken in that they cannot be taken out.”

Why might people not believe when God Himself is reaching out to them to save them?

They are afraid of being “taken in” because they’ve been burned before by charlatans pretending to be on God’s errand; implied in this is that they don’t yet know God’s voice sufficient to be able to discern that it is Him. 

They can’t hear God because of all of the “noise” that either they have in their own heads or the world is throwing at them. 

They actually like sitting in the dark “stable” in the company of likeminded people; they retain control of their lives (albeit they are sad, dark lives).

What does it mean that their prison is only in their own minds?

The reality is that these dwarves are not sitting in a dark stable but are actually in “Aslan’s Country” but they lack the ability to see it because they won’t believe it; they have a set of constraints about the “real world” and will not believe anything that contradicts them.

Meditation teaches us that our minds or brains IS the “veil” that separates us from God and higher states of consciousness – that we must transcend above it to truly connect to God and obtain revelation and nirvana (spiritual rebirth); that the prison we sit in IS our mind and our physical senses – it is what prevents us from seeing what is actually all around us – the reality of the spiritual realm.

 

READ James 1:17

Why can we have faith in Him to answer our prayers?

He loves us – He gives good gifts, which we can see all around us – even in the physical world.

He is the same yesterday, today and forever – otherwise He would cease to be God (to be a saved being is to be precisely what He is and nothing else – see LoF 7:15).

So, this means we can have faith that He won’t change the plan on us – and that He will be around forever to ensure that all His promises will come to pass, as He has all power to make them so.

 

Back to James 1:5-7…

What does it mean to give to ALL men LIBERALLY?

He is no respecter of persons – He will answer ALL people – regardless of their standing before Him.

It is about our faith in Him.

It is about our desire to communicate with Him – are we “crying” unto Him for answers?

What does it imply that God will not upbraid or scold us for asking Him questions?

God will not send you away discouraged, telling you “don’t inquire of me, ask someone else” – some church leader or enlightened mortal.

He will not tell you there are lines you must not cross or things about which you must not inquire.

We are the ones who withdraw ourselves from God, not the other way around – and that happens when we come into His presence unprepared – but if we are truly repentant, He will forgive us and make us comfortable with Him.

But some things ARE more important than other things and God has an agenda for each of us – revelations for us that will save us, if we will ask Him.

 

READ D&C 8:10-11

Oliver Cowdery was on his own agenda but what did the Lord want him to ask about?

To ask to know the mysteries of God.

To ask how to walk back into God’s presence and know Him – which is eternal life (see John 17:3).

Will He answer our agenda questions though?

Yes.

But He’d rather we ask Him His questions.

But He is patient and will take us on our terms, where we are, concerned with the things that bother us at the time.

And He will use those occasions – because when He finally gets our attention, He has a lot to tell us (see Ether 3).

Why must we ask God if He already knows our hearts and what we lack?

It is about our agency – He will not violate it.

God will not impose upon us what we will not willingly receive.

He stands at the door and knocks but we must open the door – which we do by asking for revelation from Him.

 

READ JSH 1:10-13

What pattern can we see in Joseph Smith’s experience that enabled him to receive an answer to his prayer?

Desiring to know (“what is to be done?  If any of them be right, which is it and how shall I know it?”).

Believing the Lord can make them known unto you (“came to the determination to ask of God, concluding that if He gave wisdom…and would give liberally and not upbraid, I might venture”).

Pondering or thinking deeply and prayerfully - contemplating (“while I was laboring”, “reflected on it again and again”).

See also 1 Nephi 11:1-3 and 3 Nephi 17:3.

What is more important to your salvation, the answers and insights about God that Joseph Smith received in the First Vision or the example Joseph Smith set to be followed?

His example is the most important thing to your salvation.

What he said he saw, heard or learned can be debated, his credibility challenged, his competency argued, even his sanity questioned.

If God spoke to Joseph Smith, then all Joseph really stands for is the proposition that God will speak to anyone who lacks wisdom and asks. 

And we can follow Joseph’s example and have the same experience, if we will trust James’ advice. 

We can attain the level of proof in the existence, attributes and plan of God.

Both James and Joseph assure us that God speaks.  From that bit of information WE all go on trial.  Do we ask?  Do we trust God to answer?  Do we seek for light and truth?  Are we willing to accept the challenge and seek God for ourselves?  This is really a test of the deepest desires of our hearts and our core faith in God’s nature and abilities. 

 

 

Pure Religion

READ James 1:27 (including JST)

What is “pure religion”?

It is to live as Christ lived.

To have a fullness of charity.

To act on that fullness or spirit in service, particularly to those who need it the most.

And to keep oneself unspotted from the world.

How does one keep themselves “unspotted from the world”?

Either they are tempted but pay no heed to it and do not sin – to live as Christ lived.

Or they make and keep the covenant with Christ such that He declares them clean from the “blood of this wicked generation” (see 1 John 5:18 and D&C 88:75); so it’s more about keeping themselves “in” covenant with Christ.

 

 

Faith and Works

READ James 1:22 and 2:14-20, 24, 26

What does it mean to be a “doer” of the Word?

It means to do the works of Christ, who is the Word made flesh.

It means to put what you hear into action in your life.

How is James defining faith?

Belief alone.

How does Paul define faith?

Belief plus works – (He is using Joseph Smith’s definition that faith is the principle of action in all intelligent beings – see LoF 1:9-10; see also Romans 3:27, Romans 9:32, Galatians 2:16, Galatians 3:2-5, Hebrews 6:1).

For Paul when he talks about “dead works”, he is referring to the works of the Law – keeping terrestrial commandments and outward performances and rites; so doing works alone means attempting to be saved by living the Law of Moses without exercising faith in Christ (which includes works or actions, but they “flow” from a place of faith, rather than being a vain attempt to circumvent offering my whole soul to Christ and trying to save oneself).

What does it benefit us to believe in Christ but not seek to do His works; will our belief save us?

No – we would be hypocrites.

Belief without action is a very weak belief (and it is certainly not faith).  If I think the probability that something is going to happen is very low, I will not act on it unless I have no other choice, or it is a super easy task and I do it logically to hedge my bets.

How do we show where our faith is by our works?

By what we do, say, think and feel – by who we emulate and serve – by who we love.

What works does Christ want to see, to show our belief in Him?

Covenanting with Christ and offering Him our whole souls.

Relieving the suffering of others.

Sacrificing what we have for them, with charity.

Doing His work (be about my “spiritual father’s” business) – feeding His sheep in whatever ways He directs (temporally, spiritually, etc.).

Can we be a Zion people – be “one” – because we believe in the theory or doctrine of equality, sharing with each other, and ensuring none among us are in need/poor, or must we act?

We must act.

And we can’t wait for the Church - it’s been over 180 years since the call to establish Zion and the institutional Church is no closer to living it than it was in 1832.

We must act personally, as directed by God.

Zion will be established one person, one family, one group at a time, as we each conform to the requirements needed to stand in His presence and love each other as we love Him.

 

Hiatus

Due to some recent work and life changes, I'm taking a hiatus from the weekly blog.  I will leave the blog up for anyone who would like ...