John Markum

Don’t be spiritually delusional

James 1:22, “But be doers of the Word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourself.”

I love when the Bible just comes out and tells it like it is. James is one of the most dense books in the Bible because nearly every single verse is so packed with powerful thoughts, encouragement, doctrine, etc. But one of the dangers that James warns against in the very first chapter of his letter is with the subject of what real discipleship is.

He warns that being a true follower of Jesus is not about how much you know. Don’t misunderstand me: “Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God.” But true faith – saving faith, changing faith – does not end there, and James goes on to deal with that in more detail.

But James specifically warns against misunderstanding discipleship for knowledge. Knowledge can lead to discipleship, but it is not discipleship in and of itself. Because discipleship is not knowledge; discipleship is obedience to what God says. And at the point that you and I begin doing what God says, we’re becoming more like Jesus. We’re not like Jesus just because we can quote the Bible. Or because we know theology and doctrine. Or because we’ve sat through hundreds of sermons.

And James tells us that if we think we are disciples because we have heard the Word but not obeyed the Word, we are “deceiving ourselves.” In other words, a person who knows God’s Word, without doing God’s Word, and thinks God is ok with it, is spiritually delusional.

If I’m honest, I’m guilty. I’ve been there. More than I’m comfortable admitting. And the excuses I make are the same as yours. And I’m a pastor. So I know this is something that we all struggle with on some level. Be doers of the Word, and not hearers only. Listen to God, and do what He says. Don’t be a Christian who marks his Bible but his Bible never marks him. Don’t be settle for being a Bible scholar over being a follower of Jesus. Don’t fool yourself. Don’t be delusional!

What are the areas that you struggle with being completely obedient to God? In what ways have you paid lip service to God, but your actions dictate otherwise? How will you correct that behavior and submit it to Christ? Have a great week!

Blessings,

John

Knowledge vs. Discipleship

1 Corinthians 8:1 tells us that, “Knowledge puffs up; but love edifies.” It is common in church for us to think that we are “mature” disciples based on our knowledge of God and the Bible. Let me be clear that the more we know about God and His word, the more we can be obedient to Him and His word. But there is a chasm of difference between knowledge and discipleship.

Knowledge makes it possible for me to be a mature follower of Christ; it does not garantee it. You and I need to be ever-learning, ever growing disciples. But we do not become more like Jesus until we behave more like Him. If we can quote the entire New Testament, but fail to love people the way Jesus did, we are not mature disciples. If we know when to stand, sit, and speak in church like a well-trained puppy, but we hold onto grudges, we are not mature disciples.

James 1:22, “But be doers of the Word and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves.” In other words: If we think that hearing and knowing the Word makes us disciples without doing the Word, we’re spiritually dillusional.

Let’s be doers of the Word this week.

Blessings,

John

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