When he was at table with them, he took the bread. He blessed the bread, and broke it, and gave it to them. And their eyes were opened and they recognized him!(Luke 24:13-35)

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Go deep!


The Letter of James is probably best known for its call to make the Christian life a life of depth and not of superficiality.  He finds many ways to point to a life which is not merely a collection of good thoughts and kind wishes, but a life rich in actions.  From this letter we receive the often-quoted reminder that “Faith without works is dead.” 

There is a variety of ways in which James envisions faith being expressed in actions, in which the Christian life is to be one of depth.  (Jas 1: 19-27) The passage’s reminder that true faith consists in “looking after orphans and widows” sounds just like the James we know.  But slipped into his reminders are James’ injunctions to “control the tongue” and to “keep oneself unspotted by the world.” 

Most surprising is the lead off line which James sends our way, commanding us to “be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger.”  If ever there was a call to depth and not superficiality, this is it.  But could we think of three things that our contemporary society finds more difficult? 

“Quick to hear.”  Sounds roar around us without interruption.  Sounds “out front” are not enough; we need “background sound.”  To really hear what someone else is saying, demands that we stop and receive from another, that we allow the other’s words to “go deep.”  Are we anxious to “receive from another?”

“Slow to speak.”  From chat rooms and Facebook to talk shows and “reality shows” we’re not very slow to speak.  Talking “off the top of our heads” without much depth comes easily to us.  Yet we delight when we hear someone who speaks “from the heart.”  Do we speak “from the heart?”   When we do, we are usually ridiculed or suspected of ulterior motives.

“Slow to anger.”  I doubt that James would mind good anger at injustices and other things that “should not be.”  What he would find hard to handle would be our society’s tendency to blame others first before looking at our own responsibility, the tendency to “react” rather than to “respond.”  When difficult words come our way, do we “react” or do we “respond?” 

Quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger.  James encourages us to let these actions flow from our faith.  What a life of depth that demands!

No comments: