Today, I am reading and commenting on James 1-5.
I love the book of James because he hits on so many great points for us to think about. Because I have been convicted this year about my need to improve my prayer life, I want to focus on what James says about prayer today. In a way the fact that God has been speaking to me about prayer for the last several months is probably why I see so much of this passage as being about prayer. James begins by telling us that if we lack wisdom we should ask God. If you don’t think that you lack in wisdom, you haven’t been paying attention to what the Bible says. All of us are lacking in wisdom, some of us, such as myself, more than others. James also tells us that when we ask of God we must believe and not doubt. Specifically, we must not doubt that God will give us wisdom, but we must have faith that God will give us what we ask of Him. James talks more about praying and asking God for things later, but in between he tells us some important things. I believe he starts with telling us to ask for wisdom for a reason. He next tells us to be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to become angry. We should listen to what both our fellow man tells us and to what God tells us. James says we should not just listen to what God says, but we should also act upon it. James goes on to speak about faith and wisdom, defining both of those terms before he returns once more to writing about praying and asking God. Please read those parts as well because they form a basis for understanding what he says towards the end. He tells us that we have fights and quarrels because we desire and do not have. And we do not have because we do not ask God. Even when we do ask God, we do not receive that for which we ask because we ask for things in order to satisfy our own pleasures rather than to satisfy and serve God. So, rather than seek the pleasures of this earth, let us seek the joy of serving God. Ask God for wisdom, then ask God for what wisdom tells you that you need to do as He wills for you to do. In many ways, James is reiterating what Jesus said in Matthew 6, “seek first His kingdom and His righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.” (please follow the link and read the rest of it).
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.














