*this is a transcript of a recent sermon I gave on prayer
The Prayer of Faith
13 Are any among you suffering? They should pray. Are any cheerful? They should sing songs of praise. 14 Are any among you sick? They should call for the elders of the church and have them pray over them, anointing them with oil in the name of the Lord. 15 The prayer of faith will save the sick, and the Lord will raise them up, and anyone who has committed sins will be forgiven. 16 Therefore confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, so that you may be healed. The prayer of the righteous is powerful and effective. 17 Elijah was a human like us, and he prayed fervently that it might not rain, and for three years and six months it did not rain on the earth. 18 Then he prayed again, and the heaven gave rain, and the earth yielded its harvest. (James 5:13-18)
“This call to interconnected living defined the early church, and it resonates today for us, in the evangelical covenant church, as we seek to embody Christ’s radical love in our relationships with others.” (Evangelical Covenant Church)
PRAY FOR ONE ANOTHER
Here in James we find the call to pray for one another.
If only it were that simple.
And maybe it really is. I don’t know about you, but I would be the first to put up my hand and say, okay, but I actually genuinely believe that I suck at praying.
The evangelical covenant church is currently in a denomination wide invitation to participate in this series titled “One Another.” When I was given the invitation to put together a teaching for our local community on the subject of prayer, I actually had a choice, between a couple different one another topics, prayer being one and the other option seemingly embedded in an obscure teaching on circumcision from Galatians.
And yes, I am bad enough at praying that I debated going with the latter
When I settled on prayer as my teaching subject, I asked my wife (Jen) for advice. Her response- Dave, get out of your head and just be practical. Anyone who knows me knows I’d likely disappoint her here. But she knows me well enough to be on to something here. I am somebody who needs to parse through the what and the why of a given thing. And the what and the why of my struggle with prayer? As an introvert prayer makes me anxious. Praying publically, but it also represents a struggle when it comes to getting stuck in my own head, be it struggling to find words, not doing well with silence, or even wrestling with the implications of what prayer expects.
I could probably spend a good deal of time unpacking that struggle on a surface level, a topic I seem to come back to in an almost cyclical nature as the years go by. But in this case, I suspect the real struggle when it comes to prayer runs deeper, and that it’s worth digging a little to unearth what the real root of that struggle actually is.
The covenant write up seems to suggest the real crisis of prayer is found in it’s vulnerability. To pray in the face of our given reality, the reality of this world, to acknowledge the actual shape of our lives, is to find ourselves risking much, even simply in our perception, in the eyes of God and one another, and even risking feeding our questions and our doubts. I feel like that makes sense. At the root of it, prayer creates a crisis that forces us to reconcile these tensions. And in truth, a lot hangs in the balance, particularly when we stop to actually pay attention to what pray is.
Easier maybe to imagine that as personal struggle and stay in my own head. But it gains a whole different kind of weight when we see prayer through the lens of this mornings passage- the call to pray for one another. Or to pray “together”- the stakes get bigger.
That has been the lingering question I’ve been pondering over this past week- how do I get from the challenges prayer represents for myself to those specific concerns for what prayer means for our lives together. Because it seems to me that, if I actually can’t get out of my own head and into the practice, it’s the one another of it all that suffers. Which is what this series is all about.
Last week was about how love, which emphasized that love is the foundation. Love is what this whole thing is all about. If love (of God, of others) is the point, prayer seems to be a first step in fleshing that out. But here’s the thing: prayer is the source of the tension. That’s easy to see. The much more difficult thing to parse out is, it’s also the grounds by which we address the tension, and even redeem it. That vulnerability opens us up to a conversation about:
- our ideas of who God is, who we see ourselves to be, how we view the world
- the story of God and Christ that is holding all of this together.
And what we find in-between these two ideas is the one another of it all. To pray for one another is to take those initial struggles and bring it into conversation with the story.
Coming back to James chapter 5. Part of the great power of the text in terms of helping us to wrestle with this tension, is the way it can remind us that we are not alone in feeling and dealing with this tension. The first thing that stood out for me to this end, taking from the commentary I read (Peter Davids), is the suggestion that 5:13-18 finds James “returning” to the subject of prayer. Meaning, this subject of prayer doesn’t come out of the blue, it’s actually the culmination of a subject that James has been fleshing out the whole way through. Thus I decided to begin by seeking out where James actually starts with this idea of prayer.
Which brought me all the way back to Chapter 1:
5 If any of you is lacking in wisdom, ask God, who gives to all generously and ungrudgingly, and it will be given you. 6 But ask in faith, never doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea, driven and tossed by the wind. 7,8 For the doubter, being double-minded and unstable in every way, must not expect to receive anything from the Lord. (James 1:5-8)
I want to pause on that first line: “If any of you is lacking in wisdom, ask God…” (1:5)
The word you… “Whenever you face”, consider it joy… “because you know” endurance will be produced through… “your faith”… “so that you may be” mature and complete, lacking in nothing (1:1-4)… indicates the thing being made whole, or complete. But that you is not an I, it is, in this case, a we.
Second, the phrase lacking in nothing (vs 4), is contrasted with the ensuing phrase “must not expect to receive anything (vs 8), with the thing bridging these two realities together being the word “Wisdom.”
The inference here, borrowing from my commentary, is that lacking in nothing becomes synonymous with having wisdom. Or to put it another way, to have wisdom means that we lack in nothing. This, here in James, is what “we” seek in prayer.
What then is wisdom? As someone who does spend a lot of time getting stuck in their own head, it’s easy for me to intellectualize this word, to turn it into a statement of abstract intelligence and controlled theology. However, wisdom in James is better understood as the true knowledge of the character and story of God that comes through weathered, experiential, participatory knowledge. This is what leads to maturity. And it is described in 3:17 as having the following quality- pure, peaceable, gentle, willing to yield, fully of mercy and good fruit, no partiality, no hypocrisy.
If this is true, I wonder, and this is purely my thought. But I wonder if the real point here is not distinguishing between those who lack and those who don’t, but rather resting in the proclamation that “all” lack in the endurance this wisdom produces and proclaims. Precisely because none of us is whole. We, as it is with the whole of creation, are in process.
Here I think we are getting closer that tension I was talking about earlier. This idea that we are a transformed people, and that we are also in the process of being transformed. That’s a difficult and hard thing to make sense of in my head. And yet, where this leaves a liminal space in-between, forcing us to wrestle with both realities all at once, the more I think about it the more it seems to make sense of the lived life. We know this tension to be true, that much is intuitive to the human experience. We know the world, this life, contains struggle, and where the Christian story breathes truth into this picture what we are handed is a seeded tension.
If this tracks, at least for me this is where it was leading me, the subsequent discussion of that charged word double mindedness starts to make sense:
But ask in faith, never doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea, driven and tossed by the wind; for the doubter, being double-minded and unstable in every way, must not expect to receive anything from the Lord. (James 1:6-8)
Here we find two co-existing operative words- faith and doubt. To doubt, in this case, is to lose sight of this basic truth of the Christian story. Faith on the other hand, becomes the beating heart of this wisdom that is so central to James’ view. A wisdom that is made manifest in our lives as a an act of God. It comes to know a thing precisely through our act of participation in the story- the vulnerability of prayer is our way into this participation in faith that brings this Wisdom into view.
But, here’s the real revelation that comes breaking in through James’ letter- this is a gift. This is not leaving us to fight against the tension in order to bring about the world, the life, the outcome that we want. Rather it is God’s work in inviting us to participation in this liminal space as He brings about the promised transformation. In 1:4, this endurance, or process of transformation, is something we are asked to “let have it’s full effect.” This Wisdom is that which our generous and loving God gives through prayer.
This is good news, but it also comes with a warning in the larger context in James’ letter concerning this particular community- there is a false wisdom that comes not from God, but a different power. It is described as envy, selfish ambition, boasting, falsehood. This is described as “unspiritual,” which for James’ hearers means an opposing power to the God whom holds the world’s redemptive force in His hands.
So when James goes on to point out right after naming these powers the evidenced fact of “those conflicts and disputes among you…” this is about how prayer brings these two kinds of wisdom- true wisdom and false wisdom- to the forefront of our lives together. That double mindedness that he speaks about is given a flesh and blood application. It becomes a question in James of which story we are participating in, and what that participation brings about in the one another of it all. Where this opposing power is given reign in our lives there is, as the verse puts it, disorder. Where the Wisdom of God is given reign in our lives there is a reordering of the chaos.
This is, then, what faith calls us towards, is the Wisdom that comes from God, a wisdom that has the power of reordering the shape of our community and our lives.
I love how Amar Peterman puts it in the book Becoming Neighbors: The Common Good Made Local:
“Faith is the polyphonic hum of belief and devotion. It begins with the glimmering incantation of our souls, O God, you are my God… My soul clings to you (Ps 63:1, 8) It blooms when our endless hunger and longings meet the divine reality that God is with us here and now. Faith is the gentle vibration of the Spirit that lives in us, providing the baseline of hope. It is our orientation to God and the world. Even if all else is stripped away, the hum remains. Christ with me, Christ, before me, Christ behind me, Christ in me.”
As he puts it, “Belonging must become the hermeneutic starting point” of our lives. Or, our lives together.
The elephant in the room. Here I’ve been dancing around the part of the passage that most often trips people up- pray for one another, so that you may be healed. What throws things into crisis more than this- we pray for an outcome, we don’t get that outcome, our faith is thrown in crisis. What James is reminding his readers of is that the thing that ultimately gets affected is the one another of it all. There is a two-fold nature to this observation however- it is also the one another of it all that becomes the healing and revealing process.
There is a more important observation though. Notice how the phrase “Will save” is attached to the phrase will raise: “The prayer of faith WILL save the sick, and the Lord WILL raise them up…” (James 5:15)
What often gets neglected here is that there is a past, present, future dynamic at play here. What’s interesting to point out is, when we lose sight of the true story, when we enter into the world and it’s story, often given the label in our modern day, “secularity,” what ultimately happens is this liminal space gets erased. There no longer is a past, present, future dynamic in which the tension is allowed to emerge, there is only the future we are left to fight our way towards. And often against the past.
Augustine once put a similar idea this way regarding the nature of secularity. He looks to bring forward a more ancient definition of the secular, describing it as the space between the first coming of Christ and the second coming of Christ. As he famously put it, we can live ordinary lives with redemption behind us and before us. And the thought I had when thinking over this basic redefinition was simply this- what if the tension itself is the gift. That is the point of the Christian life, is recognizing how the story creates it precisely by redeeming it. This is how Wisdom emerges.
So what do we do with this? In our lives? In our church community? In our neighborhoods?
First thing- make sure we are soaking ourselves in the story. Let it get baked into every facet of our lives, both together and apart. Let the hope be spoken into the mix.
Second, expect a prayer shaped life to expose the false wisdom that is robbing us of that hope. And expect that what this brings to light in the midst of that tension is the gift. The gift of Wisdom and the gift of community. The primary shape of our Christian formation is the body of Christ, and as I once heard it put, prayer is the great leveling ground. And in truth, what other story frees us to actually name the tension for what it is? What other story allows us to co-exist in community where one person can speak the word “I am not alright,” while another can speak about the workings of God in their life. Where one can be found in a deep rooted space of doubts while another is being illuminated by a strengthened faith. Where one is bringing their struggles and another their victories, one is bringing a story of healing and another a deep rooted sense of grief and loss.
Third and lastly, recognize the power of our liturgy. If James 5 is the culmination of this larger argument, prayer begins first with repentance. Note the first part of this morning’s verse- “Therefore confess your sins to one another, and pray for one another.” Confession, the turning, is the forming ground for entering into true participation with the body through prayer.
A last thought, once again from Peterman in Becoming Neighbors. He recognizes the challenge of the tension, that it can find us coming up against a wall that seems insurmountable. And yet, faith beckons us to ask a different question- “What will we be to each other if the world doesn’t end.”
It’s a question that breaks into the what and the why of the struggle prayer represents. This quote isn’t about some unnamed future, it’s actually about pushing us all the way back into the present with a resurrected imagination. After all, at the heart of this all is the similar question, “how then will we live.” That’s the invitation of prayer.





