The Book of James: Part 5 - Love is the Law, Mercy is the Culture
Mercy is easy to believe in when you need it. It gets harder when someone
else does.
In this message from James 2:8–13, Pastor Ezra takes the next step in
James and confronts the way we measure people. We want others to judge
us by our intentions, but we often judge them by their impact. We want
grace for our weakness, but consequences for theirs. James presses
directly on that tension and asks a deeper question: has the mercy of Jesus
changed the way you treat people?
The big idea is simple and searching: love is the law, mercy is the culture.
Love is not extra credit in Christianity. It is the royal law because it comes
from the King. And James makes it clear that favoritism is not just rude or
awkward. It is sin, because partiality violates love. You cannot love your
neighbor while ranking your neighbors.
Pastor Ezra also confronts selective obedience, the kind that says, I am
generous, but harsh. I know the Bible, but I will not control my tongue. I
serve, but I refuse to forgive. James will not let us pick the commands that
make us feel spiritual and ignore the ones that make us uncomfortable.
Then the message lands on one of the most powerful lines in James:
mercy triumphs over judgment. Not because sin is small, but because the
cross is enough. Judgment fell on Jesus. Mercy flowed to sinners.
The application is clear: check your measure. In your assumptions. In your
words. In your response. Are you measuring people with mercy or irritation,
patience or suspicion, compassion or criticism?
If mercy is how we got in, mercy better be what people feel when they walk
in.
