Now listen, you rich people, weep and wail because of the misery that is coming on you. Your wealth has rotted, and moths have eaten your clothes. Your gold and silver are corroded. Their corrosion will testify against you and eat your flesh like fire. You have hoarded wealth in the last days. Look! The wages you failed to pay the workers who mowed your fields are crying out against you. The cries of the harvesters have reached the ears of the Lord Almighty. James 5:1-4
“Society has always been characterized by the gulf between the majority who are poor and the handful who are rich. The latter are the powerful ones. They set themselves up above the law. They make demands that are harmful to the interests of the poor. They insult poor people, drag them into court, and slander the noble name of the Lord. James does not call such people ‘brothers’ because they are not part of the family, even if they attend church. But God will judge them on that day when everyone will appear before the true judge to account for their behavior.
That day will be one of weeping and misery for the rich without God. The riches they relied on will evaporate – and will even be used as evidence against them. The wealth the rich have hoarded should have been used to pay fair wages to their employees. This injustice is yet another major addition to the catalogue of wrongs they have committed. But there is irony in the fact that those same rich people who dragged others before courts will themselves be judged in court by the Lord Almighty, or ‘the Lord of Hosts’ (that is, armies), who defends His people. The poor will be the ones to lay the charge, and the rich will be powerless before this judge, who cannot be manipulated or bribed.”
Solomon Andria (Madagascar) in “James” in Africa Bible Commentary, Tokunboh Adeyemo, General Editor (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2006).
Today marks my last full day of a long trip. I praise God for the way He has worked in the hearts of those I have had the privilege of serving from all across Africa over a week in Cameroon and a week in Uganda.
As I get to the final chapter of James and study it with Solomon Andria, an African commentator, two thoughts stood out to me today worth exploring more deeply. They relate to the powerless and the powerful.
When the rich handle God’s money rightly, they demonstrate justice and generosity using their power to serve the powerless. They do not aim to preserve their place of power. God sees and celebrates as they care for the poor who cry out (see Job 29:12).
When the rich follow worldly patterns, they participate in oppression and manipulation, and often use bribes or other favors to get or preserve and grow their power. Ironically, in the end, these people will be the powerless ones.
This brings into view the paradox of power related to generosity. Only those who give away their power keep it. And those who try to preserve their power lose it. In the last day with whom will you rank, the powerless or the powerful?
How you live, give, serve, and love will shape your eternal destiny! I see this more vividly when I spend two weeks in Africa. Lord have mercy and move the powerful to give away their power and entrust themselves to you through generous living. Amen.
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