Intro
It’s a sad fluke of history when we forget prominent men who shaped their 
times.  It’s even sadder when the Church has succumbed to this failing.  But 
that such a fate should fall on a first-rank figure of the Apostolic Church is 
even more worthy of lamentation.  

James, the stepbrother of Jesus, was not an apostle.  Yet, he became the first 
pastor and bishop of our mother Church in Jerusalem.  People knew James as 
someone who lived an especially holy life, who prayed and interceded for 
others.  He presided over the first Church council.  He wrote the book of 
James.  And in 62 AD, he was martyred for the faith.  

Who was this man?  Who is--not John, Peter, or Paul--but James called the Just, 
of Jerusalem?  Who was this man, whom Galatians called, “James, the brother of 
the Lord”?  And how sad it is that we have all but forgotten such a man. 

Main Body
The New Testament gives us several glimpses of James.  Taken together, they 
help us to understand who He was.  After Jesus arose from the dead, He first 
showed Himself to James and then to the Apostles (1 Corinthians 15:7).  As the 
Church began to grow in Jerusalem, James became the leading figure of the 
Jerusalem Church.  

When an angel had freed Peter from prison, he asked to report his escape “to 
James and the brothers.”  Several years later, in 49 AD, at the Council of 
Jerusalem, James led the Church with an unwavering hand to decide how to treat 
and live with the new Gentile converts.  James said, “It is my judgment…,” and 
then he went on to describe how to live and love the Gentiles in mostly an 
ethnically Jewish Church (Acts 15:13-21).  

Yet, James did more than stand up and urge the Church not to trouble the 
Gentile Christians.  He also reminded them that Gentiles were also grafted into 
a Vine that has been here since Abraham and Moses, and even before.  By doing 
so, James made sure the Church was faithful to the past, to the truths that 
endure into eternity, yet applied them in their current context. 

Years later, when the Apostle Paul visited Jerusalem, he went to see “James, 
and all the elders [that is, pastors, who] were present” (Acts 21:18).  When 
Paul spoke of an earlier visit to Jerusalem, he spoke of how “James, Peter, and 
John” had given him the “right hand of fellowship.”  From the way that Paul 
ordered his list of names, he shows that he gave precedence to James.  Indeed, 
the New Testament connects James with the Jerusalem Church more than any other 
person. 

So, that’s the James of Jerusalem, James the Just, who was the first bishop of 
the first New Testament Church.  Yet, what may seem even stranger is that James 
didn’t believe Jesus was the Messiah for much of his life.  I suppose James was 
too close to Jesus, his younger stepbrother (by Church tradition [Epiphanius]), 
having seen much of Him throughout the years with family.  

Indeed, it is as Jesus says: “A prophet is not without honor except in his 
hometown and in his household” (Matthew 13:57).  And so as James saw Jesus grow 
up, he probably saw Him as strange and eccentric.  James would never see Jesus 
do anything wrong--but what was His obsession with always confronting people 
about their sins?  

James knew Jesus’ miracles were for real.  And, from what we know, James never 
accused Jesus of being a charlatan.  James could not deny Jesus’ miracles; yet, 
he still didn’t have faith in Him.  How can he, Jesus is His stepbrother?  
Jesus can’t be all that.  Jesus can’t be the Messiah.  And so James gave Jesus 
no respect.  After all, He was just his stepbrother. 

That was the Jesus James knew until Jesus arose from the grave.  After that, 
then James knew that what Jesus had spoken of for many years was true.  Jesus 
said, “Destroy this temple, and I will raise it up in three days” (John 2:19).  
Jesus was referring to Himself.  Yes, it seemed crazy, but the resurrection 
proved it all.  Jesus arose from the dead on the third day.  Jesus is the 
Messiah and savior prophesied from of old!

What James experienced is also true for us.  We are not neutral when it comes 
to Jesus.  We also are disinclined to believe what we think is but a ridiculous 
story.  But like James, God has pierced you with His truths to change a heart 
to believe in the One who is Himself Truth--Jesus Christ!

What is it about the Christian faith and Jesus against which your sinful flesh 
keeps rebelling?  Could it be that you would be more comfortable with a Lord 
who keeps Himself cozy in heaven?  Is that a more spiritual Savior to you?  
Yet, Jesus refuses to give up His humanity: His flesh, His bones, and His 
blood.  In human frailty and weakness, only a real, flesh-and-blood Jesus can 
speak your forgiveness and salvation from the Cross.  How downright physical 
Jesus is--and not simply spiritual! 

Yes, Jesus baffles us, as He baffled James, His older stepbrother.  In John 
chapter 6, Jesus said that unless someone ate His flesh and drank His blood, he 
would have no life.  The people there thought Jesus was losing it.  

But then Jesus makes sure that no one misunderstands Him.  He changes words, so 
no one would be in doubt.  In the Greek, Jesus changed from generic eating to 
physical chewing.  Unless someone chews my flesh and drinks my blood, he will 
not live in me and I in him.  It was then the crowd of several thousand left 
Jesus.  They all thought He had gone insane.  

Yes, even today, Jesus, your flesh-and-blood brother, still confronts you.  He 
tells you to eat His flesh and drink His blood.  Will you be like the crowds 
2,000 years ago?  Will you be like most churches in America?  Will you also 
reject this crazy, insane-sounding truth from Jesus?  Or will you walk by faith 
and believe what Jesus tells you, even if your fallen mind remains baffled and 
perplexed? 

What is it about the Christian faith and Jesus against which you sinful flesh 
keeps rebelling?  Is it that you would prefer to see some real proof, some 
evidence, of God’s generous giving?  Would you prefer to have a God who rewards 
you here for being His disciple?  After all, the cross is all right for Jesus.  
He had to endure that to save me.  But honestly, I’d rather have my cake and 
eat it too.  I’d prefer to be a rich and comfortable here, and then receive my 
crown of glory in eternity.  But no, Jesus urges you to rejoice in your 
suffering and exalt in your lowliness.  

Jesus, our God, is a man.  He died.  He did not become a man to suit Himself, 
but His Father.  He became a man to die for those who hated, betrayed, and 
rejected Him.  He became a man to save even His stepbrother, James, who, at 
first, refused to believe in Him.  

Our Lord showed Himself to James after He rose from the dead.  Jesus forgave 
him.  And James believed.  From that work of God, James continued to grow in 
the faith.  He wrote an epistle, where he spurned false faith, where someone 
could boast of his faith, but then live a life that denied the faith.  

James said, if you have faith, praise be to God!  But don’t spend your time 
boasting about your faith.  Listen to the Gospel.  You are washed in the 
cleansing blood of Christ.  You are absolved in the Name of Christ.  You have 
fellowship--communion--in Christ, eating His body and blood once given into 
death for you and now, fed to you in bread and wine.  That’s the faith that 
saves you.  Being sure of that, then forget about yourself and serve your 
neighbor in love. 

James urged love for the Gentile converts, even while he struggled with living 
that out.  He preached and taught a love consistent with the Faith delivered to 
the saints.  God does not save you, and keep saving you, in some theoretical, 
abstract world.  God grafts you in, just as James taught at the Jerusalem 
council, with all the saints who came before us.  That’s why we have saint 
days, in which we remember the lives of saints, our true family, our brothers 
and sisters in Christ.  

That’s the life of a Christian.  That’s the life of a forgiven sinner, of 
living by faith--and the works produced by such faith--even for the first 
bishop of the mother Church in Jerusalem.  We live the life of faith rooted in 
Christ’s forgiveness because sin still infects us all.  But the grace and 
forgiveness of Jesus Christ permeates not just the Church, but also each 
Christian, even you. 

Conclusion
Jesus did not turn His back on Nazareth, even when they turned their backs on 
Him.  And so St. James of Jerusalem was also saved.  James found forgiveness 
and grace from his brother, Jesus, whom he had rejected until He rose from the 
grave.  

Because of Jesus, we are also honored to call Christ “Brother,” and to call His 
Father, “our Father.”  For by faith, enlivened and made real in us through Word 
and Sacrament, we are all sons of the Father and brothers of our Lord.   We are 
all forgiven.  Amen. 


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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