The Perversion of Being Prejudiced
Introduction
Chapter 1 concluded with an appeal for us to practice pure religion. Chapter 2 presents two requirements of pure religion.
First, show no partiality. Cater to the poor and spiritually hungry rather than to the powerful. Live by the royal law and experience the law that gives freedom.
Second, produce obedient deeds, for true faith is obedient. Look to Abraham and Rahab for examples.
“He that prizeth the person of Christ prizeth all his relatives.”
Puritan scholar Thomas Manton
“He that prizeth the person of Christ prizeth all his relatives.”
Puritan scholar Thomas Manton
I. Prejudice is Un-Christlike (2:1)
II. Prejudice is Ugly (2:2-4)
II. Prejudice is Ugly (2:2-4)
III. Prejudice is Unreasonable (2:5-7)
III. Prejudice is Unreasonable (2:5-7)
IV. Prejudice is Unloving (2:8-9)
IV. Prejudice is Unloving (2:8-9)
V. Prejudice is Unlawful (2:10-11)
V. Prejudice is Unlawful (2:10-11)
The Jews tended to regard the law as a series of detached commands. To keep one of those commands was to gain credit. To break one was to incur debt. Therefore, a man could add up the ones he kept and subtract the ones he broke and, as it were, emerge with a moral credit or debit balance.
That philosophy, of course, is common to every works-righteousness system of religion. The idea is that acceptance or rejection by God depends essentially on the moral standing of the person himself. If he does more good than bad, he is accepted by God. If the scale tilts the other way, he is rejected.