What You Say and What You Do – James 5:12-10

At the end of the book of James we find some timely advice on what we say and what we do in relation to our brothers and sisters in Christ as well as on what we say and do in prayer.

Verse 12 speaks to our integrity in what we say. We shouldn’t have to swear to something or take an oath to support what we say or to prove that our word is good. Our word should stand on its own. Our word should be as good as gold. Our yes should be yes and our no should be no.

In prayer we should submit to God. James has already told us why we don’t get what we pray for in James 4:3. But it goes deeper. Praying for healing is something the church must do. Prayer offered in faith will bring healing. The prayer of faith offered up by the righteous is powerful – as powerful as that of Elijah the prophet.

Finally, in loving our fellow believers, we must be mindful of those who are struggling in their faith. As we read in Galatians 6 we who spiritual are to assist those who have wandered from the faith, remembering that next time it might be us who will be in need of assistance.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, November 19, 2023. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is The Making of Authentic Faith. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at: gc2press.org/the-making-of-authentic-faith-james-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

Website – FromTheBackPorch.org

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Email – fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com

Judgment of Affluence – James 5:1-6


Judgment of Affluence – James 5:1-6

According to 1 Timothy 6:10 the love of money is the root of all evil. James addresses that issue in the first six verses of chapter 5 . He comes down really hard, like Old Testament hard, like Old Testament prophet hard, like Haggai chapter 11 hard, on those who have money and use it to fatten their own coffers. with vivid imagery James paints a picture of wealth and how it can dissolve and of how it can burn your very soul.

In speaking these words of judgment to the rich he is also sharing a message to those have nots who would be listening. There is the obvious warning about the harmful effects of seeking worldly gain, but there is also a warning to watch out for those people.  Furthermore, as we will see next week, we need to keep wealth in perspective. 

For us as Americans there is a message concerning our wealth and affluence. We like our creature comforts like air conditioning, soft beds, comfortable and yet stylish clothes, and good food. In short, all of the things that make physical life pleasurable are things that we seek out. There is nothing wrong with having money. There is nothing wrong with spending money on things we need. However, there is something wrong when we spend money without considering what God wants us to do with our money.

In light of this passage we must all take a hard look at how we handle the abundance of what God has given us. May we always seek to honor Him with our finances.


This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, November 5, 2023. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is The Making of Authentic Faith. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at:
http://gc2press.org/the-making-of-authentic-faith-james…/ .
Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .
Website – FromTheBackPorch.org
Twitter – From the Back Porch @ nationalfast
Facebook – From the Back Porch in Texas
Email – fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com

Changing Your Pronouns – James 4:1-12

There’s a great deal of talk about pronouns these days. The pronoun problem begins with the pronoun “me.” We have become such a self-centered people that our national anthem should be changed to “I Wanna Talk About Me.” James speaks to this problem in the first few verses of the 4th Chapter.

It affects our overall attitudes, our relationships, our work, our health, and our lives in general. It even affects our prayer life. James says that we don’t get what we ask God for because we ask with selfish motives. Only in humility can we know the peace of God that comes from letting go of the control of our lives. Even when James tells us to resist the devil and he will flee from us it is to be done in a spirit of humility.

Finally, he concludes this section with some straight talk about judging others. He tells us not to talk trash about our fellow Christians. When we do this we are saying that God – the One Who established the law and right and wrong – may have missed missed something and that He needs us to step in and point out what he hasn’t. Then we’re on thin ice because we have moved from a position of obeying God to thinking we can handle God’s job. Definitely this is not a good place to be.

God gives grace generously. As the Scriptures say, “God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.” (James 4:6)

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, October 8, 2023. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is The Making of Authentic Faith. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at:

gc2press.org/the-making-of-authentic-faith-james-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

Website – FromTheBackPorch.org

Twitter – From the Back Porch @ nationalfast

Facebook – From the Back Porch in Texas

Email – fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com

Wisdom that Leads to Peace – James 3:13-18

The 3rd Chapter of James begins with a warning to Bible teachers to not take this responsibility lightly. James goes on from there to talk about the tongue – to talk about talk – to talk about what we say. And while he is still talking to teachers he opens up the discussion to speak about speech in a general way to all believers.

Finally, the chapter comes to a close with a review of wisdom which is a must for teachers and all Christians. The line is drawn between earthly wisdom and heavenly wisdom and that line is peppered by examples of behavior that will exemplify each type of wisdom. Jealousy, selfish ambition, boasting, lying, disorder, and vile practices are found in the life of the person who is guided by earthly wisdom. On the other hand, gentleness, reasonableness, mercy, good deeds, impartiality, and sincerity will be the marks of a life guided by heavenly wisdom.

Earthly Wisdom – There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death. (Proverbs 14:12)

Heavenly Wisdom – Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths. (Proverbs 3:5-6)

The conclusion of the 3rd Chapter points out that God’s wisdom is first of all pure and it is also peace loving. Those who are peacemakers – those who are wise and understand God’s ways – will plant seeds of peace and reap a harvest of righteousness.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, October 1, 2023. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is The Making of Authentic Faith. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at:

gc2press.org/the-making-of-authentic-faith-james-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

Website – FromTheBackPorch.org

Twitter – From the Back Porch @ nationalfast

Facebook – From the Back Porch in Texas

Email – fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com

The Taming of the Shrewd Tongue – James 3:1-13

Words have power. Whoever first said, “Sticks and stones can break my bones, but words will never hurt me,” did not consider the horribly destructive force our words can unleash. The tongue is so small and yet so big in it’s potential for harm . . . and for good.

James describes this concept using words with powerful imagery. Comparing the tongue to a bit in a horse’s mouth, a rudder on a ship, and a spark that ignites a forest fire, he makes it very clear that the tongue is something that must be controlled.

However, he then gives us one of the most frightening statements in the Bible. This tongue – this beast – cannot be controlled by humans. But Praise God, it can be controlled by God’s Spirit within us. The mouth is only saying what overflows from the heart and God is in the heart transplant business. In fact, He gives us a DNA transplant – in Him we are new creations. (2 Cor. 5:7)

But the regeneration of the heart is not the end but rather the beginning of the process of sanctification that continues throughout the remainder of our lives here on this earth. We must continually be transformed through the renewing of our minds. (Rom. 12:1-2)

Only then can our tongues be tamed. Only then can our speech reflect the Godliness that we want to see revealed in our lives. Only then can we know that what we say will “give grace to those who hear.” (Eph. 4:29)

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, September 24, 2023. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is The Making of Authentic Faith. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at:

gc2press.org/the-making-of-authentic-faith-james-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

Website – FromTheBackPorch.org

Twitter – From the Back Porch @ nationalfast

Facebook – From the Back Porch in Texas

Email – fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com

Playing Favorites in the Church

Playing Favorites – James 2:1-13

Playing favorites is a human trait that affects every area of our lives. We make judgments about people on a daily basis. Those that we perceive to be favorable to our lives we approve of and those we perceive to be unfavorable we push aside or ignore. When we choose a plumber to work at our house we practice a process of discrimination in order to choose the plumber we favor. However, James decries this practice in the church saying that we make such judgments on our own “evil thoughts.” (James 2:4) “Ism’s” such as racism, ageism, sexism, ableism, antisemitism, sizeism, elitism, tokenism, and religionism have no place in the church. All are equal at the foot of the cross.

And all are equal at the foot of the cross no matter their social or economic status. “God has chosen those who are poor in the world to be rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom?” (James 2:5) “Ism’s” have no place in our treatment of people in the church and money (or lack thereof) is no measure of a person’s status in the church.

Rather that practicing favoritism we must practice the “Royal Law” that James describes as loving your neighbor as yourself. (James 2:8; also see Mark 12:29-31) The Royal Law includes loving others and showing grace and mercy to others in the name of Christ. Your loving and giving mercy and grace to others – especially those who you may not like, those who are different from you, those who have nothing to give you – is a measure of your love for and your relationship with your heavenly Father.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, September 10, 2023. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is The Making of Authentic Faith. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at:

gc2press.org/the-making-of-authentic-faith-james-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

Website – FromTheBackPorch.org

Twitter – From the Back Porch @ nationalfast

Facebook – From the Back Porch in Texas

Email – fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com

Just Do It! – James 1:19-27 – Part 3

Be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to anger. (James 1:19) Excellent advice, but difficult at times to put into practice. And quite often we are quick to anger because we have been slow to listen and quick to speak. When we do so we think we doing the right thing – correcting a wrong, bringing justice. Unfortunately, such anger, birthed of our human desires, cannot accomplish what God desires. 

Our focus must always be on God and our actions must reflect His presence in our daily lives. There is a difference between Biblical awareness and Biblical action. We can know what God wants us to do, but not do it. James says, “Just Do It.” Actually, he says, “Be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves.” (James 1:22) That’s right – just do it.

The word “religion” carries with it many connotations – some good, some bad, and some in between. In James 1:26-27 we see an indication of what “good religion” is. It is not an all-inclusive checklist of how to be a “good” Christian, but it is rather one of several New Testament check-up lists which give us an indication of how we are honoring God with our lives. James gives us 3 items in particular that we need to examine in our own lives: 1. Control your tongue; 2. Care for those with no voice or personal power; & 3. Live pure lives unstained by the world.

3 Easy Steps – Ha!! The fact is that this is only the beginning of the check-up list(s) that God gives us in His Word. We are not saved by doing the things God asks us to do, but we want to do them because we’re saved. And God doesn’t want us to be saved and then never grow so He is constantly challenging us with ways to glorify His name. We continually find ourselves being doers or the Word and not hearers only.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, September 3, 2023. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is The Making of Authentic Faith. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at:

gc2press.org/the-making-of-authentic-faith-james-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

Website – FromTheBackPorch.org

Twitter – From the Back Porch @ nationalfast

Facebook – From the Back Porch in Texas

Email – fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com

Just Do It – James 1:19-27 – Part 2

Be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to anger. (James 1:19) Excellent advice, but difficult at times to put into practice. And quite often we are quick to anger because we have been slow to listen and quick to speak. When we do so we think we doing the right thing – correcting a wrong, bringing justice. Unfortunately, such anger, birthed of our human desires, cannot accomplish what God desires. 

Our focus must always be on God and our actions must reflect His presence in our daily lives. There is a difference between Biblical awareness and Biblical action. We can know what God wants us to do, but not do it. James says, “Just Do It.” Actually, he says, “Be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves.” (James 1:22) That’s right – just do it.

Today’s Bible Study was cut short because we had some class business to discuss. Next week we will finish the 1st Chapter of James by looking at verses 26-27.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, August 27, 2023. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is The Making of Authentic Faith. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at:

gc2press.org/the-making-of-authentic-faith-james-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

Website – FromTheBackPorch.org

Twitter – From the Back Porch @ nationalfast

Facebook – From the Back Porch in Texas

Email – fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com

Overcoming Temptation


Overcoming Temptation – James 1:13-18

We know what is right and we know what is wrong. We want to do what is right but we are constantly tempted to do what is wrong. Paul describes this dilemma in Romans 7 and it is all too familiar a struggle in our daily lives. James begins his letter by emphasizing our response to the trials we face. In verse 13 James pivots to explore the nature of temptation.

God tests us, but He does not tempt us. We need to have a clear concept of how we are tempted so that we don’t fall into the traps set by Satan and so that we don’t lightly pass over our sin as just part of the human experience. Satan may set the trap, but we are too easily fooled because we fail to see how he is using our own desires to bait the trap.

On the other hand, God – the Creator of all that is and the One Who created us as His prized possession – offers us truth and light to counteract Satan’s darkness and lies. And so we pray as Jesus taught His disciples to pray, “Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.”


This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, August 13, 2023. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is The Making of Authentic Faith. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at: gc2press.org/the-making-of-authentic-faith-james-study-guide/ . Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com .
Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

Website – FromTheBackPorch.org
Twitter – From the Back Porch @ nationalfast
Facebook – From the Back Porch in Texas
Email – fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com

Learning to Endure Pain – James 1:1-12

Pain management is big business around the world. In America we spend hundreds of billions of dollars each year on pain management. The book of James addresses the issue of pain, but the pain he focuses on is found in the trials and tribulations of life – the stuff that settles deep in the dark corners of the human psyche and, at times, immobilizes us with fear, dread, discomfort, and anxiety.

Right from the start he gives us a perspective of trials that seem counter-intuitive and counter-cultural at the same time. Be happy about it! He goes on to explain that only by seeing our lives with the wisdom of God can we hope to be joyful in our present condition and thereby endure the pain of living in this fallen world.

We must learn to run the race of life fixing our eyes on Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith, Who, for the joy set before Him, endured the pain of the world even to the point of dying on the cross. We spend our lives avoiding pain, but our Example – Jesus – joyfully chose pain because He knew the outcome of His pain. May we see with the eyes and wisdom of Christ in every situation that brings the specter of pain into our world. And may we respond joyfully, counting ourselves worthy to suffer pain in His name.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, August 6, 2023. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is The Making of Authentic Faith. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at: gc2press.org/the-making-of-authentic-faith-james-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

Website – FromTheBackPorch.org

Twitter – From the Back Porch @ nationalfast

Facebook – From the Back Porch in Texas

Email – fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com