Many of us fail to really appreciate the
remarkable-yet often misunderstood-epistle written by Jacob to the
descendants of Israel. (Jacob means the supplanter; heel-catcher;
tripper-up.1 It is Ya'kov
in Hebrew, translated Jacobos in Greek, Jacques in French, Iago
in Italian, Diego in Spanish, and James in English.)
Which James?
There were four James's in the New Testament: James, the son of
Zebedee; brother of John the beloved disciple. He was called to be a follower
early2 and became, with his
brother John and Peter, one of the insiders.3
(He was slain by Herod very soon after Pentecost.)
Another was James, the son of Alpheus, the brother of Judas (not
Iscariot). Another was James, the father of Judas (not Iscariot),4
identified as one of the twelve5
and is probably to be identified with Thaddaeus.6
However, the author of this epistle, we believe, was the brother of our
Lord. He was considered by the early church as a son of Mary and Joseph.7
(Jerome, Augustine, et al.) Although this James, along with Lord's other
brothers, was an unbeliever before the resurrection.8
(It is believed that there were only the two other James's at the cross. It is
interesting that apparantly encrypted within the Old Testament text of Isaiah
53-that pinnacle of Messianic prophecy-are "equidistant letter sequences" which
include 40 names of people that were at the cross. What is provocative is that
there are only two James's. Also, Judas is a conspicuous omission.)9
However, the resurrected Lord appeared to James.10
James then emerged as the prominent leader in the Jerusalem Church,11
and those going to the other churches founded by Paul are said to have come from
James12 (although he had
already disavowed having authorized them to use his name as an endorsement of
their legal teachings.13)
Contrary to Paul?
Some feel that this epistle appears contradictory to Paul's teaching,
but the ostensible differences are easy to understand. Paul focused on our
justification before God. James focuses on the believer's justification before
men.
Faith is not believing in spite of the evidence; Faith is obeying
in spite of the consequences.
James was intensely Jewish, as evidenced by his advice to Paul when he
came to Jerusalem bringing alms for his nation, and when he suggested
that Paul should be at charges for some brethren who were about to complete
their Nazarite-ship.14
The epistle evidences a closer connection with the Sermon on the Mount
than any other New Testament letter.15
It contains 60 imperatives in 108 verses; more than any other New Testament
book.
A conspiracy led by Annas the Younger, the son of the high priest
Annas, illegally arranged for the execution of James in 62 A.D.16
The execution of the popular James may have been a key event in the
circumstances that led up to the rebellion and its subsequent squelching by the
Romans in 66-70 A.D.
This epistle of James may have been written early, right after
Pentecost (Acts 2), perhaps after the scattering in Acts 8:1-3. If later, it may
have been written to correct a misunderstanding bordering on antinomianism on
the part of some who were pushing Paul's teaching to an extreme he never
intended.17
To Whom Written?
This epistle is addressed to the Twelve Tribes. Notice that ten
are not missing.18
These are the same of whom Paul speaks in his address before Agrippa.19
These are the same as addressed in 1 Peter.
The "True Gospel" of James?
James is strangely the focus of a number of related heresies and
attempts at historical revisionism. A frequently encountered proposal is that
Jesus led an entirely Jewish sect and that he was succeeded by his younger
brother James, the first Bishop of Jerusalem. It is claimed that the role of
James appeared as a threat by the Roman Catholic Church, controlling history and
removing information about this important figure. (In 1996, Pope John Paul II
issued a statement declaring that Jesus was Mary's only child, and therefore not
his brother after all.20)
This view puts Paul in opposition to James as a later intruder. These
heresies ascribe modern Christianity to the teachings of Paul, "in contrast" to
James, and prey upon the ignorant who fail to perceive the integrity of
the Word of God.
Eisenman21 and
others attempt to portray James as the central figure among the revolutionary
parties in Jerusalem from 40 A.D. to the early 60s, when James was killed by the
same pro-Roman priestly establishment that killed Jesus. Throughout his
lifetime, James, like Jesus, is presented as having preached a Law-oriented
apocalyptic nationalism that contrasted sharply with the teachings of Paul.
The Knights Templar
Christopher Knight and Robert Lomas have published several books which
even suggest that the Shroud of Turin is actually that of a crusader, Jacques de
Molay, the last Grand Master of the Knights Templar, who was crucified by the
Inquisition as a sardonic torture prior to his being burned at the stake in
1314.
They portray the "true story" of the original Jerusalem Church as Jesus
and his brother James struggling to establish the "kingdom of heaven" upon the
earth using Masonic-style rituals. They present the establishment of the
Christian Church as a political invention that had little connection to the man
we call Christ. The early Christians are said to have buried their most precious
scrolls beneath Herod's temple shortly before they and the city were destroyed
by the Romans in 70 A.D.
Their hidden teachings were thus driven underground. Following the
destruction of the Jerusalem Church and the slaughter of the Jewish nation in 70
A.D., a few surviving priests from the smoldering city of Jerusalem headed to
Europe to await the moment of return prophesied in the Gospel of John.
Precisely 1,000 years later their bloodline descendants reentered the
holy city to claim their ancient heritage and form a new order of priests of the
Temple: the mysterious Knights Templar. These warrior monks ostensibly conducted
a nine-year-long excavation of the ruins of Herod's Temple following the First
Crusade.
These records were then, it is claimed, clandestinely unearthed and
interpreted by the infamous Order of the Knights Templar, who adopted these
ancient teachings and the rituals as their own. There they recovered the lost
teachings (and, perhaps, extensive treasures) hidden below the tumbled ruins
(and may have devised elaborate Tarot cards with cryptic meanings to protect
their secret cult).
Their strange history ended nearly 200 years later, when they were
discovered and arrested. Philippe IV of France-Philippe le Bel-coveting their
wealth and power, on October 13, 1307 arranged their simultaneous seizure,
arrest, and confiscation of goods. Tried and tortured, their wealth eluded him.
Their treasure was secreted out in advance and never found. It remains a
mystery.
In March 1314 their last leader, Jacques de Molay, the last Grand
Master of the Knights Templar, it is suggested, was crucified in a bizarre
parody of the crucifixion of Jesus, and the image of his suffering slowly
materialized on the cloth that had once swathed him. Colorful embellishments on
thinly veiled error. Diabolic, indeed.
The Hazards of Pseudo-Scholarship
This kind of pseudo-scholastic revisionism can deal severe blows to the
faith of those who haven't the depth of background or a sound grounding in the
Holy Scripture. An awareness of the integration of the whole Bible is the best
defense to such attacks on the Word of God: 66 books penned by over 40 authors
over thousands of years that clearly evidence an integrity of supernatural
design.
There is a cosmic contest going on for your very soul. The god
of this pagan world continues to muster his resources of deceit and confusion.
"In so much that, if it were possible, they would deceive the very elect." The
recent rhetoric in the national news demonstrates just how intensely vicious and
malicious this spiritual warfare can be in the political arena, and your own
personal spiritual journey is no exception. Do your homework! Your personal
destiny needs to be anchored in the bedrock of Scripture.