James 5:19-20 My brothers, if one of you should wander from the truth and someone should bring him back, 20 remember this: Whoever turns a sinner from the error of his way will save him from death and cover over a multitude of sins.
It's one of the worst feelings that a parent can have: one of your children is missing. I recall a terrifying 20 minutes not long after our family had moved into the parsonage when suddenly we couldn't find one of my sons anywhere. We scoured the house and garage. We ran through church and opened every classroom and closet, shouting his name. Nothing. We were seconds from calling the police when he came walking out of a neighbor's house, safe and sound. Now some might say that our behavior was an overreaction, but experts say the first 48 hours are critical because a missing person can be in serious danger. Moreover, this wasn't just ANY missing person, it was OUR SON. When a family member is unaccounted for the level of concern gets kicked up a notch.
James closes his letter with a note of spiritual concern. He gives a hypothetical but realistic scenario: someone among the family of believers has "gone missing" and wandered off, but in this case what they have strayed from is not the playground or their backyard but the truth. Here "the truth" certainly includes the truth of salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ. If this truth is obscured, denied, or lost, so is eternal life. "The truth" could also include other clear teachings of Scripture, which Jesus calls the Father's Word of Truth (John 17:17).
Straying from the truth is a serious matter, one that is best and most easily addressed in the beginning when initial doubts and questions arise. Sometimes people deceive themselves; they get it into their heads that they are smart enough or good enough or strong enough, and they don't need God anymore. Other times false teachers lure souls down the path of error. In any case, any deviation from God's truth puts souls in spiritual danger as it opens us up to the devil's lies and temptations. All wandering begins with a single footstep, but if left uncorrected, we can find ourselves so far distanced from the Lord and his Word that we can't find our way home again and our faith dies lost in unbelief or sin.
Something else that's true about missing persons is that there are few things that will unite and galvanize a community more than searching for someone who is lost. The news media, law enforcement, bloodhounds, and helicopters are allocated to the case. Throngs of volunteers form human chains to comb through miles of muck looking for any trace of the individual. As I said before, if someone in our immediate family was lost, we'd have no hesitation about doing whatever it takes to find them and bring them back home. Christians and Christian congregations need to ask themselves if they have the same commitment and concern for their fellow-Christians? If someone in our church family suddenly changes their worship habits or goes down a dark self-destructive path, do we deliberately, compassionately, and gently intervene, or do we just wait on the sidelines, imagining they'll find their own way back in time? Most congregations, like ours, have elder boards or shepherding committees that are tasked with reaching out to the wandering, but this is not only the duty of the spiritual shepherds. Every Christian shares the responsibility of caring for their brother and sister in faith. God give us the compassion and the courage to reach out to our family and friends, who have wandered from the truth, just as we would want someone to search for us if we were lost. We go out with the goal of saving souls, turning them back to the forgiveness of sins and retrieving them with the Word so we can continue rejoice and walk together in the truth.
Questions / Personal Reflection:
1.) Consider the times in your life when you wandered from the Lord and his way. Who did the Lord use to bring you back? How did they reach out to you? If you haven't ever done so, thank that person for being God's instrument of bringing you back to his fold.
2.) In his grace God has sent concerned brothers and sisters in faith to bring you back and keep you close to him. Identify the fellow-Christians in your own circle of family and friends, who need your concern, encouragement, and gentle redirection. While such conversations may be awkward at first, you can never go wrong by leading with, "I love you and I'm concerned about you because..." Who knows where the Spirit may lead the conversation from there!
Prayer: Lord Jesus, Good Shepherd of the Sheep, thank you for sending pastors, teachers, family, and friends, who loved me enough to reach out to me and warn me when I was wondering from you. Give me and all your people the grace and the courage to do the same so that we may be a forgiven family gathered around your truth and devoted to one another. Amen.