NT Text: James 2:19
OT Source(s):
Source: Richard Bauckham, Jesus and the God of Israel (Eerdmans, 2008); Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Reference Type: Direct Quotation
Connection Method(s): Contrast
Anchor Text: Deut 6:4-5 — The Shema
Significance: James quotes the Shema's confession verbatim — "You believe that God is one (εἷς ἐστιν ὁ θεός)" — and turns it to a startling polemical use. Of all NT writers James is the most Jewish, and he assumes his readers' daily recitation of the creed; orthodox monotheism is precisely what he grants them. But he immediately deflates any complacency: "Good for you! Even the demons believe that — and shudder." The Shema, the most fundamental article of faith, when held as bare assent without works, accomplishes nothing that demons cannot match (indeed, the demons' response is more honest — they tremble). James thereby contrasts true Shema-faith with counterfeit: the confession "the LORD is one" was never meant as a doctrine to be checked off but as the ground of loving God with all the heart (Deut 6:5, the verse the Shema joins to the confession). Faith that recites v. 4 but never lives v. 5 is dead. The telos: orthodoxy about the one God is not the goal but the gateway — the Shema is fulfilled not in correct belief that leaves the affections untouched but in a faith that works through love, treasuring the one God so genuinely that the life is reshaped. Demons know the truth and hate it; the redeemed know it and love it.