The Book of James: Part 6 - Redemption Has Receipts

Receipts prove something happened. They are not the purchase, but they prove the purchase was made. And James says real faith works the same way. In James Part 6, Pastor Ezra takes on one of the most misunderstood passages in the New Testament: faith and works. James is not saying works save you. He is not saying you earn your way to God or hustle hard enough for heaven. He is saying that if salvation really happened, there should be evidence. There should be fruit. There should be receipts. The big idea is clear: we are not saved by receipts, but saved people have receipts. James presses the question underneath the whole message: if someone watched your life this week, what would they think you believe? Not just your church attendance, but your calendar, conversations, generosity, compassion, obedience, private habits, willingness to serve, and willingness to share Jesus. Pastor Ezra shows that real faith is demonstrated, not debated. It does not just agree with truth. It obeys. Even demons believe true things about God, but belief without surrender is not living faith. Then James points to Abraham and Rahab, two very different people with very different stories, to show the same truth: living faith moves. Abraham shows faith that obeys. Rahab shows faith that risks. Your past does not disqualify you from a future of faith, and your next step does not require full understanding. It requires surrendered obedience. This message is not about condemnation. It is an invitation to stop asking, What is the minimum? and start asking, Jesus, what is my next yes?