1My friends, are you really trying to combine faith in Jesus Christ, our glorified Lord, with the worship of rank? 2Suppose a visitor should enter your synagogue, with gold rings and in grand clothes, and suppose a poor man should come in also, in shabby clothes, 3and you are deferential to the visitor who is wearing grand clothes, and say — “There is a good seat for you here,” but to the poor man — “You must stand; or sit down there by my footstool,” 4Is not that to make distinctions among yourselves, and show yourselves prejudiced judges? 5Listen, my dear friends. Has not God chosen those who are poor in the things of this world to be rich through their faith, and to possess the kingdom which he has promised to those who love him? 6But you — you insult the poor man! Is not it the rich who oppress you? Is not it they who drag you into law courts? 7Is not it they who malign that honorable name which has been bestowed on you? 8Yet, if you keep the royal law which runs — ‘You must love your neighbor as you love yourself,’ you are doing right; 9but, if you worship rank, you commit a sin, and stand convicted by that same law of being offenders against it. 10For a person who has laid the law, as a whole, to heart, but has failed in one particular, is accountable for breaking all its provisions. 11He who said ‘You must not commit adultery’ also said ‘You must not murder.’ If, then, you commit murder but not adultery, you are still an offender against the law. 12Therefore, speak and act as people who are to be judged by the ‘law of freedom.’ 13For there will be justice without mercy for the person who has not acted mercifully. Mercy triumphs over Justice. 14 My friends, what is the good of a person’s saying that they have faith, if they do not prove it by actions? Can such faith save them? 15Suppose some brother or sister should be in need of clothes and of daily bread, 16and one of you were to say to them — “Go, and peace be with you; find warmth and food for yourselves,” and yet you were not to give them the necessaries of life, what good would it be to them? 17In just the same way faith, if not followed by actions, is, by itself, a lifeless thing. 18Some one, indeed, may say — “You are a man of faith, and I am a man of action.” “Then show me your faith,” I reply, “apart from any actions, and I will show you my faith by my actions.” 19It is a part of your faith, is it not, that there is one God? Good; yet even the demons have that faith, and tremble at the thought. 20Now do you really want to understand, fool, how it is that faith without actions leads to nothing? 21Look at our ancestor, Abraham. Was not it the result of his actions that he was pronounced righteous after he had offered his son, Isaac, on the altar? 22You see how, in his case, faith and actions went together; that his faith was perfected as the result of his actions; 23and that in this way the words of scripture came true — “Abraham believed God, and that was regarded by God as righteousness,” and “He was called the friend of God.” 24You see, then, that it is as the result of their actions that a person is pronounced righteous, and not of their faith only. 25Was not it the same with the prostitute, Rahab? Was not it as the result of her actions that she was pronounced righteous, after she had welcomed the messengers and helped them escape by? 26Exactly as a body is dead without a spirit, so faith is dead without actions.