Quote:
It does not affirm or deny whether God is the
author of sin – it does not address the topic at all, but its concerns are completely
different. It just tells you that God is not the tempter, which is altogether different from
saying that God is not the author of sin.
That is, if God directly causes you to sin, it does make him the "author" of sin (at least in
the sense that people usually use the expression), but the "sinner" or "wrongdoer" is still
you. Since sin is the transgression of divine law, for God to be a sinner or wrongdoer in
this case, he must decree a moral law that forbids himself to be the author of sin, and then
when he acts as the author of sin anyway, he becomes a sinner or wrongdoer.
But unless this happens, for God to be the author of sin does not make him a sinner or
wrongdoer. The terms "author," "sinner," "wrongdoer," and "tempter" are relatively
precise – at least precise enough to be distinguished from one another, and for God to be
the "author" of sin says nothing about whether he is also a "sinner," "wrongdoer," or a
"tempter." And for one not to be a wrongdoer by definition means that he has not done
wrong. Therefore, even if God is the author of sin, it does not automatically follow that
there is anything wrong with it, or that he is a wrongdoer.
However, this is not to distance God from evil, for to "author" the sin implies far more
control over the sinner and the sin than to merely tempt. Whereas the devil (or a person's
lust) may be the tempter, and the person might be the sinner, it is God who directly and
completely controls both the tempter and the sinner, and the relationship between them.
And although God is not himself the tempter, he deliberately and sovereignly sends evil
spirits to tempt (1 Kings 22:19–23) and to torment (1 Samuel 16:14–23, 18:10, 19:9). But
in all of this, God is righteous by definition.
The verse is telling you that when you deal with temptation, you must directly address
your lust, and not just blame God and then do nothing, or remain in your sin. Read all of
James 1 and see if this is not his obvious emphasis.
Link:
http://www.rmiweb.org/books/authorsin.pdf