Brother, not quite — faith isn’t made real by performance; it’s revealed as real by endurance.
Just as fire doesn’t create gold but proves its purity, trials don’t create saving faith — they expose whether faith is genuine. Peter’s analogy makes this clear:
“The trial of your faith… though it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and honour and glory.” (1 Peter 1:7)
The fire didn’t make the gold gold — it showed what was already there.
Faith is “the gift of God” (Ephesians 2:8), rooted in Christ’s finished work, not in our performance. Yet living faith naturally shows itself in trust and obedience, even under pressure — whereas empty profession collapses when tested (Matthew 13:20-21).
So the point isn’t that faith becomes real through trials, but that trials reveal what kind of faith we already have — living or lifeless.
Grace and peace, brother — may our faith be proven genuine, not by our strength, but by the steadfast grace of the One who sustains it.
And those who fail were never truly saved then correct according to this line of reasoning?
I am just wondering why if James was concerned about an empty profession of faith amongst the Jews to whom he was writing, who he considered to be brothers in Christ, why he did not take the time to share the Good News with them.
I am thinking an empty profession of faith was not in view at all.