“Therefore confess your sins to one another, and pray for one another, so that you may be healed. The prayer of the righteous is powerful and effective” (James 5:16).  We conclude our time with James this week with a powerful reminder of how much we need one another as Christians.  This has always been a hallmark of our United Methodist heritage.  John Wesley said that he knew of “no holiness but social holiness.”  In part that means that you and I can never develop into the people Christ calls us to be without the aid of our brothers and sisters in Christ.  Do you have people in your life for whom you pray every day?  Do you have people in your life with whom you can share all that you have done and are?  In our troubled times, perhaps this is what United Methodists as well as other Christians need more than anything else: brothers and sisters in Christ with whom we may trust our greatest joys and heartbreaks.  Do you have people like that in your life?  Is God calling you to be such a person for someone else?