Verse 1
James 1:1. James, a servant of
Jesus Christ — Whose name the
apostle mentions but once more
in the whole epistle, namely,
James 2:1, and not at all in his
whole discourse, Acts 15:14,
&c., or Acts 21:20-25. It might
have seemed, if he had mentioned
him often, that he did it out of
vanity, as being the brother, or
near kinsman, of the Lord; to
the twelve tribes — Of Israel;
that is, to those of them that
were converted to Christianity,
and with an evident reference,
in some parts of the epistle, to
that part of them which was not
converted; which are scattered
abroad — In various countries;
ten of the tribes were scattered
ever since the reign of Hoshea,
and a great part of the rest
were now dispersed through the
Roman empire, as was foretold
Deuteronomy 28:25; Deuteronomy
30:4. That the twelve tribes
were actually in existence when
James wrote his epistle, will
appear from the following facts.
1st, Notwithstanding Cyrus
allowed all the Jews in his
dominions to return to their own
land, many of them did not
return, but continued to live
among the Gentiles, as appears
from this, that in the days of
Ahasuerus, one of the successors
of Cyrus, who reigned from India
to Ethiopia, over one hundred
and twenty-seven provinces,
(Esther 3:8,) the Jews were
dispersed among the people in
all the provinces of his
kingdom, and their laws were
diverse from the laws of all
other people; so that, by
adhering to their own usages,
they kept themselves distinct
from all the nations among whom
they lived. 2d, Josephus
considered the twelve tribes as
being in existence when the Old
Testament Scriptures were
translated into Greek, (namely,
in the time of Ptolemy
Philadelphus, about two hundred
and fifty or two hundred and
sixty years before Christ,) as
he says that six persons were
sent out of every tribe to
assist in that work. 3d, On the
day of pentecost, as mentioned
Acts 2:5; Acts 2:9, there were
dwelling at Jerusalem devout men
out of every nation under
heaven, Parthians, Medes, &c: so
numerous were the Jews, and so
widely dispersed through all the
countries of the world. 4th,
When Paul travelled through Asia
and Europe, he found the Jews so
numerous, that in all the noted
cities of the Gentiles they had
synagogues, in which they were
assembled for the worship of
God, and were joined by
multitudes of proselytes from
among the heathens. 5th, The
same apostle, in his speech to
Agrippa, affirmed that the
twelve tribes were then
existing, and that they served
God day and night, in
expectation of the promise made
to the fathers, Acts 26:6. 6th,
Josephus (Antiq., 50. 14. c. 12)
tells us, that in his time one
region could not contain the
Jews, but they dwelt in most of
the flourishing cities of Asia
and Europe, in the islands and
continent, not much less in
number than the heathen
inhabitants. From all which it
is evident that the Jews of the
dispersion were more numerous
than even the Jews in Judea; and
that James very properly
inscribed his letter to the
twelve tribes which were in the
dispersion, seeing the twelve
tribes really existed then, and
do still exist, although not
distinguished by separate
habitations, as they were
anciently in their own land.
Greeting — That is, wishing you
all blessings, temporal,
spiritual, and eternal.
Verses 2-4
James 1:2-4. Count it all joy —
That is, matter of the greatest
joy; when ye fall into divers
temptations — πειρασμοις,
trials; for though rendered
temptations, it does not signify
here what is commonly meant by
temptations, for these we are
directed to pray against, but it
denotes trials by affliction and
persecution. To these God, by
whose providence they come,
exposes men, not to lead them
into sin, but to afford them an
opportunity of exercising and
improving their graces and
virtues. Hence our Lord declared
those to be blessed who were
persecuted for righteousness’
sake, Matthew 5:10; and exhorted
such, (Matthew 5:42,) to rejoice
and be exceeding glad;
sentiments which doubtless the
Apostle James had in his eye
when he spoke to the Jewish
Christians in this manner.
Knowing that the trying, or
proving, of your faith — By
persecution and affliction;
worketh patience — Exercises and
thereby increases your patience,
through the divine blessing, and
your resignation to God’s will,
from which many other virtues
will flow. But let patience have
her perfect work — Let it be
duly and fully exercised, that
it may rise to the highest
degree of perfection: 1st, By
composing your minds to a sweet
and humble frame under your
sufferings. 2d, By acknowledging
God’s hand in them, and blessing
him for them. 3d, By resisting
all inclinations to impatience,
fretfulness, and murmuring. 4th,
By quietly waiting for
deliverance, in the way God hath
appointed, till he shall see fit
to grant James 2:5 th, By
enduring to the end of the time
of your trial; that ye may be
perfect and entire — Adorned
with every Christian grace and
virtue; wanting nothing — No
kind or degree of grace which
God requires to be in you; but
may be complete in all the parts
of holiness.
Verses 5-7
James 1:5-7. If any of you — In
whole or in part; lack wisdom —
To understand whence and why
temptations come, and how they
are to be improved, or for any
other purpose. Wisdom, in the
common acceptation of the word,
denotes a sound practical
judgment concerning things to be
done or avoided: but here the
expression seems to mean wisdom
to know how to conduct ourselves
under afflictions, or how to
make a right use of them.
Patience is in every pious man
already; let him exercise this,
and ask for wisdom. The sum of
wisdom, how to conduct ourselves
in the trial of poverty, on the
one hand, and riches, on the
other, is described in the 9th
and 10th verses. The connection
between the second and following
verses of this chapter will be
easily discerned by him who
reads them while he is suffering
wrongfully. He will then readily
perceive why the apostle
mentions all these various
affections of the mind. Let him
ask of God — The eternal
fountain of wisdom, as well as
of grace; that giveth to all —
That ask aright; liberally —
Freely and richly; and
upbraideth not —
Either with their past
sinfulness or present
unworthiness. But let him ask in
faith — With a firm confidence
in the power, love, and
faithfulness of God. St. James
also both begins and ends with
faith, James 5:15; the
hinderances of which he removes
in the middle part of his
epistle; nothing wavering — Or
doubting, as διακρινομενος
frequently and properly
signifies; or not divided in his
mind, between the desires of
obtaining and the fears of not
obtaining the grace he asks; or
not questioning God’s
willingness to bestow it. For he
that wavereth — Or doubteth, and
therefore is divided in his
mind, as just observed, and who
does not firmly confide in the
goodness and faithfulness of
God, can have no other solid and
substantial support, but is like
a wave of the sea — Restless and
inconstant; driven with the wind
to and fro, and tossed about at
its mercy; is unsettled and
irresolute. Let not that man —
Who thus yields to diffidence
and distrust; think that he
shall receive any thing of the
Lord — While he continues in
such an unstable and wavering
state of mind, and dares not
rely on God for those supplies
of grace which he professes to
seek. Such unreasonable doubts
and suspicions, as they wrong
the divine goodness, so they
may, in many instances, prevent
the communication of those
favours which might otherwise be
obtained.
Verse 8
James 1:8. A double-minded man —
ανηρ διψυχος, a man who has, as
it were, two souls; whose heart
is divided between God and the
world, and is not simply given
up to him, nor entirely confides
in him for the direction, aid,
and support which he stands in
need of; is unstable in all his
ways — Being without the true
wisdom, he perpetually disagrees
both with himself and others;
and will be perpetually running
into inconsistencies of conduct,
while those imperfect
impressions of religion which he
feels will serve rather to
perplex and torment than to
guide and confirm him in the
right way.
Verses 9-11
James 1:9-11. Let the brother —
St. James does not give this
appellation to the rich; of low
degree — Poor and tempted, or
brought low by his sufferings
for Christ, and humbled in
spirit thereby; rejoice that he
is exalted — To be a child of
God, and an heir of eternal
glory; let him think of his
dignity as a Christian, and
entirely acquiesce in his low
station in life, which will
continue only for a short
season, and which God has wisely
appointed for his eternal good.
Or, let him rejoice that he is
thought worthy to be called to
suffer for Christ, Acts 5:41;
Philippians 1:29. But the rich —
Let the rich rejoice in that he
is made low — Is humbled by a
deep sense of his true
condition, and brought to have
low thoughts of all worldly
excellences, and to be prepared
for sufferings. The Greek is, εν
τη ταπεινωσει αυτου, in his
humiliation, as the word is
rendered Acts 8:33; where it is
used to express the humiliation
of Christ by his various
sufferings. And as it is here
opposed to υψει, exaltation, in
the preceding verse, it may
signify the humiliation of the
rich man, by his being stripped
of his riches and possessions,
of his liberty, and his being
made liable to lose his life on
account of the gospel. Here,
therefore, the apostle advises
the rich to glory when they lose
the uncertain riches of this
life, and are exposed to other
sufferings, for the sake of
truth and a good conscience,
with the favour and approbation
of God. For the sun, &c. —
Literally, For the sun arose
with a burning heat, and
withered the grass, and the
flower fell off, and the beauty
of its form perished. There is
an unspeakable beauty and
elegance, both in the comparison
itself and the very manner of
expressing it; intimating both
the certainly and the suddenness
of the event. So shall the rich
man fade away in his ways — In
the midst of his various
pleasures and enjoyments.
Verse 12
James 1:12. Blessed — ΄ακαριος,
happy, is the man that endureth
temptation — Trials of various
kinds, patiently and
perseveringly; for when he is
tried — δοκιμος γενομενος, being
approved on trial, he shall
receive the crown of eternal
life, which the Lord Christ hath
promised to them that love him —
And express their love by such
fidelity and zeal.
Verse 13
James 1:13. Let no man say, when
he is tempted — To commit sin,
in whatever way it may be; I am
tempted of God — God has laid
this temptation in my way; for
God cannot be tempted with evil
— It cannot appear desirable, or
otherwise than detestable, in
God’s eyes; nor can he be
inclined to it in any degree,
through any external object, or
any internal motion; neither
tempteth he any man — He does
not persuade or incline, much
less constrain any one to sin by
any means whatever. The word
πειραζειν, to tempt, as we have
seen, often signifies “to try,
in order to discover the
disposition of a person, or to
improve his virtue, James 1:12.
In this sense God is said to
have tempted or tried Abraham
and the Israelites. Not that he
was ignorant of the dispositions
of either of them. In the same
sense the Israelites are said to
have tempted or proved God. They
put his power and goodness to
the trial, by entertaining
doubts concerning them. Here, to
tempt, signifies to solicit one
to sin, and actually to seduce
him into sin, which is the
effect of temptation or
solicitation. See James 1:14. In
this sense the devil tempts men.
And because he is continually
employed in that malicious work,
he is called, by way of
eminence, ο πειραζων, the
tempter. It is in this sense we
are to understand the saying in
the end of the verse, that God
is incapable of being tempted,
that is, seduced to sin by evil
things, and that he seduces no
one to sin. God having nothing
either to hope or fear, no evil
beings, whether man or angel,
can either entice or seduce him.
Further, his infinitely perfect
nature admitting no evil thought
or inclination, he is absolutely
( απειραστος) incapable of being
tempted.” — Macknight.
Verse 14-15
James 1:14-15. But every man is
tempted when — In the beginning
of the temptation; he is drawn
away of his own lust — Greek,
υπο της ιδιας επιθυμιας
εξελκομενος; literally, he is
drawn out of God, his strong
refuge, by his own desire;
excited by some external object
presenting itself; and enticed —
δελεαζομενος, caught with a
bait. It is generally supposed
that the allusion here is to the
drawing of fish out of a river
with a baited hook: a metaphor
used by Plato, as quoted by
Cicero, (De Senect., cap. 13,)
“Divine enim Plato, escam
malorum appellat voluptatem;
quod ea videlicet homines
capiantur ut hamo pisces.” Plato
divinely calls pleasure a bait
of evil things; namely, because
by it men are taken as fishes by
a hook. With regard to most
temptations that draw men into
sin, the case seems to be thus:
1st, An outward object presents
itself, which appears to be
desirable, either on account of
the profit or pleasure it seems
calculated to afford; 2d,
Through an inordinate love of
ease, honour, wealth, or
pleasure, a desire of that
object arises in a man’s corrupt
heart; 3d, That desire is
yielded to, instead of being
resisted, and thereby he is
drawn from that line of duty in
which he before walked, and from
that state of union and
communion with God which he
enjoyed, and is entangled in the
guilt and misery of sin. We are
therefore to look for the causes
of every sin chiefly in
ourselves; in our appetites,
passions, and corrupt
inclinations. Even the
injections of the devil cannot
hurt us, till we make them our
own, by entertaining and
yielding to them. Then, when
lust, desire, hath conceived —
By obtaining the consent of our
will, that is, when it is
yielded to; it bringeth forth
actual sin — By a speedy birth,
where, perhaps, the full
indulgence of the desire was not
at first intended. It does not
follow from this, that the
desire itself is not sin. He
that begets a man is himself a
man; and sin, when it is
finished — Actually committed;
bringeth forth death — Tends, in
its consequences, to the final
ruin of both soul and body, as
naturally as the conception of
an animal does to its birth.
Indeed, sin is born big with
death. Thus St. James
“represents men’s lust as a
harlot, which entices their
understanding and will into its
impure embraces, and from that
conjunction conceives sin. And
sin, being brought forth and
nourished by frequent
repetitions, in its turn begets
death, which destroys the
sinner. This is the true
genealogy of sin and death. Lust
is the mother of sin, and sin
the mother of death; and the
sinner the parent of both. James
1:18, the apostle gives the
genealogy of righteousness. All
the righteous deeds which men
perform, and the holy designs
and desires, intentions and
affections, which are found in
them, proceed from their renewed
nature; and their nature is
renewed by the power of truth
and grace; and God is the prime
mover in the whole.” —
Macknight.
Verse 16-17
James 1:16-17. Do not err, &c. —
By supposing that God is the
author of sin, or that any thing
which is sinful in the heart or
conduct of man can, with truth,
be ascribed to him: as well
might darkness and coldness be
attributed to the sun. It is
indeed a grievous error to
ascribe the evil, and not the
good, which we receive, to God.
No evil, but every good gift —
Of every kind: whatever is
beautiful, excellent, and good
in any creature in the universe;
all the members and senses of
our bodies, and all our temporal
blessings; and every perfect
gift — Every gift of truth and
grace, whatever tends to
holiness and happiness here or
hereafter; is from above — From
heaven, not from earth, much
less from hell; and cometh down
from the Father of lights —
Whether material or spiritual,
in the kingdom of grace and
glory; the author of all truth,
knowledge, wisdom, holiness, and
happiness. The appellation of
Father is here used with
peculiar propriety. It follows
in the next verse, he begat us.
With whom is no variableness —
In his understanding; or shadow
of turning — In his will; but he
is immutably wise and good, holy
and happy. He infallibly
discerns all good and evil, and
invariably loves the one and
hates the other. There is in
both the Greek words here used a
metaphor taken from the heavenly
bodies, particularly proper,
where the Father of lights is
mentioned; both words are
applicable to any celestial body
which has a daily vicissitude of
day and night, and sometimes
longer days, sometimes longer
nights. In God is nothing of
this kind. He is mere light. If
there be any such vicissitude in
us, it is from ourselves, not
from him. “Will he give us holy
desires at one time, and evil
inclinations at another? No: he
always gives us what is good,
and nothing but good. It is
blasphemous, therefore, as well
as absurd, to suppose that God
either tempts or constrains men
to sin, on purpose that he may
have a pretence for making them
miserable. Some are of opinion
that in the word παραλλαγη,
translated variableness, there
is an allusion to the parallaxes
of the heavenly bodies. But as
these were not known to the
common people, the apostle, in a
letter addressed to them, would
hardly introduce a reference to
such things.” — Macknight.
Verse 18
James 1:18. Of his own will —
Without any necessity on his
part, or merit on ours; from a
will most loving, most free,
most pure, just opposite to our
evil desire, James 1:15; begat
he us — He converted,
regenerated us, who believe; by
the word of truth — The true
word, emphatically so termed,
the gospel; that we should be a
kind of first-fruits of his
creatures — The most excellent
of his visible creatures, and
consecrated to, and set apart
for him in an especial manner.
The first-fruits being the best
of their kind, by calling the
regenerated the first-fruits of
God’s creatures, the apostle has
shown how acceptable such are to
God, and how excellent in
themselves through the
renovation of their nature; and
as the first-fruits, being
offered to God, were supposed to
sanctify the rest of the
harvest, true Christians, who
are in a peculiar manner
dedicated to God, in some
respects may be said to sanctify
the rest. The apostle says, a
kind of first-fruits, for Christ
alone is absolutely the
first-fruits.
Verse 19-20
James 1:19-20. Wherefore — As if
he had said, Since you are
regenerated, and that by the
word of God, therefore let every
man be swift to hear — That
word; let him be willing and
desirous to receive instruction
from it, and therefore diligent
in embracing all opportunities
of hearing it; slow to speak —
To deliver his opinion in
matters of faith, that he does
not yet well understand. Persons
half instructed frequently have
a high opinion of their own
knowledge in religious matters,
are very fond of teaching
others, and zealous to bring
them over to their opinions.
That the converted Jews were
fond of being teachers, we learn
from James 3:1; 1 Timothy 1:7.
Slow to wrath — Against those
that differ from him.
Intemperate religious zeal is
often accompanied by a train of
bad passions, and particularly
with anger against those who
differ from us in opinion. The
Jews, even the Jewish Christians
to whom this letter was chiefly
written, were very faulty in
this respect. The apostle,
however, may be understood as
cautioning his readers against
easily yielding to provocation
in any respect whatever, and
especially when injuriously
treated by their persecutors.
For the wrath of man — Even when
it appears in the garb of
religious zeal, worketh not —
But, on the contrary, greatly
obstructs, the righteousness of
God — Instead of promoting the
cause of true religion in the
world, it is a reproach to it,
and a means of exciting the
prejudices of mankind against
it. Persecution, in particular,
the effect of the wrath of man,
if violent, may make men
hypocrites, by forcing them to
profess what they do not
believe; but it has no influence
to produce that genuine faith
which God accounts to men for
righteousness. Nothing but
rational arguments, with the
illumination of the Spirit of
God, can do this.
Verse 21
James 1:21. Wherefore — Because
wrath is such a hinderance to
true religion, and you are
regenerated; lay apart — As you
would a dirty garment; all
filthiness — Every kind of sin
which is of a defiling nature.
The word ρυπαρια, here used,
signifies filthiness adhering to
the body. When, as here, applied
to the mind, it denotes those
lusts and appetites, and other
sins which defile the soul,
particularly those which are
gratified by gluttony,
drunkenness, and uncleanness;
vices to which many Jews,
pretending to be teachers, were
addicted; and superfluity of
naughtiness — κακιας,
maliciousness, or wickedness of
any sort; for however specious
and necessary it may appear to
worldly wisdom, it is vile,
hateful, contemptible, and
really superfluous: every
reasonable end may be
effectually answered without any
kind or degree of it. Lay this,
every known sin, aside by the
grace of God, or all your
hearing is vain; and receive —
Into your ears, your heart, your
life; with meekness — Constant
evenness and serenity of mind,
or with an humble, submissive
frame of spirit; the ingrafted
word — The word of the gospel,
ingrafted in penitent, believing
souls by regeneration, (James
1:18,) and by habit, (Hebrews
5:14,) through the influence of
God’s Spirit attending the
ministry of your teachers, 1
Corinthians 3:5-6. Which is able
to save your souls — As a means
appointed by God for that end,
and when received by faith,
Hebrews 4:2.
Verse 22
James 1:22. But be ye doers of
the word — See on Matthew 7:21;
Matthew 7:24. We are then doers
of the word, when, being
enlightened by its doctrines,
awed by its threatenings, and
encouraged by its promises, we,
through the aid of divine grace,
love and obey its precepts, both
those which enjoin repentance
toward God and faith in our Lord
Jesus Christ, as terms necessary
to be complied with in order to
our justification and
regeneration, and those
subsequent commands which show
how those, who are already
justified and born from above,
ought to walk that they may
please God, and save their
souls; and not hearers only —
Not contenting yourselves with
mere hearing, or even with
understanding and believing what
you hear, without reducing it to
practice; deceiving your own
selves — As if it was sufficient
to know your Master’s will
without doing it. Some suppose
that in these words the apostle
refers primarily to the Jews,
whose doctrine it was, 1st, That
to be Abraham’s seed was
sufficient to obtain for them
God’s favour, and secure them
against his judgments; 2d, That
circumcision procured them
acceptance with God; 3d, That
all Israelites had a portion in
the world to come; and
especially, 4th, That to be
employed in hearing and studying
the law was of itself
sufficient. But it seems more
likely that he gives this
caution with a reference to
those Gnostics and other
Antinomians that were creeping
fast into the church; and were
hearers only, not even
considering the word they heard,
and therefore not understanding
it; and especially not
experiencing its power to
regenerate and save them from
the guilt and power of their
sins, and restore them to the
divine image. The words,
παραλογιζομενοι εαυτους,
rendered, deceiving your own
selves, properly signify,
imposing upon yourselves by
sophistical reasonings; an
expression here used with great
propriety, and very applicable
to all those professors of
Christianity who abuse the
doctrines of grace to Antinomian
purposes, and make void the
moral law through a pretence of
faith.
Verse 23-24
James 1:23-24. If any be a
hearer of the word merely, and
not a doer — If he do not comply
with its design, do not so
consider and believe it as to
lay it to heart, and be
influenced by its doctrines,
obey its precepts, embrace and
rely on its promises, revere and
stand in awe of its
threatenings, guarding against
what would expose him to them;
he is like a man beholding —
From custom or by accident; his
natural face in a glass —
Without any intention to
discover, and wash or wipe off,
the spots that may be on it. For
he beholdeth himself — Without
taking particular notice of what
renders his visage disagreeable;
and goeth his way — To other
business; and straightway
forgetteth what manner of man he
was — What renders his
countenance uncomely, and
requires to be removed. Here the
word of God is represented as a
mirror, in which, if a man will
look with attention and care, he
will see the face of his soul,
and discover in what state he
is, and what character he bears
in the sight of God. It will
manifest to him those principles
and practices, those thoughts
and imaginations, those
affections, intentions,
dispositions, words, and
actions, which are contrary to
truth and grace, to wisdom,
piety, and virtue. But
frequently those who discover
all this through the word heard
or read, go away, and so occupy
themselves in secular affairs,
as immediately to forget what
manner of persons they were, and
continue the same in their
temper and conduct as before.
Reader, is this thy case?
Verse 25
James 1:25. But whoso looketh —
Not with a transient glance,
but, as παρακυψας signifies,
bending down, as it were, with
an intention to fix his eyes
upon, examine with accuracy, and
search all things to the bottom.
The expression implies much
thought and meditation, joined
with self- examination: into the
perfect law — Namely, that of
the gospel, termed a law, as
being a rule of faith and
practice, obligatory upon all to
whom it is made known,
acquitting or condemning men,
(for by it they will be judged
at the last day,) and
determining our state for ever:
called a perfect law, 1st,
Because it is clear, concise,
full, having no deficiency, and
yet containing nothing
superfluous. 2d, Because of its
superiority to the law of Moses,
which made no man perfect,
either in respect of
justification or sanctification,
Hebrews 7:10; whereas the gospel
is calculated to make men
perfect in both respects. And
the apostle terms it the law of
liberty, 1st, In opposition to
the ceremonial law, which was a
yoke of bondage the Jews could
not bear, and from which it
freed all that received it;
Christ’s yoke being easy, his
burden light, and his
commandments not grievous. 2d,
Because it delivers all true
believers from the guilt of past
sin, from the curse of the law,
and from the wrath of God. 3d,
Because it rescues them from the
power of sin and Satan, of the
world and the flesh, and from
the slavery of their lusts and
passions, restoring the dominion
of reason and conscience in
their minds, which is true
liberty. 4th, Because it saves
those, on whom it has its
designed influence, from all
slavish fear of God, all
tormenting fear of death and
hell, and the whole spirit of
bondage. Observe, reader, he who
receives the gospel in faith,
love, and new obedience, is
free; he that does not is not
free, but a slave to sin, and a
criminal before God. And
continueth therein — Perseveres
in the study, consideration, and
belief of it, and in obedience
to it; see John 8:31; being not
a forgetful hearer — Like the
person above described; but a
doer of the work — Of the duty
which the gospel requires; this
man — There is a peculiar force
in this repetition of the word;
shall be blessed — ΄ακαριος,
happy; in his deed — Not only in
hearing, but especially in doing
the will of God.
Verse 26-27
James 1:26-27. If &c. — Here the
apostle shows more particularly
who are the doers of the word;
1st, Negatively, in this verse:
2d, Positively, in the next
verse. If any man among you —
Who are professors of
Christianity; seem to be
religious — θρησκος, pious,
devout, or a worshipper of God:
and if his conduct in other
respects be irreprehensible, and
he be exact in all the outward
offices of religion, yet if he
bridleth not his tongue — From
tale-bearing, backbiting,
evil-speaking, slandering; or
from vain, foolish, ostentatious
talking and jesting; or rash,
bitter, passionate, malicious,
revengeful expressions: this man
only deceiveth his own heart —
If he fancy he has any true
religion at all; for his
religion is vain — Is a mere
empty profession, and neither is
nor will be of any service to
him. Pure religion — The word
θρησκεια, here used, properly
signifies worship, which branch
of religion is put for the
whole. In the epithets here
given to it, pure and undefiled,
Archbishop Tillotson thinks
there is an allusion to the
excellence of a precious stone,
which consists much in its being
καθαρα και αμιαντος, clear, and
without flaw, or cloud. And
surely, says Doddridge, no gem
is so precious or ornamental as
the lovely temper here
described. Here then the apostle
describes the religion which
Isaiah , 1 st, True and genuine,
in opposition to that which is
false and mistaken: 2d, Sincere
and solid, in opposition to that
which is feigned and pretended:
3d, Pure and holy, in opposition
to that which is mixed with the
inventions and superstitions of
men, and defiled by erroneous
principles and vicious
practices. But what is this
religion? In what does it
consist? The apostle informs us:
it consists not in speculations
or notions, however just and
orthodox. Not in forms or modes
of worship, however Scriptural
and necessary to be observed.
Not in the warmth of affection,
or ardour of zeal, &c., during
worship. But, in consequence of
repentance toward God, and faith
in our Lord Jesus Christ, of
justification by faith, and
regeneration by the influence of
the Divine Spirit, it consists
in the possession and exercise
of that love to God and all
mankind, which is the source of
the various branches of
practical religion, of mercy as
well as justice toward men, and
of holiness toward God. True
religion before God — Before his
penetrating eyes; even the
Father — Whose intelligent and
immortal offspring we all are;
is this, to visit — With
counsel, comfort, and relief;
the fatherless and widows —
Those who need it most; in their
affliction — In their most
helpless and hopeless state; and
to keep himself unspotted from
the world — From the maxims,
tempers, habits, and customs of
it. But this cannot be done till
we have given our hearts to God,
and love our neighbour as
ourselves. That this is true or
pure religion, or the proper
effect and evidence thereof, the
reader will not question, if he
recollects, 1st, That religion
consists principally in faith
working by love to God and man,
Galatians 5:6; 1 Timothy 1:5; 1
Corinthians 13:1, &c.; John 4:8.
2d, That the most eminent and
important fruit of faith, and of
the love of our neighbour, is
not saying, Be thou warmed,
(James 2:14; 1 John 4:17,) but
visiting, comforting, and
relieving the needy and
distressed. 3d, That the most
important fruit of faith in, and
love to, God, is purity of
intention and affection, or the
being dead to, and unspotted by,
the world. |