Verse 1
James 4:1. The crimes condemned
in this and the following
chapter were so atrocious, and
of so public a nature, that we
can hardly suppose them to have
been committed by any who bore
the name of Christians.
Wherefore, as this letter was
directed to the twelve tribes,
(James 1:1,) it is reasonable to
think that the apostle, in
writing these chapters, had the
unbelieving Jews, not only in
the provinces, but in Judea,
chiefly in his eye. From whence
come wars and fightings among
you — Some time before the
breaking out of the war with the
Romans, which ended in the
destruction of Jerusalem and of
the Jewish commonwealth, the
Jews, as Josephus informs us, on
pretence of defending their
religion, and of procuring to
themselves that freedom from
foreign dominion, and that
liberty which they thought
themselves entitled to as the
people of God, made various
insurrections in Judea against
the Romans, which occasioned
much bloodshed and misery to
their nation. The factions,
likewise, into which the more
zealous Jews were now split, had
violent contentions among
themselves, in which they killed
one another, and plundered one
another’s goods. In the
provinces likewise the Jews were
become very turbulent;
particularly in Alexandria,
Egypt, Syria, and many other
places, where they made war
against the heathen, and killed
numbers of them, and were
themselves massacred by them in
their turn. This being the state
of the Jews in Judea, and in the
provinces, about the time the
Apostle James wrote his epistle
to the twelve tribes, it can
hardly be doubted that the wars,
fightings, and murders, of which
he here speaks, were those above
described. For as he composed
his letters after the confusions
were begun, and as the crimes
committed in these confusions,
although acted under the colour
of zeal for God and for truth,
were a scandal to any religion,
it certainly became him, who was
one of the chief apostles of the
circumcision, to condemn such
insurrections, and to rebuke,
with the greatest sharpness, the
Jews who were the prime movers
in them. Accordingly, this is
what he hath done. And both in
this and in the following
chapter, using the rhetorical
figure called apostrophe, he
addresses the Jews as if they
were present, whereby he hath
given his discourse great
strength and vivacity. See
Macknight. Come they not hence,
even of your lusts — Greek,
ηδονων, pleasures; that is, your
greedy desire after the
pleasures and enjoyments of the
world; that war — Against your
souls; or raise tumults, as it
were, and rebel both against
reason and religion; in your
members — In your wills and
affections. Here is the first
seat of war. Hence proceeds the
war of man with man, king with
king, nation with nation; the
ambition of kings and nations to
extend their territories; their
love of grandeur and riches;
their resentments of supposed
injuries; all the effect of
lust, or of earthly, sensual,
and devilish desires, engage
them in wars.
Verse 2-3
James 4:2-3. Ye lust —
επιθυμειτε, ye covet, or eagerly
desire; and have not — What you
desire; you are, some way or
other, hindered from attaining
that of which you are so greedy;
ye kill — In your heart; for he
that hateth his brother is a
murderer. Or he speaks of the
actual murders which the carnal
Jews, called zealots, committed
of the heathen, and even those
of their own nation who opposed
them. Accordingly, he says, ye
kill, και ζηλουτε, and are
zealous, thereby showing,
evidently, that the persons to
whom he spake were zealots. Ye
fight and war, yet ye have not —
What ye so eagerly desire;
because ye ask not — And no
marvel; for a man full of evil
desire, of malice, envy, hatred,
cannot pray. Since, as appears
by this, the persons to whom the
apostle is speaking failed of
their purpose, because they did
not pray to God, it shows, says
Macknight, “that some of their
purposes, at least, were
laudable, and might have been
accomplished with the blessing
of God. Now this will not apply
to the Judaizing teachers in the
church, who strongly desired to
subject the converted Gentiles
to the law of Moses. As little
will it apply to those who
coveted riches. The apostle’s
declaration agrees only to such
of the unconverted Jews as
endeavoured to bring the heathen
to the knowledge and worship of
the true God. So far their
attempt was commendable,
because, by converting the
Gentiles to Judaism, they
prepared them for receiving the
gospel; and if for this they had
asked the blessing of God
sincerely, they might have been
successful in their purpose.” Ye
ask, &c. — But if ye do ask, ye
receive not, because ye ask
amiss — κακως αιτεισθε, ye ask
wickedly, from sinful motives.
Some understand this of the Jews
praying for the goods of this
life: “But though,” says
Macknight, “such a prayer had
been allowable, the apostle
scarcely would have spoken of it
here, as it had no connection
with his subject. His meaning,
in my opinion, is, that they
prayed for success in converting
the heathen, not from any regard
to the glory of God and the
salvation of the heathen, but
from a desire to draw money from
them whom they converted, to
spend on their own lusts.”
Verse 4
James 4:4. Ye adulterers and
adulteresses — Who have broken
your faith with God, your
rightful spouse. Thus many
understand these expressions,
because God himself represented
his relation to the Jews as his
people under the idea of a
marriage, and because the
prophets, in conformity to that
idea, represented the idolatry
of the Jews as adultery. But
inasmuch as gross idolatry was a
sin from which the Jews had long
been entirely free, and whereas
to adultery, and other sins of
the flesh, they were exceedingly
addicted, it seems more probable
that these appellations are to
be understood literally. Know ye
not that the friendship of the
world — The desire of the flesh,
the desire of the eye, and the
pride of life, yielded to, to
gain the favour of carnal and
worldly men; or a conformity to
such in their sinful courses, in
order to gain their friendship;
is enmity with God — Is an
evident proof thereof? see
Matthew 6:24; Matthew 12:30.
Whosoever therefore will be a
friend of the world — Makes it
his business to comply with and
gratify worldly men, thereby
constitutes himself an enemy of
God — And takes part with his
adversaries.
Verse 5
James 4:5. Do ye think that the
Scripture saith in vain —
Without good ground, or that it
speaks falsely. St. James seems
to refer to many, not to one
particular passage of Scripture.
The spirit that dwelleth in us
lusteth to envy — That is, as
many understand the words, our
natural corruption, excited and
influenced by Satan, strongly
inclines us to unkind and
envious dispositions toward our
fellow-creatures. Some, however,
suppose that the Spirit of God
is intended by the apostle in
this clause, and that the sense
is, The Spirit of love, that
dwelleth in all believers,
lusteth against envy, (Galatians
5:17,) is directly opposite to
all those unloving tempers which
necessarily flow from the
friendship of the world. Nearly
to the same purpose is
Doddridge’s paraphrase of the
verse: “Do you think the
Scripture speaks in vain in all
the passages in which it guards
us against such a temper as
this, and leads the mind
directly to God as the supreme
good, teaching us to abandon
every thing for him? Or does the
Holy Spirit, that dwells in us
Christians, lust to envy? Does
it encourage these worldly
affections, this strife and
envying which we have reproved?
Or can it be imagined that we,
who appear to have so much of
the Spirit, have any interested
views in the cautions we give,
and would persuade you from the
pursuit of the world, because we
should envy you the enjoyment of
it?
No.”
Verses 6-10
James 4:6-10. But he — God,
giveth more grace — To all those
who, while they shun those
tempers, sincerely and earnestly
pray for it. Wherefore he saith,
[see the margins] God, resisteth
the proud — The unhumbled; those
that think highly of themselves,
and put confidence in their own
wisdom, power, or holiness, and
who seek the praise of men
rather than the praise of God;
against these God sets himself
in battle array, as it is
expressed, Proverbs 3:24. He
rejects them, and will not allow
them access to, or communion
with himself. He thwarts their
undertakings, and renders their
schemes abortive. But giveth
grace unto the humble — Unto
those that are humbled under a
sense of their ignorance and
weakness, their guilt and
depravity, and therefore have no
confidence in any thing they are
or have. Submit yourselves — Or
be subject, as υποταγητε
signifies, therefore to God —
Pursue your lusts no longer, but
yield an humble obedience to God
in all things. Resist — With
faith and steadfastness; the
devil — The father of pride and
envy; and he will flee from you
— And your progress in religion
will become greater, and your
victory over your spiritual
enemies more easy and evident
day by day. Draw nigh to God —
In faith and prayer; and he will
draw nigh unto you — By his
grace and blessing; which that
nothing may hinder, cleanse your
hands — From doing evil; and
purify your hearts — From all
spiritual idolatry, from all
vile affections and corrupt
inclinations, from the love of
the world in all its branches;
be no more double-minded —
Vainly endeavouring to serve
both God and mammon. Be
afflicted — On account of your
past sins, especially your
ingratitude to God, your abuse
of his blessings, and
unfaithfulness to his grace; and
mourn and weep — For the
miseries to which you have
exposed yourselves. Let your
laughter be turned into mourning
— Because of the heavy judgments
that hang over you; humble
yourselves in the sight and
presence of the Lord, and he
shall lift you up — Comfort you
with a sense of his pardoning
mercy.
Verse 11-12
James 4:11-12. Speak not evil
one of another — See on Titus
3:2. Evil- speaking is a grand
hinderance of peace and comfort;
yea, and of holiness. O who is
sufficiently aware of the evil
of that sin? He that speaketh
evil of his brother — Of his
fellow-Christian or
fellow-creature; and judgeth his
brother — For such things as the
word of God allows, or does not
condemn, does, in effect, speak
evil of the law — Both of Moses
and of Christ, which forbids
that kind of speaking; and
judgeth the law — Condemns it,
as if it were an imperfect rule.
In doing which, thou art not a
doer of the law — Dost not yield
due obedience to it; but a judge
of it — Settest thyself above
it, and showest, if thou wert
able, thou wouldest abrogate it.
There is one lawgiver — By whose
judgment and final sentence thou
must stand or fall hereafter;
for he is able to execute the
sentence he denounces, and save
with a perfect and everlasting
salvation, and to destroy with
an utter and endless
destruction; who art thou — A
poor, weak, dying worm; that
judgest another — And thereby
assumest the prerogative of
Christ?
Verses 13-15
James 4:13-15. Go to now — αγε
νυν, come now, an interjection,
calculated to excite attention;
ye that say, To-day or to-morrow
we will go, &c. — As if future
events were in your own power,
and your health and lives were
ensured to you for a certain
time; whereas ye know not what
shall be on the morrow — Whether
your spirits before then shall
not have passed into eternity;
for what is your life? It is
even a vapour — An
unsubstantial, uncertain, and
fleeting vapour; that appeareth
for a little time — In this
visible world; and then suddenly
vanisheth away — And is seen
here no more. Thus Isaiah, All
flesh is grass, and all the
goodliness thereof as a flower
of the field; a similitude used
also by David, Psalms 103:15-16,
As for man, his days are as
grass, as a flower of the field
so he flourisheth; for the wind
passeth over it and it is gone,
and the place thereof shall know
it no more. And still more
striking is the metaphor used by
Asaph, Psalms 78:39, where he
terms men, even a generation of
them, A wind that passeth away
and cometh not again. But in no
author, sacred or profane, is
there a finer image of the
brevity and uncertainty of human
life than this given by St.
James, who likens it to a
vapour, which, after continuing
and engaging men’s attention for
a few moments, unexpectedly
disappears while they are
looking at it. For that ye
ought, &c. — That is, whereas ye
ought to say — In consideration
of this your great frailty; If
the Lord will, we shall live and
do this or that —
Intimating, even by your manner
of speaking, the sense that you
have of his being able, at
pleasure, to cut you short in
all your schemes and
appointments. The apostle does
not mean that these very words
should always be used by us,
when we speak of our purposes
respecting futurity; but that,
on such occasions, the sentiment
which these words express should
always be present to our minds.
Verse 16-17
James 4:16-17. Now ye rejoice —
καυχασθε, ye glory, in your
boastings — Ye please yourselves
in the vain thoughts which you
entertain of these worldly
projects and successes, and you
boast of them. All such
rejoicing — Or glorying, is evil
— The delight you take in these
expectations argues either a
strange want of consideration,
or gross stupidity. Therefore to
him that knoweth to do good, and
doeth it not — That knows what
is right and is his duty, and
does not practise it; to him it
is sin — His knowledge does not
prevent but increase his
condemnation. As if he had said,
Since you cannot but know
better, as you have the oracles
of God, and profess to believe
them, if you do not act
answerably thereto, you are
guilty of the greater sin.
“Because this is true with
respect to all who act contrary
to knowledge and conscience.
Beza and Estius consider it as a
general conclusion, enforcing
the whole of the reproofs given
to the Jews for acting contrary
to the divine revelation, of
which they were the keepers.” —
Macknight. |