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THE GENERAL EPISTLE OF
JAMES
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
CHAPTER 4
@Jas
4:1-17. AGAINST
FIGHTINGS AND
THEIR SOURCE;
WORLDLY LUSTS;
UNCHARITABLE
JUDGMENTS, AND
PRESUMPTUOUS
RECKONING ON THE
FUTURE.
1. whence--The cause of
quarrels is often sought in external circumstances,
whereas internal lusts are the true origin.
wars, &c.--contrasted with the "peace" of
heavenly wisdom. "Fightings" are the active carrying on of
"wars." The best authorities have a second "whence" before
"fightings." Tumults marked the era before the destruction
of Jerusalem when James wrote. He indirectly alludes to
these. The members are the first seat of war; thence it
passes to conflict between man and man, nation and nation.
come they not, &c.--an appeal to their
consciences.
lusts--literally, "pleasures," that is, the
lusts which prompt you to "desire" (see on Jas 4:2)
pleasures; whence you seek self at the cost of your
neighbor, and hence flow "fightings."
that war--"campaign, as an army of soldiers
encamped within" [ALFORD]
the soul; tumultuously war against the interests of your
fellow men, while lusting to advance self. But while
warring thus against others they (without his knowledge)
war against the soul of the man himself, and against the
Spirit; therefore they must be "mortified" by the
Christian.
2. Ye lust--A different
Greek word from that in @Jas
4:1. "Ye desire"; literally, "ye set your mind
(or heart) on" an object.
have not--The lust of desire does not ensure
the actual possession. Hence "ye kill" (not as Margin,
without any old authority, "envy") to ensure possession.
Not probably in the case of professing Christians of that
day in a literal sense, but "kill and envy" (as the
Greek for "desire to have" should be translated), that
is, harass and oppress through envy [DRUSIUS].
Compare @Zec
11:5, "slay"; through envy, hate, and desire to
get out of your way, and so are "murderers" in God's eyes
[ESTIUS]. If
literal murder [ALFORD]
were meant, I do not think it would occur so early in the
series; nor had Christians then as yet reached so open
criminality. In the Spirit's application of the passage to
all ages, literal killing is included, flowing from
the desire to possess so David and Ahab. There is a
climax: "Ye desire," the individual lust for an object;
"ye kill and envy," the feeling and action of individuals
against individuals; "ye fight and war," the action of
many against many.
ye have not, because ye ask not--God promises
to those who pray, not to those who fight. The petition of
the lustful, murderous, and contentious is not recognized
by God as prayer. If ye prayed, there would be no
"wars and fightings." Thus this last clause is an answer
to the question, @Jas
4:1, "Whence come wars and fightings?"
3. Some of them are
supposed to say in objection, But we do "ask" (pray);
compare @Jas
4:2. James replies, It is not enough to ask for good
things, but we must ask with a good spirit and intention.
"Ye ask amiss, that ye may consume it (your object
of prayer) upon (literally, 'in') your lusts (literally,
'pleasures')"; not that ye may have the things you need
for the service of God. Contrast @Jas
1:5 with @Mt
6:31,32. If ye prayed aright, all your pro. per wants
would be supplied; the improper cravings which produce
"wars and fightings" would then cease. Even believers'
prayers are often best answered when their desires are
most opposed.
4. The oldest manuscripts
omit "adulterers and," and read simply, "Ye adulteresses."
God is the rightful husband; the men of the world are
regarded collectively as one adulteress, and
individually as adulteresses.
the world--in so far as the men of it and
their motives and acts are aliens to God, for example, its
selfish "lusts" (@Jas
4:3), and covetous and ambitious "wars and fightings"
(@Jas
4:1).
enmity--not merely "inimical"; a state of
enmity, and that enmity itself. Compare @1Jo
2:15, "love . . . the world . . . the love of the
Father."
whosoever . . . will be--The Greek is
emphatic, "shall be resolved to be." Whether he
succeed or not, if his wish be to be the friend of
the world, he renders himself, becomes (so the
Greek for "is") by the very fact, "the enemy of God."
Contrast "Abraham the friend of God."
5. in vain--No word of
Scripture can be so. The quotation here, as in @Eph
5:14, seems to be not so much from a particular
passage as one gathered by James under inspiration from
the general tenor of such passages in both the Old and New
Testaments, as @Nu
14:29 Pr 21:20 Ga 5:17.
spirit that dwelleth in us--Other manuscripts
read, "that God hath made to dwell in us" (namely, at
Pentecost). If so translated, "Does the (Holy) Spirit that
God hath placed in us lust to (towards) envy" (namely, as
ye do in your worldly "wars and fightings")? Certainly
not; ye are therefore walking in the flesh, not in the
Spirit, while ye thus lust towards, that is,
with envy against one another. The friendship of the
world tends to breed envy; the Spirit produces very
different fruit. ALFORD
attributes the epithet "with envy," in the unwarrantable
sense of jealously, to the Holy Spirit: "The Spirit
jealously desires us for His own." In English
Version the sense is, "the (natural) spirit that hath
its dwelling in us lusts with (literally, 'to,' or
'towards') envy." Ye lust, and because ye have not what ye
lust after (@Jas
4:1,2), ye envy your neighbor who has, and so the
spirit of envy leads you on to "fight." James also
here refers to @Jas
3:14,16.
6. But--"Nay, rather."
he--God.
giveth more grace--ever increasing grace; the
farther ye depart from "envy" [BENGEL].
he saith--The same God who causes His spirit
to dwell in believers (@Jas
4:5), by the Spirit also speaks in Scripture. The
quotation here is probably from @Pr
3:34; as probably @Pr
21:10 was generally referred to in @Jas
4:5. In Hebrew it is "scorneth the scorners,"
namely, those who think "Scripture speaketh in vain."
resisteth--literally, "setteth Himself in
array against"; even as they, like Pharaoh, set themselves
against Him. God repays sinners in their own coin. "Pride"
is the mother of "envy" (@Jas
4:5); it is peculiarly satanic, for by it Satan fell.
the proud--The Greek means in
derivation one who shows himself above his fellows,
and so lifts himself against God.
the humble--the unenvious, uncovetous, and
unambitious as to the world. Contrast @Jas
4:4.
7. Submit to . . . God--so
ye shall be among "the humble," @Jas
4:6; also @Jas
4:10 1Pe 5:6.
Resist . . . devil--Under his banner pride
and envy are enlisted in the world; resist his
temptations to these. Faith, humble prayers, and heavenly
wisdom, are the weapons of resistance. The language is
taken from warfare. "Submit" as a good soldier puts
himself in complete subjection to his captain. "Resist,"
stand bravely against.
he will flee--Translate, "he shall
flee." For it is a promise of God, not a mere assurance
from man to man [ALFORD].
He shall flee worsted as he did from Christ.
8. Draw nigh to God--So
"cleave unto Him," @De
30:20, namely, by prayerfully (@Jas
4:2,3) "resisting Satan," who would oppose our access
to God.
he will draw nigh--propitious.
Cleanse . . . hands--the outward instruments
of action. None but the clean-handed can ascend into the
hill of the Lord (justified through Christ, who alone was
perfectly so, and as such "ascended" thither).
purify . . . hearts--literally "make chaste"
of your spiritual adultery (@Jas
4:4, that is, worldliness) "your hearts": the inward
source of all impurity.
double-minded--divided between God and the
world. The "double-minded" is at fault in heart;
the sinner in his hands likewise.
9. Be afflicted--literally,
"Endure misery," that is, mourn over your wretchedness
through sin. Repent with deep sorrow instead of
your present laughter. A blessed mourning. Contrast
@Isa
22:12,13 Lu 6:25. James does not add here, as in @Jas
5:1, "howl," where he foretells the doom of the
impenitent at the coming destruction of Jerusalem.
heaviness--literally, "falling of the
countenance," casting down of the eyes.
10. in the sight of the Lord--as
continually in the presence of Him who alone is worthy to
be exalted: recognizing His presence in all your ways, the
truest incentive to humility. The tree, to grow
upwards, must strike its roots deep downwards; so man, to
be exalted, must have his mind deep-rooted in humility. In
@1Pe
5:6, it is, Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of
God, namely, in His dealings of Providence: a distinct
thought from that here.
lift you up--in part in this world, fully in
the world to come.
11. Having mentioned sins
of the tongue (@Jas
3:5-12), he shows here that evil-speaking flows
from the same spirit of exalting self at the expense of
one's neighbor as caused the "fightings" reprobated in
this chapter (@Jas
4:1).
Speak not evil--literally, "Speak not
against" one another.
brethren--implying the inconsistency of such
depreciatory speaking of one another in brethren.
speaketh evil of the law--for the law in
commanding, "Love thy neighbor as thyself" (@Jas
2:8), virtually condemns evil-speaking and judging [ESTIUS].
Those who superciliously condemn the acts and words of
others which do not please themselves, thus aiming at the
reputation of sanctity, put their own moroseness in the
place of the law, and claim to themselves a power of
censuring above the law of God, condemning what the law
permits [CALVIN].
Such a.one acts as though the law could not perform its
own office of judging, but he must fly upon the
office [BENGEL].
This is the last mention of the law in the New Testament.
ALFORD
rightly takes the "law" to be the old moral law applied in
its comprehensive spiritual fulness by Christ: "the law of
liberty."
if thou judge the law, thou art not a doer . . .
but a judge--Setting aside the Christian
brotherhood as all alike called to be doers of
the law, in subjection to it, such a one arrogates the
office of a judge.
12. There is one lawgiver--The
best authorities read in addition, "and judge." Translate,
"There is One (alone) who is (at once) Lawgiver and Judge,
(namely) He who is able to save and destroy." Implying,
God alone is Lawgiver and therefore Judge, since it is He
alone who can execute His judgments; our inability in this
respect shows our presumption in trying to act as judges,
as though we were God.
who art thou, &c.--The order in the Greek
is emphatic, "But (inserted in oldest manuscripts) thou,
who art thou that judgest another?" How rashly arrogant in
judging thy fellows, and wresting from God the office
which belongs to Him over thee and
THEM alike!
another--The oldest authorities read, "thy
neighbor."
13. Go to now--"Come now";
said to excite attention.
ye that say--boasting of the morrow.
To-day or to-morrow--as if ye had the free
choice of either day as a certainty. Others read, "To-day
and to-morrow."
such a city--literally, "this the city"
(namely, the one present to the mind of the speaker).
This city here.
continue . . . a year--rather, "spend one
year." Their language implies that when this one year is
out, they purpose similarly settling plans for to come [BENGEL].
buy and sell--Their plans for the future are
all worldly.
14. what--literally, "of
what nature" is your life? that is, how evanescent it is.
It is even--Some oldest authorities read,
"For ye are." BENGEL,
with other old authorities, reads, "For it shall be," the
future referring to the "morrow" (@Jas
4:13-15). The former expresses, "Ye yourselves are
transitory"; so everything of yours, even your life, must
partake of the same transitoriness. Received text has no
old authority.
and then vanisheth away--"afterwards
vanishing as it came"; literally, "afterwards (as it
appeared), so vanishing" [ALFORD].
15. Literally, "instead of
your saying," &c. This refers to "ye that say" (@Jas
4:13).
we shall live--The best manuscripts read, "We
shall both live and do," &c. The boasters
spoke as if life, action, and the particular kind
of action were in their power, whereas all three depend
entirely on the will of the Lord.
16. now--as it is.
rejoice in . . . boastings--"ye boast in
arrogant presumptions," namely, vain confident fancies
that the future is certain to you (@Jas
4:13).
rejoicing--boasting [BENGEL].
17. The general principle
illustrated by the particular example just discussed is
here stated: knowledge without practice is imputed to a
man as great and presumptuous sin. James reverts to the
principle with which he started. Nothing more injures the
soul than wasted impressions. Feelings exhaust themselves
and evaporate, if not embodied in practice. As we will not
act except we feel, so if we will not act out our
feelings, we shall soon cease to feel.
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