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Text -- James 5:13 (NET)

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Context
Prayer for the Sick
5:13 Is anyone among you suffering? He should pray. Is anyone in good spirits? He should sing praises.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Suffering | Resignation | Praise | MUSIC | Joy | JAMES, EPISTLE OF | Afflictions and Adversities | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
, Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Jam 5:13 - -- Is any suffering? ( kakopathei tis̱ ). See Jam 5:10 for kakopathia . The verb in N.T. occurs only here and in 2Ti 2:3, 2Ti 2:9; 2Ti 4:5. The lively ...

Is any suffering? ( kakopathei tis̱ ).

See Jam 5:10 for kakopathia . The verb in N.T. occurs only here and in 2Ti 2:3, 2Ti 2:9; 2Ti 4:5. The lively interrogative is common in the diatribe and suits the style of James.

Robertson: Jam 5:13 - -- Among you ( en humin ). As in Jam 3:13.

Among you ( en humin ).

As in Jam 3:13.

Robertson: Jam 5:13 - -- Let him pray ( proseuchesthō ). Present middle imperative, "let him keep on praying"(instead of cursing as in Jam 5:12).

Let him pray ( proseuchesthō ).

Present middle imperative, "let him keep on praying"(instead of cursing as in Jam 5:12).

Robertson: Jam 5:13 - -- Is any cheerful ( euthumei̱ ). Present active indicative of euthumeō , old verb from euthumos (Act 27:36), in N.T. only here and Act 27:22, Act ...

Is any cheerful ( euthumei̱ ).

Present active indicative of euthumeō , old verb from euthumos (Act 27:36), in N.T. only here and Act 27:22, Act 27:25.

Robertson: Jam 5:13 - -- Let him sing praise ( psalletō ). Present active imperative of psallō , originally to twang a chord as on a harp, to sing praise to God whether w...

Let him sing praise ( psalletō ).

Present active imperative of psallō , originally to twang a chord as on a harp, to sing praise to God whether with instrument or without, in N.T. only here, 1Co 14:15; Rom 15:9; Eph 5:19. "Let him keep on making melody."

Vincent: Jam 5:13 - -- Is afflicted ( κακοπαθεῖ ) See on the kindred word κακοπάθεια , suffering, Jam 5:10. Only here and 2Ti 2:3, 2Ti 2:9; 2Ti...

Is afflicted ( κακοπαθεῖ )

See on the kindred word κακοπάθεια , suffering, Jam 5:10. Only here and 2Ti 2:3, 2Ti 2:9; 2Ti 4:5.

Vincent: Jam 5:13 - -- Let him sing psalms ( ψαλλέτω ) The word means, primarily, to pluck or twitch. Hence of the sharp twang on a bowstring or harp-strin...

Let him sing psalms ( ψαλλέτω )

The word means, primarily, to pluck or twitch. Hence of the sharp twang on a bowstring or harp-string, and so to play upon a stringed instrument. Our word psalm , derived from this, is, properly, a tune played upon a stringed instrument. The verb, however, is used in the New Testament of singing praise generally. See 1Co 14:15; Rom 15:9.

JFB: Jam 5:13 - -- Referring to the "suffering affliction" (Jam 5:10).

Referring to the "suffering affliction" (Jam 5:10).

JFB: Jam 5:13 - -- Not "swear" in rash impatience.

Not "swear" in rash impatience.

JFB: Jam 5:13 - -- Joyous in mind.

Joyous in mind.

JFB: Jam 5:13 - -- Of praise. Paul and Silas sang psalms even in affliction.

Of praise. Paul and Silas sang psalms even in affliction.

Clarke: Jam 5:13 - -- Is any among you afflicted? let him pray - The Jews taught that the meaning of the ordinance, Lev 13:45, which required the leper to cry, Unclean! u...

Is any among you afflicted? let him pray - The Jews taught that the meaning of the ordinance, Lev 13:45, which required the leper to cry, Unclean! unclean! was, "that thus making known his calamity, the people might be led to offer up prayers to God in his behalf,"Sota, page 685, ed. Wagens. They taught also, that when any sickness or affliction entered a family, they should go to the wise men, and implore their prayers. Bava bathra, fol. 116, 1

In Nedarim, fol. 40, 1, we have this relation: "Rabba, as often as he fell sick, forbade his domestics to mention it for the first day; if he did not then begin to get well, he told his family to go and publish it in the highways, that they who hated him might rejoice, and they that loved him might intercede with God for him.

Clarke: Jam 5:13 - -- Is any merry? let him sing psalms - These are all general but very useful directions. It is natural for a man to sing when he is cheerful and happy....

Is any merry? let him sing psalms - These are all general but very useful directions. It is natural for a man to sing when he is cheerful and happy. Now no subject can be more noble than that which is Divine: and as God alone is the author of all that good which makes a man happy, then his praise should be the subject of the song of him who is merry. But where persons rejoice in iniquity, and not in the truth, God and sacred things can never be the subject of their song.

Calvin: Jam 5:13 - -- 13.Is any among you afflicted? he means that there is no time in which God does not invite us to himself. For afflictions ought to stimulate us to pr...

13.Is any among you afflicted? he means that there is no time in which God does not invite us to himself. For afflictions ought to stimulate us to pray; prosperity supplies us with an occasion to praise God. But such is the perverseness of men, that they cannot rejoice without forgetting God, and that when afflicted they are disheartened and driven to despair. We ought, then, to keep within due bounds, so that the joy, which usually makes us to forget God, may induce us to set forth the goodness of God, and that our sorrow may teach us to pray. For he has set the singing of psalms in opposition to profane and unbridled joy; and thus they express their joy who are led, as they ought to be, by prosperity to God.

TSK: Jam 5:13 - -- any among : 2Ch 33:12, 2Ch 33:13; Job 33:26; Psa 18:6, Psa 50:15, Psa 91:15, Psa 116:3-5, Psa 118:5; Psa 142:1-3; Lam 3:55, Lam 3:56; Hos 6:1; Jon 2:2...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Jam 5:13 - -- Is any among you afflicted? - By sickness, bereavement, disappointment, persecutions, loss of health or property. The word used here refers to ...

Is any among you afflicted? - By sickness, bereavement, disappointment, persecutions, loss of health or property. The word used here refers to suffering evil of any kind, ( κακοπαθεῖ kakopathei .)

Let him pray - That is, prayer is appropriate to trial. The mind naturally resorts to it, and in every way it is proper. God only can remove the source of sorrow; he can grant unto us "a happy issue out of all our afflictions;"he can make them the means of sanctifying the soul. Compare 2Ch 33:12; Psa 34:4; Psa 107:6, Psa 107:13, Psa 107:28. It matters not what is the form of the trial, it is a privilege which all have to go to God in prayer. And it is an inestimable privilege. Health fails, friends die, property is lost, disappointments come upon us, danger threatens, death approaches - and to whom shall we go but to God? He ever lives. He never fails us or disappoints us if we trust in him, and his ear is ever open to our cries. This would be a sad world indeed, if it were not for the privilege of prayer. The last resource of millions who suffer - for millions suffer every day - would be taken away, if men were denied the access to the throne of grace. As it is, there is no one so poor that he may not pray; no one so disconsolate and forsaken that he may not find in God a friend; no one so broken-hearted that he is not able to bind up his spirit. One of the designs of affliction is to lead us to the throne of grace; and it is a happy result of trials if we are led by our trials to seek God in prayer.

Is any merry? - The word merry now conveys an idea which is not properly found in the original word here. It refers now, in common usage, to light and noisy pleasure; to that which is jovial; to that which is attended with laughter, or which causes laughter, as a merry jest. In the Scriptures, however, the word properly denotes "cheerful, pleasant, agreeable,"and is applied to a state of mind free from trouble - the opposite of affliction - happy, Pro 15:13, Pro 15:15; Pro 17:22; Isa 24:7; Luk 15:23-24, Luk 15:29, Luk 15:32. The Greek word used here ( εὐθυμεῖ euthumei ) means, literally, "to have the mind well"( εῦ eu and θυμὸς thumos ;) that is, to have it happy, or free from trouble; to be cheerful.

Let him sing psalms - That is, if anyone is happy; if he is in health, and is prospered; if he has his friends around him, and there is nothing to produce anxiety; if he has the free exercise of conscience and enjoys religion, it is proper to express that in notes of praise. Compare Eph 5:19-20. On the meaning of the word here rendered "sing psalms,"see the notes at Eph 5:19, where it is rendered "making melody."It does not mean to sing psalms in contradistinction from singing hymns, but the reference is to any songs of praise. Praise is appropriate to such a state of mind. The heart naturally gives utterance to its emotions in songs of thanksgiving. The sentiment in this verse is well expressed in the beautiful stanza:

In every joy that crowns my days,

In every pain I bear,

My heart shall find delight in praise,

Or seek relief in prayer.

- Mrs. Williams.

Poole: Jam 5:13 - -- Is any among you afflicted? either troubled or afflicted in mind, as appears by the opposite being merry or more generally afflicted any way. Not t...

Is any among you afflicted? either troubled or afflicted in mind, as appears by the opposite being

merry or more generally afflicted any way. Not that we need not pray at other times, but when under afflictions God calls us more especially to it, and our own necessities put us upon it.

Let him pray for support, patience, sanctification of afflictions, &c.

Is any merry? let him sing psalms express his mirth in a holy manner, by praising God with psalms or spiritual songs for mercies received from him, 1Co 14:15 Eph 5:19 ; and so keep up his spiritual mirth by a spiritual exercise, lest his cheerfulness degenerate into vanity and frothiness.

Gill: Jam 5:13 - -- Is any among you afflicted?.... As the people of God generally are; they are commonly a poor, and an afflicted people; at least there are many among t...

Is any among you afflicted?.... As the people of God generally are; they are commonly a poor, and an afflicted people; at least there are many among them that are so, and many are their afflictions: those whom Christ loves, as he did Lazarus, are not free from sicknesses and diseases; and these are rather signs of love than arguments against it; and when this is the case of any of the saints, what is to be done?

let him pray; to God that can save him; in the name of Christ; under the influence of the Spirit; believing in the word of promise. Times of afflictions are proper times for prayer; there is then more especially need of it; and God sometimes lays his afflicting hand upon his people, when they have been negligent of their duty, and he has not heard of them for some time, in order to bring them near to him, to seek his face, pay him a visit, and pour out a prayer before him; see Psa 50:15.

Is any merry? in good heart and spirit, in a good frame of mind, as well as in prosperous circumstances, in soul, body and estate:

let him sing psalms; let him not only be inwardly joyful, as he should be in prosperity, and be thankful to God for his many mercies, temporal and spiritual, he enjoys; but let him express it vocally, and melodiously, by singing psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs: not that these are the only persons that are to sing psalms, or this the only time, any more than that afflicted persons are the only ones that are to pray, or the time of affliction the only time of prayer; but as affliction more especially calls for prayer, so spiritual joy, and rejoicing in prosperous seasons, for singing of psalms: weeping, and singing of psalms, were thought, by the Jews, inconsistent. Kimchi, on the title of the third psalm, observes, that their Rabbins say, that when David went up the ascent of the Mount of Olives, he wept; and if he wept, why is this called a psalm? and if a psalm, למה בכה, "why did he weep?"

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

Geneva Bible: Jam 5:13 ( 8 ) Is any among you afflicted? let him pray. Is any merry? let him sing psalms. ( 8 ) He shows the best remedy against all afflictions, that is, p...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Jam 5:1-20 - --1 Wicked rich men are to fear God's vengeance.7 We ought to be patient in afflictions, after the example of the prophets, and Job;12 to forbear sweari...

MHCC: Jam 5:12-18 - --The sin of swearing is condemned; but how many make light of common profane swearing! Such swearing expressly throws contempt upon God's name and auth...

Matthew Henry: Jam 5:12-20 - -- This epistle now drawing to a close, the penman goes off very quickly from one thing to another: hence it is that matters so very different are insi...

Barclay: Jam 5:13-15 - --Here we have set out before us certain dominant characteristics of the early church. It was a singing church; the early Christians were always ready ...

Barclay: Jam 5:13-15 - --Another great characteristic of the early church was that it was a healing Church. Here it inherited its tradition from Judaism. When a Jew was ill,...

Constable: Jam 5:1-20 - --VI. MONEY AND PATIENT ENDURANCE 5:1-20 The final practical problem James addressed involves money. He wrote thes...

Constable: Jam 5:13-18 - --C. The Proper Action 5:13-18 James encouraged his readers to pray as well as to be patient to enable the...

Constable: Jam 5:13 - --1. The way of release 5:13 Prayer to God, not profanity, is the proper outlet for feelings of sa...

College: Jam 5:1-20 - --JAMES 5 XIV. WARNING TO THE RICH (5:1-6) 1 Now listen, you rich people, weep and wail because of the misery that is coming upon you. 2 Your wealth h...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: James (Book Introduction) THE EPISTLE OF JAMES BEFORE a.d. 50 By Way of Introduction The Author He claims to be James, and so the book is not anonymous. It is either ge...

JFB: James (Book Introduction) THIS is called by EUSEBIUS ([Ecclesiastical History, 2.23], about the year 330 A.D.) the first of the Catholic Epistles, that is, the Epistles intende...

JFB: James (Outline) INSCRIPTION: EXHORTATION ON HEARING, SPEAKING, AND WRATH. (Jam. 1:1-27) THE SIN OF RESPECT OF PERSONS: DEAD, UNWORKING FAITH SAVES NO MAN. (Jam. 2:1-...

TSK: James (Book Introduction) James, the son of Alphaeus, the brother of Jacob, and the near relation of our Lord, called also James the Less, probably because he was of lower stat...

TSK: James 5 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Jam 5:1, Wicked rich men are to fear God’s vengeance; Jam 5:7, We ought to be patient in afflictions, after the example of the prophets...

Poole: James 5 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 5

MHCC: James (Book Introduction) This epistle of James is one of the most instructive writings in the New Testament. Being chiefly directed against particular errors at that time brou...

MHCC: James 5 (Chapter Introduction) (Jam 5:1-6) The judgments of God denounced against rich unbelievers. (Jam 5:7-11) Exhortation to patience and meekness under tribulations. (Jam 5:12...

Matthew Henry: James (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The General Epistle of James The writer of this epistle was not James the son of Zebedee; for he was pu...

Matthew Henry: James 5 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter the apostle denounces the judgments of God upon those rich men who oppress the poor, showing them how great their sin and folly are...

Barclay: James (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTER OF JAMES James is one of the books which bad a very hard fight to get into the New Testament. Even when it did come to ...

Barclay: James 5 (Chapter Introduction) The Worthlessness Of Riches (Jam_5:1-3) The Social Passion Of The Bible (Jam_5:1-3 Continued) The Way Of Selfishness And Its End (Jam_5:4-6) Wait...

Constable: James (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background The writer of this epistle was evidently the half-b...

Constable: James (Outline) Outline I. Introduction 1:1 II. Trials and true religion 1:2-27 A. The v...

Constable: James James Bibliography Adamson, James B. The Epistle of James. New International Commentary on the New Testament se...

Haydock: James (Book Introduction) THE CATHOLIC EPISTLE OF ST. JAMES, THE APOSTLE. __________ ON THE CATHOLIC EPISTLES. INTRODUCTION. The seven following Epistles have bee...

Gill: James (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JAMES This epistle is called "general", because not written to any particular person, as the epistles to Timothy, Titus, and Philem...

Gill: James 5 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JAMES 5 In this chapter the apostle reproves the vices of rich men, and denounces the judgments of God upon them; exhorts the saint...

College: James (Book Introduction) FOREWORD I owe a debt of gratitude to many for assistance with this volume. John York and John Hunter are responsible for making me a part of the Co...

College: James (Outline) OUTLINE I. GREETING - 1:1 II. ENDURING TRIALS - 1:2-4 III. ASK FOR WISDOM - 1:5-8 IV. RICHES TEMPORARY - 1:9-11 V. TEMPTATION NOT FROM ...

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