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Text -- James 1:15 (NET)

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Context
1:15 Then when desire conceives, it gives birth to sin, and when sin is full grown, it gives birth to death.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Wicked | Temptation | TEMPT; TEMPTATION | Sin | Lust | FINISH | FALL, THE | Death | CONCEPTION; CONCEIVE | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
, Geneva Bible

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

Other
Critics Ask , Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Jam 1:15 - -- Then ( eita ). The next step.

Then ( eita ).

The next step.

Robertson: Jam 1:15 - -- The lust ( hē epithumia ). Note article, the lust (Jam 1:14) which one has.

The lust ( hē epithumia ).

Note article, the lust (Jam 1:14) which one has.

Robertson: Jam 1:15 - -- When it hath conceived ( sullabousa ). Second aorist active participle of sullambanō , old word to grasp together, in hostile sense (Act 26:21), in...

When it hath conceived ( sullabousa ).

Second aorist active participle of sullambanō , old word to grasp together, in hostile sense (Act 26:21), in friendly sense of help (Phi 4:3), in technical sense of a woman taking a man’ s seed in conception (Luk 1:24), here also of lust (as a woman), "having conceived."The will yields to lust and conception takes place.

Robertson: Jam 1:15 - -- Beareth sin ( tiktei hamartian ). Present active indicative of tiktō to bring forth as a mother or fruit from seed, old verb, often in N.T., here...

Beareth sin ( tiktei hamartian ).

Present active indicative of tiktō to bring forth as a mother or fruit from seed, old verb, often in N.T., here only in James. Sin is the union of the will with lust. See Psa 7:14 for this same metaphor.

Robertson: Jam 1:15 - -- The sin ( hē hamartia ). The article refers to hamartia just mentioned.

The sin ( hē hamartia ).

The article refers to hamartia just mentioned.

Robertson: Jam 1:15 - -- When it is full-grown ( apotelestheisa ). First aorist passive participle of apoteleō , old compound verb with perfective use of apo , in N.T. only...

When it is full-grown ( apotelestheisa ).

First aorist passive participle of apoteleō , old compound verb with perfective use of apo , in N.T. only here and Luk 13:32. It does not mean "full-grown"like teleioō , but rather completeness of parts or functions as opposed to rudimentary state (Hort) like the winged insect in contrast with the chrysalis or grub (Plato). The sin at birth is fully equipped for its career (Rom 6:6; Col 3:5).

Robertson: Jam 1:15 - -- Bringeth forth death ( apokuei thanaton ). Late compound (kueō to be pregnant, perfective use of apo ) to give birth to, of animals and women, f...

Bringeth forth death ( apokuei thanaton ).

Late compound (kueō to be pregnant, perfective use of apo ) to give birth to, of animals and women, for normal birth (papyrus example) and abnormal birth (Hort). A medical word (Ropes) rather than a literary one like tiktō . The child of lust is sin, of sin is death, powerful figure of abortion. The child is dead at birth. For death as the fruit of sin see Rom 6:21-23; Rom 8:6. "The birth of death follows of necessity when one sin is fully formed"(Hort).

Vincent: Jam 1:15 - -- The lust Note the article, omitted in A. V. The peculiar lust of his own.

The lust

Note the article, omitted in A. V. The peculiar lust of his own.

Vincent: Jam 1:15 - -- Hath conceived ( συλλαβοῦσα ) Lit., having conceived.

Hath conceived ( συλλαβοῦσα )

Lit., having conceived.

Vincent: Jam 1:15 - -- Bringeth forth ( τίκτει ) Metaphor of the mother. Rev., beareth.

Bringeth forth ( τίκτει )

Metaphor of the mother. Rev., beareth.

Vincent: Jam 1:15 - -- When it is finished ( ἀποτελεσθεῖσα ) Better, Rev., when it is full grown. Not when the course of a sinful life is completed; ...

When it is finished ( ἀποτελεσθεῖσα )

Better, Rev., when it is full grown. Not when the course of a sinful life is completed; but when sin has reached its full development.

Vincent: Jam 1:15 - -- Bringeth forth ( ἀποκύει ) A different verb from the preceding, bringeth forth. Rev. has rendered τίκτει , beareth, in orde...

Bringeth forth ( ἀποκύει )

A different verb from the preceding, bringeth forth. Rev. has rendered τίκτει , beareth, in order to avoid the repetition of bringeth forth. The verb is used by James only, here and at Jam 1:18. The image is interpreted in two ways. Either (1) Sin, figured as female, is already pregnant with death, and, when full grown, bringeth forth death (so Rev., and the majority of commentators). " The harlot, Lust, draws away and entices the man. The guilty union is committed by the will embracing the temptress: the consequence is that she beareth sin....Then the sin, that particular sin, when grown up, herself, as if all along pregnant with it, bringeth forth death" (Alford). Or (2) Sin, figured as male, when it has reached maturity, becomes the begetter of death. So the Vulgate, generat , and Wyc., gendereth. I am inclined to prefer this, since the other seems somewhat forced. It has the high endorsement of Bishop Lightfoot. There is a suggestive parallel passage in the " Agamemnon" of Aeschylus, 751-771:

" There is a saying old,

Uttered in ancient days,

That human bliss, full grown,

Genders, and dies not childless:

And, for the coming race,

Springs woe insatiate from prosperity.

But I alone

Cherish within my breast another thought.

The impious deed

Begets a numerous brood alike in kind;

While households ruled by right inflexible

Blossom with offspring fair. Insolence old

In men depraved begetteth insolence,

Which springs afresh from time to time

As comes the day of doom, and fresh creates

In Ate's dismal halls

Fierce wrath from light,

Unhallowed Daring, fiend invincible,

Unconquered, with its parents' likeness stamped."

The magnificent passage in Milton's " Paradise Lost," ii., 760-801, is elaborated from these verses of James.

Wesley: Jam 1:15 - -- By our own will joining therewith.

By our own will joining therewith.

Wesley: Jam 1:15 - -- It doth not follow that the desire itself is not sin. He that begets a man is himself a man.

It doth not follow that the desire itself is not sin. He that begets a man is himself a man.

Wesley: Jam 1:15 - -- Grown up to maturity, which it quickly does.

Grown up to maturity, which it quickly does.

Wesley: Jam 1:15 - -- Sin is born big with death.

Sin is born big with death.

JFB: Jam 1:15 - -- The guilty union is committed by the will embracing the temptress. "Lust," the harlot, then, "brings forth sin," namely, of that kind to which the tem...

The guilty union is committed by the will embracing the temptress. "Lust," the harlot, then, "brings forth sin," namely, of that kind to which the temptation inclines. Then the particular sin (so the Greek implies), "when it is completed, brings forth death," with which it was all along pregnant [ALFORD]. This "death" stands in striking contrast to the "crown of life" (Jam 1:12) which "patience" or endurance ends in, when it has its "perfect work" (Jam 1:4). He who will fight Satan with Satan's own weapons, must not wonder if he finds himself overmatched. Nip sin in the bud of lust.

Clarke: Jam 1:15 - -- When lust hath conceived - When the evil propensity works unchecked, it bringeth forth sin - the evil act between the parties is perpetrated

When lust hath conceived - When the evil propensity works unchecked, it bringeth forth sin - the evil act between the parties is perpetrated

Clarke: Jam 1:15 - -- And sin, when it is finished - When this breach of the law of God and of innocence has been a sufficient time completed, it bringeth forth death - t...

And sin, when it is finished - When this breach of the law of God and of innocence has been a sufficient time completed, it bringeth forth death - the spurious offspring is the fruit of the criminal connection, and the evidence of that death or punishment due to the transgressors

Any person acquainted with the import of the verbs συλλαμβανειν, τικτειν , and αποκυειν, will see that this is the metaphor, and that I have not exhausted it. Συλλαμβανω signifies concipio sobolem, quae comprehenditur utero; concipio foetum ; - τικτω, pario, genero, efficio ; - αποκυεω ex απο et κυω, praegnans sum, in utero gero. Verbum proprium praegnantium, quae foetum maturum emittunt. Interdum etiam gignendi notionem habet . - Maius, Obser. Sacr., vol. ii., page 184. Kypke and Schleusner

Sin is a small matter in its commencement; but by indulgence it grows great, and multiplies itself beyond all calculation. To use the rabbinical metaphor lately adduced, it is, in the commencement, like the thread of a spider’ s web - almost imperceptible through its extreme tenuity or fineness, and as easily broken, for it is as yet but a simple irregular imagination; afterwards it becomes like a cart rope - it has, by being indulged produced strong desire and delight; next consent; then, time, place, and opportunity serving, that which was conceived in the mind, and finished in that purpose, is consummated by act

"The soul, which the Greek philosophers considered as the seat of the appetites and passions, is called by Philo το θηλυ, the female part of our nature; and the spirit το αρῥεν, the male part. In allusion to this notion, James represents men’ s lust as a harlot; which entices their understanding and will into its impure embraces, and from that conjunction conceives sin. Sin, being brought forth, immediately acts, and is nourished by frequent repetition, till at length it gains such strength that in its turn it begets death. 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."See Macknight.

Calvin: Jam 1:15 - -- 15.Then when lust hath conceived. He first calls that lust which is not any kind of evil affection or desire, but that which is the fountain of all...

15.Then when lust hath conceived. He first calls that lust which is not any kind of evil affection or desire, but that which is the fountain of all evil affections; by which, as he shews, are conceived vicious broods, which at length break forth into sins. It seems, however, improper, and not according to the usage of Scripture, to restrict the word sin to outward works, as though indeed lust itself were not a sin, and as though corrupt desires, remaining closed up within and suppressed, were not so many sins. But as the use of a word is various, there is nothing unreasonable if it be taken here, as in many other places, for actual sin.

And the Papists ignorantly lay hold on this passage, and seek to prove from it that vicious, yea, filthy, wicked, and the most abominable lusts are not sins, provided there is no assent; for James does not shew when sin begins to be born, so as to be sin, and so accounted by God, but when it breaks forth. For he proceeds gradually and shews that the consummation of sin is eternal death, and that sin arises from depraved desires, and that these depraved desires or affections have their root in lust. It hence follows that men gather fruit in eternal perdition, and fruit which they have procured for themselves.

By perfected sin, therefore, I understand, not any one act of sin perpetrated, but the completed course of sinning. For though death is merited by every sin whatever, yet it is said to be the reward of an ungodly and wicked life. Hence is the dotage of those confuted who conclude from these words, that sin is not mortal until it breaks forth, as they say, into an external act. Nor is this what James treats of; but his object was only this, to teach that there is in us the root of our own destruction.

Defender: Jam 1:15 - -- The word used for "finished" (Greek apoteleo) occurs only here. It is an emphatic word, implying an ultimate and final consummation. Thus sin, if allo...

The word used for "finished" (Greek apoteleo) occurs only here. It is an emphatic word, implying an ultimate and final consummation. Thus sin, if allowed to continue without repentance and redemption, must result in eternal and irrevocable spiritual death."

TSK: Jam 1:15 - -- when : Gen 3:6, Gen 4:5-8; Job 15:35; Psa 7:14; Isa 59:4; Mic 2:1-3; Mat 26:14, Mat 26:48-59; Act 5:1-3 when : Gen 2:17, Gen 3:17-19; Psa 9:17; Rom 5:...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Jam 1:15 - -- Then when lust hath conceived - Compare Job 15:35. The allusion here is obvious. The meaning is, when the desire which we have naturally is qui...

Then when lust hath conceived - Compare Job 15:35. The allusion here is obvious. The meaning is, when the desire which we have naturally is quickened, or made to act, the result is that sin is produced. As our desires of good lie in the mind by nature, as our propensities exist as they were created, they cannot be regarded as sin, or treated as such; but when they are indulged, when plans of gratification are formed, when they are developed in actual life, the effect is sin. In the mere desire of good, of happiness, of food, of raiment, there is no sin; it becomes sin when indulged in an improper manner, and when it leads us to seek that which is forbidden - to invade the rights of others, or in any way to violate the laws of God. The Rabbis have a metaphor which strongly expresses the general sense of this passage"- "Evil concupiscence is at the beginning like the thread of a spider’ s web; afterwards it is like a cart rope."Sanhedrin, fol. 99.

It bringeth forth sin - The result is sin - open, actual sin. When that which is conceived in the heart is matured, it is seen to be sin. The design of all this is to show that sin is not to be traced to God, but to man himself; and in order to this, the apostle says that there is enough in the heart of man to account for all actual sin, without supposing that it is caused by God. The solution which he gives is, that there are certain propensities in man which, when they are suffered to act themselves out, will account for all the sin in the world. In regard to those native propensities themselves, he does not say whether he regards them as sinful and blameworthy or not; and the probability is, that he did not design to enter into a formal examination, or to make a formal statement, of the nature of these propensities themselves. He looked at man as he is as a creature of God - as endowed with certain animal propensities - as seen, in fact, to have strong passions by nature; and he showed that there was enough in him to account for the existence of sin, without bringing in the agency of God, or charging it on him.

In reference to those propensities, it may be observed that there are two kinds, either of which may account for the existence of sin, but which are frequently both combined. There are, first, our natural propensities; those which we have as men, as endowed with an animal nature, as having constitutional desires to be gratified, and wants to be supplied. Such Adam had in innocence; such the Saviour had; and such are to be regarded as in no respect in themselves sinful and wrong. Yet they may, in our case, as they did in Adam, lead us to sin, because, under their strong influence, we may be led to desire that which is forbidden, or which belongs to another. But there are, secondly, the propensities and inclinations which we have as the result of the fall, and which are evil in their nature and tendency; which as a matter of course, and especially when combined with the former, lead to open transgression. It is not always easy to separate these, and in fact they are often combined in producing the actual guilt of the world. It often requires a close analysis of a man’ s own mind to detect these different ingredients in his conduct, and the one often gets the credit of the other. The apostle James seems to have looked at it as a simple matter of fact, with a common sense view, by saying that there were "desires"( ἐπιθυμίας epithumias ) in a man’ s own mind which would account for all the actual sin in the world, without charging it on God. Of the truth of this, no one can entertain a doubt. - (See the supplementary note above at Jam 1:14.)

And sin, when it is finished bringeth forth death - The result of sin when it is fully carried out, is death - death in all forms. The idea is, that death, in whatever form it exists, is to be traced to sin, and that sin will naturally and regularly produce it. There is a strong similarity between this declaration and that of the apostle Paul Rom 6:21-23; and it is probable that James had that passage in his mind. See the sentiment illustrated in the notes at that passage, and Rom 5:12 note. Any one who indulges in a sinful thought or corrupt desire, should reflect that it may end in death - death temporal and eternal. Its natural tendency will be to produce such a death. This reflection should induce us to check an evil thought or desire at the beginning. Not for one moment should we indulge in it, for soon it may secure the mastery and be beyond our control; and the end may be seen in the grave, and the awful world of woe.

Poole: Jam 1:15 - -- Then when lust hath conceived lust (compared to a harlot) may be said to conceive, when the heart is pleased with the motion, and yields some consent...

Then when lust hath conceived lust (compared to a harlot) may be said to conceive, when the heart is pleased with the motion, and yields some consent to it.

It bringeth forth sin the birth of sin may be the complete consent of the will to it, or the outward act of it.

And sin actual sin, the fruit and product of original.

When it is finished sin is finished, when it is not only committed, but continued in, as the way and course of a man’ s life.

Bringeth forth death not only temporal, but eternal. Or we may thus take the order and progress of sin: the first indeliberate motion of lust, is the temptation or bait, which by its pleasantness enticeth, and by its vehemency draws the heart after it (as the harlot, Pro 7:21 , with the flattering of her lips forced the young man, telling him of the pleasure he should enjoy, Jam 1:14,16-18 , and then he goes after her, Jam 1:22 ); the heart’ s lingering about and being entangled with the delightful motion of lust, is its committing folly with it; when the full consent is joined, lust hath conceived; when the outward act is performed, sin is brought forth; and when sin is finished in a settled course, it brings forth death; which, though every sin do in the merit of it, yet sin only finished doth in the event.

Objection. Doth not this imply lust, and its first motions, not to be sin?

Answer. No: for;

1. The least motions of it are forbidden, Mat 5:28 Rom 7:7 .

2. It is contrary to the law and Spirit of God, Rom 7:23,25 Ga 5:16,17 .

3. It is the fountain of impurity, and therefore is itself impure, Job 14:4 Mat 7:15,16 Jas 3:11 .

4. Evil thoughts defile a man, Mat 15:19 Act 8:22 .

Objection. How is lust said here to bring forth sin, when, Rom 7:8 , sin is said to work lust?

Answer. James calls the corrupt principle itself lust, and the actings of it, sin; whereas Paul calls the same principle sin, and the actings of it lust. And so both are true, lust, as a root, brings forth the acts of sin as its fruits; and sin as a root, brings forth actual lusts, as its fruits.

Haydock: Jam 1:15 - -- When concupiscence hath conceived, (man's free will yielding to it) it bringeth [6] forth sin, our perverse inclinations become sinful, and when...

When concupiscence hath conceived, (man's free will yielding to it) it bringeth [6] forth sin, our perverse inclinations become sinful, and when any grievous sin is completed, or even consented to, it begetteth death, it maketh the soul guilty of eternal death. It may not be amiss here to observe with St. Gregory, &c. that there are three degrees of temptations: the first, by suggestion only; the second, by delectation; the third, by consent. The first, the devil, or our own frail nature, tempts us by a suggestion of evil thoughts in our imagination: to have such thoughts and imaginations may be no sin at all, though the things and objects represented be never so foul and hideous, though they may continue never so long, and return never so often. The reason is, because we cannot hinder them. On the contrary, if our will remains displeased with them, and resist them, such a resistance is meritorious, and by the mercies of God will purchase us a reward. Second, these representations may be followed with a delight or delectation in the senses, or in the body only; and if by an impression made against the will, which we no ways consent to, there is again no sin. There may be also some neglect in the person tempted, by not using sufficient endeavours to resist and repel those thoughts, which if it be only some small neglect, the sin is not great: but if the person tempted hath wilfully, and with full deliberation, taken delight in evil thoughts, either of revenge, or of fornication, or adultery, or about any thing very sinful, such a wilful delight is a grievous and deadly sin, though he hath not had a will or design to perform the action itself. The reason is, because he then wilfully consents in mind and heart to a sinful delight, though not to the execution or action. And the sin may be great, and mortal, though it be but for a short time: for a temptation may continue for a long time and be no sin; and there may be a great sin in a short time. The reason again is, because we are to judge of sin by the dispositions and consent of the will, not by the length of time. Third, when the sinner yields to evil suggestions and temptations, so that his will fully consents to what is proposed, and nothing can be said to be wanting but an opportunity of putting his sinful desires in execution, he has already committed the sin; for example, of murder, of fornication, &c. in his heart, as our blessed Saviour taught us. (Matthew v. 28.) (Witham)

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Generat mortem, Greek: apokuei thanaton; apokuein is fætum emittere, and generare, as it is also here again used ver. 18.

Gill: Jam 1:15 - -- Then when lust hath conceived,.... A proposal of pleasure or profit being made, agreeable to lust, or the principle of corrupt nature, sinful man is p...

Then when lust hath conceived,.... A proposal of pleasure or profit being made, agreeable to lust, or the principle of corrupt nature, sinful man is pleased with it; and instead of resisting and rejecting the motion made, he admits of it, and receives it, and cherishes it in his mind; he dallies and plays with it; he dwells upon it in his thoughts, and hides it under his tongue, and in his heart, as a sweet morsel, and forsakes it not, but contrives ways and means how to bring it about; and this is lust's conceiving. The figure is used in Psa 7:14 on which Kimchi, a Jewish commentator, has this note;

"he (the psalmist) compares the thoughts of the heart להריון, "to a conception", and when they go out in word, this is "travail", and in work or act, this is "bringing forth".''

And so it follows here,

it bringeth forth sin; into act, not only by consenting to it, but by performing it:

and sin, when it is finished: being solicited, is agreed to, and actually committed:

bringeth forth death; as the first sin of man brought death into the world, brought a spiritual death, or moral death upon man, subjected him to a corporeal death, and made him liable to an eternal one; so every sin is deserving of death, death is the just wages of it; yea, even the motions of sin work in men to bring forth fruit unto death. Something like these several gradual steps, in which sin proceeds, is observed by the Jews, and expressed in much the like language, in allegorizing the case of Lot, and his two daughters i;

"the concupiscent soul (or "lust") stirs up the evil figment, and imagines by it, and it cleaves to every evil imagination, שמתעברת, "until it conceives a little", and produces in the heart of man the evil thought, and cleaves to it; and as yet it is in his heart, and is not "finished" to do it, until this desire or lust stirs up the strength of the body, first to cleave to the evil figment, and then תשלום הרעה, "sin is finished"; as it is said, Gen 19:36.''

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

Geneva Bible: Jam 1:15 Then when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth {n) sin: and sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death. ( n ) By sin, in this place, he means a...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Jam 1:1-27 - --1 We are to rejoice under the cross;5 to ask patience of God;13 and in our trials not to impute our weakness, or sins, to him,19 but rather to hearken...

MHCC: Jam 1:12-18 - --It is not every man who suffers, that is blessed; but he who with patience and constancy goes through all difficulties in the way of duty. Afflictions...

Matthew Henry: Jam 1:13-18 - -- I. We are here taught that God is not the author of any man's sin. Whoever they are who raise persecutions against men, and whatever injustice and s...

Barclay: Jam 1:13-15 - --At the back of this passage lies a Jewish way of belief to which all of us are to some extent prone. James is here rebuking the man who puts the blam...

Barclay: Jam 1:13-15 - --From the beginning of time it has been man's first instinct to blame others for his own sin. The ancient writer who wrote the story of the first sin ...

Constable: Jam 1:12-18 - --B. The Options in Trials 1:12-18 Thus far James revealed the value of trials, how God uses them to perfe...

Constable: Jam 1:15 - --3. The progress of temptation 1:15 Lust in this context is the desire to do, have, or be somethi...

College: Jam 1:1-27 - --JAMES 1 I. GREETING (1:1) 1 James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, To the twelve tribes scattered among the nations: Greetings. Ja...

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Commentary -- Other

Critics Ask: Jam 1:15 JAMES 1:15 —If God doesn’t tempt anyone, then why did He tempt Abraham? PROBLEM: The Bible says “God tempted Abraham” ( Gen. 22:1 , KJV ...

Evidence: Jam 1:15 The ungodly hold firmly onto the lighted stick of dynamite called " sin." They relish its flickering flame. Lust may delight the human heart, but its...

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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 1 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Jam 1:1, We are to rejoice under the cross; Jam 1:5, to ask patience of God; Jam 1:13, and in our trials not to impute our weakness, or s...

Poole: James 1 (Chapter Introduction) ARGUMENT That the authority of this Epistle hath been questioned by some anciently, appears plainly by Eusebius and Jerome, who speak suspiciously ...

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 1 (Chapter Introduction) (Jam 1:1-11) How to apply to God under troubles, and how to behave in prosperous and in adverse circumstances. (Jam 1:12-18) To look upon all evil as...

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 1 (Chapter Introduction) After the inscription and salutation (Jam 1:1) Christians are taught how to conduct themselves when under the cross. Several graces and duties 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 1 (Chapter Introduction) Greetings (Jam_1:1) The Jews Throughout The World (Jam_1:1 Continued) The Recipients Of The Letter (Jam_1:1 Continued) Tested And Triumphant (J...

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 1 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JAMES 1 In this chapter, after the inscription and salutation, the apostle instructs the saints he writes to, how to behave under a...

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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