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Text -- James 1:17 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Jam 1:17 - -- Gift ( dosis )
- boon (dōrēma ). Both old substantives from the same original verb (didōmi ), to give. Dosis is the act of giving (endin...
Gift (
- boon (
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Robertson: Jam 1:17 - -- pāsa do / sis aga / thē kai / pān dō / rēma te / leion .
@@Such accidental rhythm occurs occasionally in many writers. Ropes (lik...
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Robertson: Jam 1:17 - -- Coming down ( katabainon ).
Present active neuter singular participle of katabainō agreeing with dōrēma , expanding and explaining anōthen ...
Coming down (
Present active neuter singular participle of
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Robertson: Jam 1:17 - -- From the Father of lights ( apo tou patros tōn phōtōn ).
"Of the lights"(the heavenly bodies). For this use of patēr see Job 38:28 (Father ...
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Robertson: Jam 1:17 - -- With whom ( par' hōi ).
For para (beside) with locative sense for standpoint of God see para tōi theōi (Mar 10:27; Rom 2:11; Rom 9:14; Eph ...
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Robertson: Jam 1:17 - -- Can be no ( ouk eni ).
This old idiom (also in Gal 3:28; Col 3:11) may be merely the original form of en with recessive accent (Winer, Mayor) or a ...
Can be no (
This old idiom (also in Gal 3:28; Col 3:11) may be merely the original form of
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Robertson: Jam 1:17 - -- Variation ( parallagē ).
Old word from parallassō , to make things alternate, here only in N.T. In Aristeas in sense of alternate stones in pavem...
Variation (
Old word from
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Robertson: Jam 1:17 - -- Shadow that is cast by turning ( tropēs aposkiasma ).
Tropē is an old word for "turning"(from trepō to turn), here only in N.T. Aposkiasma ...
Shadow that is cast by turning (
Vincent: Jam 1:17 - -- The first words of this verse form a hexameter line, thus:
Πᾶσα δό |σις ἀγα |θὴ καὶ | πᾶν δῶ |ρημα τ...
The first words of this verse form a hexameter line, thus:
Such verses, or parts of verses, occur occasionally in the New Testament. Sometimes they are quotations from the Greek poets; sometimes the writer's words unconsciously fall into metrical form. Poetical quotations are confined to Paul, Act 17:28; 1Co 15:33; Tit 1:12.
Every good gift and every perfect gift (see Greek above)
The statement that these gifts are from God is in pursuance of the idea that God does not tempt men to evil. The gifts of God are contrasted with the evil springing from man's lust. Two words are used for gifts.
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Vincent: Jam 1:17 - -- Perfect
Enlarges upon good, bringing out more distinctly the moral quality of the gift.
Perfect
Enlarges upon good, bringing out more distinctly the moral quality of the gift.
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Vincent: Jam 1:17 - -- And cometh down ( καταβαῖνον )
A present participle, to be construed with ἄνωθεν ἐστιν , is from above. Lit., is ...
And cometh down (
A present participle, to be construed with
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Vincent: Jam 1:17 - -- Father of lights ( τοῦ πατρὸς τῶν φώτων )
Lit., the lights, by which are meant the heavenly bodies. Compare Psalms 135...
Father of lights (
Lit., the lights, by which are meant the heavenly bodies. Compare Psalms 135:7 (Sept.); and Jeremiah 4:23 (Sept.). God is called " the Father of the lights," as being their creator and maintainer. Compare Job 38:28; Psa 8:3; Amo 5:8.
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Vincent: Jam 1:17 - -- Is no variableness ( ἔνι )
Abbreviated from ἔνεστι , is in. Stronger than the simple is , and denoting inherence or indwe...
Is no variableness (
Abbreviated from
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Vincent: Jam 1:17 - -- Variableness ( παραλλαγὴ )
Better, Rev., variation. The word is not used, as some suppose, in a technical, astronomical sense, which...
Variableness (
Better, Rev., variation. The word is not used, as some suppose, in a technical, astronomical sense, which James' readers would not have understood, but in the simple sense of change in the degree or intensity of light, such as is manifested by the heavenly bodies. Compare Plato, " Republic," vii., 530: " Will he (the astronomer) not think that the heaven and the things in heaven are framed by the Creator in the most perfect manner? But when he reflects that the proportions of night and day, or of both, to the month, or of the month to the year, or of the other stars to these and to one another, are of the visible and material, he will never fall into the error of supposing that they are eternal and liable to no deviation (
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Vincent: Jam 1:17 - -- Shadow of turning ( τροπῆς ἀποσκίασμα )
This is popularly understood to mean that there is in God not the faintest hint o...
Shadow of turning (
This is popularly understood to mean that there is in God not the faintest hint or shade of change, like the phrase, a shadow of suspicion. But the Greek has no such idiom, and that is not James' meaning. Rev., rightly, renders, shadow that is cast by turning; referring still to the heavenly orbs, which cast shadows in their revolution, as when the moon turns her dark side to us, or the sun is eclipsed by the body of the moon.
Whatever tends to holiness.
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Wesley: Jam 1:17 - -- The appellation of Father is here used with peculiar propriety. It follows, "he begat us." He is the Father of all light, material or spiritual, in th...
The appellation of Father is here used with peculiar propriety. It follows, "he begat us." He is the Father of all light, material or spiritual, in the kingdom of grace and of glory.
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Wesley: Jam 1:17 - -- in his will. He infallibly discerns all good and evil; and invariably loves one, and hates the other. There is, in both the Greek words, a metaphor ta...
in his will. He infallibly discerns all good and evil; and invariably loves one, and hates the other. There is, in both the Greek words, a metaphor taken from the stars, particularly proper where the Father of lights is mentioned. Both 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 Is any such vicissitude, it is in ourselves, not in him.
JFB: Jam 1:17 - -- Not the same words in Greek: the first, the act of giving, or the gift in its initiatory stage; the second, the thing given, the boon, when perfected....
Not the same words in Greek: the first, the act of giving, or the gift in its initiatory stage; the second, the thing given, the boon, when perfected. As the "good gift" stands in contrast to "sin" in its initiatory stage (Jam 1:15), so the "perfect boon" is in contrast to "sin when it is finished," bringing forth death (2Pe 1:3).
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JFB: Jam 1:17 - -- Creator of the lights in heaven (compare Job 38:28 [ALFORD]; Gen 4:20-21; Heb 12:9). This accords with the reference to the changes in the light of th...
Creator of the lights in heaven (compare Job 38:28 [ALFORD]; Gen 4:20-21; Heb 12:9). This accords with the reference to the changes in the light of the heavenly bodies alluded to in the end of the verse. Also, Father of the spiritual lights in the kingdom of grace and glory [BENGEL]. These were typified by the supernatural lights on the breastplate of the high priest, the Urim. As "God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all" (1Jo 1:5), He cannot in any way be the Author of sin (Jam 1:13), which is darkness (Joh 3:19).
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JFB: Jam 1:17 - -- (Mal 3:6). None of the alternations of light and shadow which the physical "lights" undergo, and which even the spiritual lights are liable to, as co...
(Mal 3:6). None of the alternations of light and shadow which the physical "lights" undergo, and which even the spiritual lights are liable to, as compared with God. "Shadow of turning," literally, the dark "shadow-mark" cast from one of the heavenly bodies, arising from its "turning" or revolution, for example, when the moon is eclipsed by the shadow of the earth, and the sun by the body of the moon. BENGEL makes a climax, "no variation--not even the shadow of a turning"; the former denoting a change in the understanding; the latter, in the will.
Clarke: Jam 1:17 - -- Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above - Whatever is good is from God; whatever is evil is from man himself. As from the sun, which is...
Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above - Whatever is good is from God; whatever is evil is from man himself. As from the sun, which is the father or fountain of light, all light comes; so from God, who is the infinite Fountain, Father, and Source of good, all good comes. And whatever can be called good, or pure, or light, or excellence of any kind, must necessarily spring from him, as he is the only source of all goodness and perfection
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Clarke: Jam 1:17 - -- With whom is no variableness - The sun, the fountain of light to the whole of our system, may be obscured by clouds; or the different bodies which r...
With whom is no variableness - The sun, the fountain of light to the whole of our system, may be obscured by clouds; or the different bodies which revolve round him, and particularly the earth, may from time to time suffer a diminution of his light by the intervention of other bodies eclipsing his splendor; and his apparent tropical variation, shadow of turning; when, for instance, in our winter, he has declined to the southern tropic, the tropic of Capricorn, so that our days are greatly shortened, and we suffer in consequence a great diminution both of light and heat. But there is nothing of this kind with God; he is never affected by the changes and chances to which mortal things are exposed. He occupies no one place in the universe; he fills the heavens and the earth, is everywhere present, sees all, pervades all, and shines upon all; dispenses his blessings equally to the universe; hates nothing that he has made; is loving to every man; and his tender mercies are over all his works: therefore he is not affected with evil, nor does he tempt, or influence to sin, any man. The sun, the source of light, rises and sets with a continual variety as to the times of both, and the length of the time in which, in the course of three hundred and sixty-five days, five hours, forty-eight minutes, and forty-eight seconds, it has its revolution through the ecliptic, or rather the earth has its revolution round the sun; and by which its light and heat are, to the inhabitants of the earth, either constantly increasing or decreasing: but God, the Creator and Preserver of all things, is eternally the same, dispensing his good and perfect gifts - his earthly and heavenly blessings, to all his creatures, ever unclouded in himself, and ever nilling Evil and willing Good. Men may hide themselves from his light by the works of darkness, as owls and bats hide themselves in dens and caves of the earth during the prevalency of the solar light: but his good will to his creatures is permanent; he wills not the death of a sinner, but rather that he may come unto him and live; and no man walks in wretchedness or misery but he who will not come unto God that he may have life. See diagram and notes at the end of this chapter.
Calvin -> Jam 1:17
Calvin: Jam 1:17 - -- This reasoning is far different from that of Plato, who maintained that no calamities are sent on men by God, because he is good; for though it is ju...
This reasoning is far different from that of Plato, who maintained that no calamities are sent on men by God, because he is good; for though it is just that the crimes of men should be punished by God, yet it is not right, with regard to him, to regard among evils that punishment which he justly inflicts. Plato, indeed, was ignorant; but James, leaving to God his right and office of punishing, only removes blame from him. This passage teaches us, that we ought to be so affected by God’s innumerable blessings, which we daily receive from his hand, as to think of nothing but of his glory; and that we should abhor whatever comes to our mind, or is suggested by others, which is not compatible with his praise.
God is called the Father of lights, as possessing all excellency and the highest dignity. And when he immediately adds, that there is in him no shadow of turning, he continues the metaphor; so that we may not measure the brightness of God by the irradiation of the sun which appears to us. 107
Defender: Jam 1:17 - -- God's first recorded words were "Let there be light" (Gen 1:3). He is the "Father of lights," but He did not create light, for "God is light" (1Jo 1:5...
God's first recorded words were "Let there be light" (Gen 1:3). He is the "Father of lights," but He did not create light, for "God is light" (1Jo 1:5) and is "dwelling in the light" (1Ti 6:16). In fact, He had to "create darkness" but only had to "form the light" (Isa 45:7). Scientifically speaking, as far as the physical creation is concerned, all matter is essentially energy in motion, and light is the most basic form of energy.
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Defender: Jam 1:17 - -- This attribute of the Father of lights - that is, no variableness - is suggested by the most basic and universal law of science, the law of conservati...
This attribute of the Father of lights - that is, no variableness - is suggested by the most basic and universal law of science, the law of conservation of energy. God can "form the light" into many different kinds of energy, but the total quantity is conserved, neither being augmented by creation nor decreased by annihilation. "Whatsoever God doeth, it shall be forever: nothing can be put to it, nor anything taken from it" (Ecc 3:14).
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Defender: Jam 1:17 - -- The word "turning" is from the Greek trope. When combined with the Greek for "in" (that is, en), it becomes entrope, which means in the Greek "confusi...
The word "turning" is from the Greek
TSK -> Jam 1:17
TSK: Jam 1:17 - -- good : Jam 1:5, Jam 3:15, Jam 3:17; Gen 41:16, Gen 41:38, Gen 41:39; Exo 4:11, Exo 4:12, Exo 31:3-6, Exo 36:1, Exo 36:2; Num 11:17, Num 11:25; 1Ch 22:...
good : Jam 1:5, Jam 3:15, Jam 3:17; Gen 41:16, Gen 41:38, Gen 41:39; Exo 4:11, Exo 4:12, Exo 31:3-6, Exo 36:1, Exo 36:2; Num 11:17, Num 11:25; 1Ch 22:12, 1Ch 29:19; 2Ch 1:11, 2Ch 1:12; Pro 2:6; Isa 28:26; Dan 2:21, Dan 2:22, Dan 2:27-30; Mat 7:11, Mat 11:25, Mat 11:26, Mat 13:11, Mat 13:12; Luk 11:13; Joh 3:27; Act 5:31, Act 11:18; Rom 6:23, Rom 11:30, Rom 12:6-8; 1Co 4:7, 1Co 12:4-12; Eph 2:3-5, Eph 2:8, Eph 4:8-11; Phi 1:29; Tit 3:3-5; 1Jo 4:10, 1Jo 5:11, 1Jo 5:12
from the : Gen 1:2-5, Gen 1:14, Gen 1:15; Deu 4:19; Psa 19:1-8, Psa 84:11; Isa 45:7, Isa 60:19; Joh 1:9; Joh 8:12; 2Co 4:6; Eph 1:18; 1Jo 1:5; Rev 21:23, Rev 22:5
no variableness : Num 23:19; 1Sa 15:29; Psa 122:6; Isa 46:10; Mal 3:6; Rom 11:29; Heb 1:11, Heb 1:12, Heb 13:8
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jam 1:17
Barnes: Jam 1:17 - -- Every good gift and every perfect gift - The difference between good and perfect here, it is not easy to mark accurately. It may be that the fo...
Every good gift and every perfect gift - The difference between good and perfect here, it is not easy to mark accurately. It may be that the former means that which is benevolent in its character and tendency; the latter that which is entire, where there is nothing even apparently wanting to complete it; where it can be regarded as good as a whole and in all its parts. The general sense is, that God is the author of all good. Every thing that is good on the earth we are to trace to him; evil has another origin. Compare Mat 13:28.
Is from above - From God, who is often represented as dwelling above - in heaven.
And cometh down from the Father of lights - From God, the source and fountain of all light. Light, in the Scriptures, is the emblem ot knowledge, purity, happiness; and God is often represented as light. Compare 1Jo 1:5. Notes, 1Ti 6:16. There is, doubtless, an allusion here to the heavenly bodies, among which the sun is the most brilliant. It appears to us to be the great original fountain of light, diffusing its radiance overall worlds. No cloud, no darkness seems to come from the sun, but it pours its rich effulgence on the farthest part of the universe. So it is with God. There is no darkness in him 1Jo 1:5; and all the moral light and purity which there is in the universe is to be traced to him. The word Father here is used in a sense which is common in Hebrew (Compare the notes at Mat 1:1) as denoting that which is the source of anything, or that from which anything proceeds. Compare the notes at Isa 9:6.
With whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning - The design here is clearly to contrast God with the sun in a certain respect. As the source of light, there is a strong resemblance. But in the sun there are certain changes. It does not shine on all parts of the earth at the same time, nor in the same manner all the year. It rises and sets; it crosses the line, and seems to go far to the south, and sends its rays obliquely on the earth; then it ascends to the north, recrosses the line, and sends its rays obliquely on southern regions. By its revolutions it produces the changes of the seasons, and makes a constant variety on the earth in the productions of different climes. In this respect God is not indeed like the sun. With him there is no variableness, not even the appearance of turning. He is always the same, at all seasons of the year, and in all ages; there is no change in his character, his mode of being, his purposes and plans. What he was millions of ages before the worlds were made, he is now; what he is now, he will be countless millions of ages hence. We may be sure that whatever changes there may be in human affairs; whatever reverses we may undergo; whatever oceans we may cross, or whatever mountains we may climb, or in whatever worlds we may hereafter take up our abode, God is the same. The word which is here rendered "variableness"(
Poole -> Jam 1:17
Poole: Jam 1:17 - -- Every good gift Greek, giving; and so it may be distinct from gift in the next clause; to show, that whereas men sometimes give good gifts in all e...
Every good gift Greek, giving; and so it may be distinct from gift in the next clause; to show, that whereas men sometimes give good gifts in all evil way, and with an evil mind, God’ s giving, as well as gift, is always good; and therefore when we receive any thing of him, we should look not only to the thing itself, but to his bounty and goodness in giving it. Or, it may be rendered as our translators do, gift, and so the word is sometimes used by profane writer’ s themselves; and then, though it may be implied, that all good gifts, and of all kinds, of nature and of grace, are from God, yet the apostle’ s design in this place being to prove that God is not the author of sin, good gifts may most fairly be understood the best gifts, those of grace, (spiritual blessings, Eph 1:3 ), such being contrary to sin, and destructive of it, in one of which he instanceth, viz. regeneration, Jam 1:18 .
And every perfect gift the highest degree of good gifts, those that perfect us most; to intimate, that all the parts and steps of spiritual life, from the first beginning of grace in regeneration to the consummation of it in glory, are of God.
Is from above i.e. from heaven, Joh 3:27,31 ; and heaven is put for God that dwells there, Luk 15:21 .
And cometh down from the Father the Creator, Author, or First Cause, as Heb 12:9 ; it is spoken after the manner of the Hebrews: see Gen 4:20,21 .
Of lights God is the author of all perfection, and so of corporeal light; but here we are to understand spiritual light, the light of knowledge, faith, holiness, as opposed to the darkness of ignorance, unbelief, sin; of which he cannot be the author.
With whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning: he here sets forth God as essentially and immutably good, and the Father of lights, by allusion to the sun, the fountain of corporeal light, and makes use of terms borrowed from astronomy. The sun, though it scattereth its beams every where, yet is not without its changes, parallaxes, and diversities of aspects, not only sometimes clear and sometimes eclipsed, but one while in the east, another in the south, then in the west; nor without its turnings in its annual course from tropic to tropic, (to which the Greek word here used seems to allude), its various accesses and recesses, by reason of which it casts different shadows: but God is always the same, like himself, constant in the emanations of his goodness, without casting any dark shadow of evil, which might infer a change in him.
Haydock -> Jam 1:16-17
Haydock: Jam 1:16-17 - -- Do not err, nor deceive yourselves by yielding to temptation; beg God his supporting grace, for every good gift is from him. (Witham)
Do not err, nor deceive yourselves by yielding to temptation; beg God his supporting grace, for every good gift is from him. (Witham)
Gill -> Jam 1:17
Gill: Jam 1:17 - -- Every good gift and every perfect gift,.... Whether of nature, providence, or grace, and especially the latter; spiritual gifts given along with Chris...
Every good gift and every perfect gift,.... Whether of nature, providence, or grace, and especially the latter; spiritual gifts given along with Christ, or spiritual blessings in him; every such gift is; as the Vulgate Latin version reads, the "best" gift; better than those which only relate to the present life: and is "perfect" such as the gifts of righteousness, remission of sins, adoption, regeneration, and eternal life. The Jews say k, that the good things of this world are not truly good, in comparison of the good things of the world to come, and are not
and cometh down from the Father of lights; or author of lights; of all corporeal light; as the sun, moon, and stars; of all natural, rational, and moral light, in angels and men; of all spiritual light, or the light of grace in regenerate persons; and of eternal light, the light of glory in the spirits of just then made perfect:
with whom is no variableness, nor shadow of turning: as there is in that great luminary, the sun in the firmament, which has its parallaxes, eclipses, and turnings, and casts its shadow; it rises and sets, appears and disappears every day; and it comes out of one tropic, and enters into another at certain seasons of the year: but with God, who is light itself, and in him is no darkness at all, there is no change, nor anything like it; he is changeable in his nature, perfections, purposes, promises, and gifts; wherefore he being holy, cannot turn to that which is evil; nor can he, who is the fountain of light, be the cause of darkness, or admit of any in him; and since every good and perfect gift comes from him, evil cannot proceed from him, nor can he tempt any to it.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Jam 1:17 Grk “variation or shadow of turning” (referring to the motions of heavenly bodies causing variations of light and darkness).
Geneva Bible -> Jam 1:17
Geneva Bible: Jam 1:17 Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the ( o ) Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither ( p )shad...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jam 1:1-27
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
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
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 1:16-18
Barclay: Jam 1:16-18 - --Once again James stresses the great truth that every gift that God sends is good. Jam 1:17might well be translated: "All giving is good." That is t...
Constable -> Jam 1:12-18; Jam 1:16-18
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...
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