
Text -- James 4:1-3 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Jam 4:1 - -- Whence ( pothen ).
This old interrogative adverb (here twice) asks for the origin of wars and fights. James is full of interrogatives, like all diatr...
Whence (
This old interrogative adverb (here twice) asks for the origin of wars and fights. James is full of interrogatives, like all diatribes.

Wars (
- fightings (

Robertson: Jam 4:1 - -- War ( polemos , old word, Mat 24:6)
pictures the chronic state or campaign, while machē (also old word, 2Co 7:5) presents the separate conflicts o...
War (
pictures the chronic state or campaign, while

Robertson: Jam 4:1 - -- Of your pleasures ( ek tōn hēdonōn humōn ).
Old word from hēdomai . Ablative case here after ek , "out of your sinful, sensual lusts,"the d...
Of your pleasures (
Old word from

Robertson: Jam 4:1 - -- That war ( tōn strateuomenōn ).
Present middle articular participle (ablative case agreeing with hēdonōn ) of strateuō , to carry on a cam...
That war (
Present middle articular participle (ablative case agreeing with

Robertson: Jam 4:2 - -- Ye lust ( epithumeite ).
Present active indicative of epithumeō , old word (from epi , thumos , yearning passion for), not necessarily evil as cle...
Ye lust (
Present active indicative of

Robertson: Jam 4:2 - -- Ye kill and covet ( phoneuete kai zēloute ).
Present active indicatives of phoneuō (old verb from phoneus , murderer) and zēloō , to desire...
Ye kill and covet (
Present active indicatives of

Robertson: Jam 4:2 - -- Ye have not, because ye ask not ( ouk echete dia to mē aiteisthai humas ).
James refers again to ouk echete (ye do not have) in Jam 4:2. Such sin...
Ye have not, because ye ask not (
James refers again to

Robertson: Jam 4:3 - -- Because ye ask amiss ( dioti kakōs aiteisthe ).
Here the indirect middle does make sense, "ye ask for yourselves"and that is "evilly"or amiss (kako...
Because ye ask amiss (
Here the indirect middle does make sense, "ye ask for yourselves"and that is "evilly"or amiss (

Robertson: Jam 4:3 - -- That ye may spend it in your pleasures ( hina en tais hēdonais humōn dapanēsēte ).
Purpose clause with hina and the first aorist subjunctiv...
Vincent: Jam 4:1 - -- Lusts ( ἡδονῶν )
Lit., pleasures, as Rev. Properly, sensual pleasures. The sinful pleasures are the outgrowths of the lusts, Jam 4:...
Lusts (
Lit., pleasures, as Rev. Properly, sensual pleasures. The sinful pleasures are the outgrowths of the lusts, Jam 4:2.

Vincent: Jam 4:1 - -- That war ( στρατευομένων )
The thought of wars and rightings is carried into the figurative description of the sensuality which ar...
That war (
The thought of wars and rightings is carried into the figurative description of the sensuality which arrays its forces and carries on its campaign in the members. The verb does not imply mere fighting, but all that is included in military service. A remarkable parallel occurs in Plato, " Phaedo," 66: " For whence come wars and rightings and factions? Whence but from the body and the lusts of the body?" Compare 1Pe 2:11; Rom 7:23.


Vincent: Jam 4:2 - -- Desire to have ( ζηλοῦτε )
Rev., covet, and are jealous, in margin. See on Jam 3:14.
Desire to have (
Rev., covet, and are jealous, in margin. See on Jam 3:14.

Vincent: Jam 4:3 - -- Amiss ( κακῶς )
Lit., evilly: with evil intent, as explained by the following sentence.
Amiss (
Lit., evilly: with evil intent, as explained by the following sentence.

Vincent: Jam 4:3 - -- Consume it upon ( δαπανησήτε ἐν )
More correctly, as Rev., spend it in. The sense is not lay out expense upon your pleasures, ...
Consume it upon (
More correctly, as Rev., spend it in. The sense is not lay out expense upon your pleasures, but sp end in the exercise of; under the dominion of.
Wesley: Jam 4:1 - -- Quarrels and wars among you, quite opposite to this peace? Is it not from your pleasures - Your desires of earthly pleasures.
Quarrels and wars among you, quite opposite to this peace? Is it not from your pleasures - Your desires of earthly pleasures.

Wesley: Jam 4:1 - -- Here is the first seat of the war. Hence proceeds the war of man with man, king with king, nation with nation.
Here is the first seat of the war. Hence proceeds the war of man with man, king with king, nation with nation.

Wesley: Jam 4:2 - -- In your heart, for "he that hateth his brother is a murderer." Ye fight and war - That is, furiously strive and contend.
In your heart, for "he that hateth his brother is a murderer." Ye fight and war - That is, furiously strive and contend.

And no marvel; for a man full of evil desire, of envy or hatred, cannot pray.
JFB: Jam 4:1 - -- The cause of quarrels is often sought in external circumstances, whereas internal lusts are the true origin.
The cause of quarrels is often sought in external circumstances, whereas internal lusts are the true origin.

JFB: Jam 4:1 - -- Contrasted with the "peace" of heavenly wisdom. "Fightings" are the active carrying on of "wars." The best authorities have a second "whence" before "...
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.

JFB: Jam 4:1 - -- Literally, "pleasures," that is, the lusts which prompt you to "desire" (see on Jam 4:2) pleasures; whence you seek self at the cost of your neighbor,...
Literally, "pleasures," that is, the lusts which prompt you to "desire" (see on Jam 4:2) pleasures; whence you seek self at the cost of your neighbor, and hence flow "fightings."

JFB: Jam 4:1 - -- "campaign, as an army of soldiers encamped within" [ALFORD] the soul; tumultuously war against the interests of your fellow men, while lusting to adva...
"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.

JFB: Jam 4:2 - -- A different Greek word from that in Jam 4:1. "Ye desire"; literally, "ye set your mind (or heart) on" an object.
A different Greek word from that in Jam 4:1. "Ye desire"; literally, "ye set your mind (or heart) on" an object.

JFB: Jam 4:2 - -- 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...
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.

JFB: Jam 4:2 - -- 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...
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, Jam 4:1, "Whence come wars and fightings?"

JFB: Jam 4:3 - -- Some of them are supposed to say in objection, But we do "ask" (pray); compare Jam 4:2. James replies, It is not enough to ask for good things, but we...
Some of them are supposed to say in objection, But we do "ask" (pray); compare Jam 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 Jam 1:5 with Mat 6:31-32. If ye prayed aright, all your proper 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.
Clarke: Jam 4:1 - -- From whence come wars and fightings - About the time in which St. James wrote, whether we follow the earlier or the later date of this epistle, we f...
From whence come wars and fightings - About the time in which St. James wrote, whether we follow the earlier or the later date of this epistle, we find, according to the accounts given by Josephus, Bell. Jud. lib. ii. c. 17, etc., that the Jews, under pretense of defending their religion, and procuring that liberty to which they believed themselves entitled, made various insurrections in Judea against the Romans, which occasioned much bloodshed and misery to their nation. The factions also, into which the Jews were split, had violent contentions among themselves, in which they massacred and plundered each other. In the provinces, likewise, the Jews became very turbulent; particularly in Alexandria, and different other parts of Egypt, of Syria, and other places, where they made war against the heathens, killing many, and being massacred in their turn. They were led to these outrages by the opinion that they were bound by their law to extirpate idolatry, and to kill all those who would not become proselytes to Judaism. These are probably the wars and fightings to which St. James alludes; and which they undertook rather from a principle of covetousness than from any sincere desire to convert the heathen. See Macknight

Clarke: Jam 4:1 - -- Come they not hence - of your lusts - This was the principle from which these Jewish contentions and predatory wars proceeded, and the principle fro...
Come they not hence - of your lusts - This was the principle from which these Jewish contentions and predatory wars proceeded, and the principle from which all the wars that have afflicted and desolated the world have proceeded. One nation or king covets another’ s territory or property; and, as conquest is supposed to give right to all the possessions gained by it, they kill, slay, burn, and destroy, till one is overcome or exhausted, and then the other makes his own terms; or, several neighboring potentates fall upon one that is weak; and, after murdering one half of the people, partition among themselves the fallen king’ s territory; just as the Austrians, Prussians, and Russians have done with the kingdom of Poland! - a stain upon their justice and policy which no lapse of time can ever wash out
These wars and fightings could not be attributed to the Christians in that time; for, howsoever fallen or degenerate, they had no power to raise contentions; and no political consequence to enable them to resist their enemies by the edge of the sword, or resistance of any kind.

Ye lust, and have not - Ye are ever covetous, and ever poor

Clarke: Jam 4:2 - -- Ye kill, and, desire to have - Ye are constantly engaged in insurrections and predatory wars, and never gain any advantage
Ye kill, and, desire to have - Ye are constantly engaged in insurrections and predatory wars, and never gain any advantage

Clarke: Jam 4:2 - -- Ye have not, because ye ask not - Ye get no especial blessing from God as your fathers did, because ye do not pray. Worldly good is your god; ye lea...
Ye have not, because ye ask not - Ye get no especial blessing from God as your fathers did, because ye do not pray. Worldly good is your god; ye leave no stone unturned in order to get it; and as ye ask nothing from God but to consume it upon your evil desires and propensities, your prayers are not heard.

Clarke: Jam 4:3 - -- Ye ask, and receive not - Some think that this refers to their prayers for the conversion of the heathen; and on the pretense that they were not con...
Ye ask, and receive not - Some think that this refers to their prayers for the conversion of the heathen; and on the pretense that they were not converted thus; they thought it lawful to extirpate them and possess their goods

Clarke: Jam 4:3 - -- Ye ask amiss - Κακως αιτεισθε· Ye ask evilly, wickedly. Ye have not the proper dispositions of prayer, and ye have an improper objec...
Ye ask amiss -
Calvin: Jam 4:1 - -- 1.From whence come wars. As he had spoken of peace, and had reminded them that vices are to be exterminated in such a way as to preserve peace, he no...
1.From whence come wars. As he had spoken of peace, and had reminded them that vices are to be exterminated in such a way as to preserve peace, he now comes to their contentions, by which they created confusion among themselves; and he shews that these arose from their invidious desires and lusts, rather than from a zeal for what was just and right; for if every one observed moderation, they would not have disturbed and annoyed one another. They had their hot conflicts, because their lusts were allowed to prevail unchecked.
It hence appears, that greater peace would have been among them, had every one abstained from doing wrong to others; but the vices which prevailed among them were so many attendants armed to excite contentions. He calls our faculties members. He takes lusts as designating all illicit and lustful desires or propensities which cannot be satisfied without doing injury to others.

Calvin: Jam 4:2 - -- 2.Ye lust, or covet, and have not. He seems to intimate that the soul of man is insatiable, when he indulges wicked lusts; and truly it is so; for h...
2.Ye lust, or covet, and have not. He seems to intimate that the soul of man is insatiable, when he indulges wicked lusts; and truly it is so; for he who suffers his sinful propensities to rule uncontrolled, will know no end to his lust. Were even the world given to him, he would wish other worlds to be created for him. It thus happens, that men seek torments which exceed the cruelty of all executioners. For that saying of Horace is true:
The tyrants of Sicily found no torment greater than envy. 129
Some copies have

Calvin: Jam 4:3 - -- 3.Ye seek and receive not. He goes farther: though they sought, yet they were deservedly denied; because they wished to make God the minister of thei...
3.Ye seek and receive not. He goes farther: though they sought, yet they were deservedly denied; because they wished to make God the minister of their own lusts. For they set no bounds to their wishes, as he had commanded; but gave unbridled license to themselves, so as to ask those things of which man, conscious of what is right, ought especially to be ashamed. Pliny somewhere ridicules this impudence, that men so wickedly abuse the ears of God. The less tolerable is such a thing in Christians, who have had the rule of prayer given them by their heavenly Master.
And doubtless there appears to be in us no reverence for God, no fear of him, in short, no regard for him, when we dare to ask of him what even our own conscience does not approve. James meant briefly this, — that our desires ought to be bridled: and the way of bridling them is to subject them to the will of God. And he also teaches us, that what we in moderation wish, we ought to seek from God himself; which if it be done, we shall be preserved from wicked contentions, from fraud and violence, and from doing any injury to others.
Defender -> Jam 4:3
Defender: Jam 4:3 - -- The problem of unanswered prayer, in spite of Jesus' apparently unlimited promise of answered prayer, is involved in the implications of prayers made ...
The problem of unanswered prayer, in spite of Jesus' apparently unlimited promise of answered prayer, is involved in the implications of prayers made "in my name" (Joh 14:14). One of the implied conditions, as indicated here, is that the prayer be unselfish otherwise it would not really be in His name, for He would never pray such a prayer (other conditions are noted in 1Jo 5:14; Jam 1:5-7). One's motive in praying must be to the glory of God - that is, for God to get the glory from the answer."
TSK: Jam 4:1 - -- whence : Jam 3:14-18
fightings : or, brawlings
come they : Jam 1:14; Gen 4:5-8; Jer 17:9; Mat 15:19; Mar 7:21-23; Joh 8:44; Rom 8:7; 1Ti 6:4-10; Tit 3...
whence : Jam 3:14-18
fightings : or, brawlings
come they : Jam 1:14; Gen 4:5-8; Jer 17:9; Mat 15:19; Mar 7:21-23; Joh 8:44; Rom 8:7; 1Ti 6:4-10; Tit 3:3; 1Pe 1:14, 1Pe 2:11, 1Pe 4:2, 1Pe 4:3; 2Pe 2:18, 2Pe 3:3; 1Jo 2:15-17; Jud 1:16-18
lusts : or, pleasures, Jam 4:3

TSK: Jam 4:2 - -- lust : Jam 5:1-5; Pro 1:19; Ecc 4:8; Hab 2:5; 1Ti 6:9, 1Ti 6:10
kill : or, envy
because : Jam 1:5; Isa 7:12; Mat 7:7, Mat 7:8; Luk 11:9-13; Joh 4:10, ...

TSK: Jam 4:3 - -- and : Jam 1:6, Jam 1:7; Job 27:8-10, Job 35:12; Psa 18:41, Psa 66:18, Psa 66:19; Pro 1:28, Pro 15:8; Pro 21:13, Pro 21:27; Isa 1:15, Isa 1:16; Jer 11:...
and : Jam 1:6, Jam 1:7; Job 27:8-10, Job 35:12; Psa 18:41, Psa 66:18, Psa 66:19; Pro 1:28, Pro 15:8; Pro 21:13, Pro 21:27; Isa 1:15, Isa 1:16; Jer 11:11, Jer 11:14, Jer 14:12; Mic 3:4; Zec 7:13; Mat 20:22; Mar 10:38; 1Jo 3:22, 1Jo 5:14
ye may : Luk 15:13, Luk 15:30, Luk 16:1, Luk 16:2
lusts : or, pleasures, Jam 4:1

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Jam 4:1 - -- From whence come wars and fightings among you? - Margin, "brawlings."The reference is to strifes and contentions of all kinds; and the question...
From whence come wars and fightings among you? - Margin, "brawlings."The reference is to strifes and contentions of all kinds; and the question, then, as it is now, was an important one, what was their source or origin? The answer is given in the succeeding part of the verse. Some have supposed that the apostle refers here to the contests and seditions existing among the Jews, which afterwards broke out in rebellion against the Roman authority, and which led to the overthrow of the Jewish nation. But the more probable reference is to domestic broils, and to the strifes of sects and parties; to the disputes which were carried on among the Jewish people, and which perhaps led to scenes of violence, and to popular outbreaks among themselves. When the apostle says "among you,"it is not necessary to suppose that he refers to those who were members of the Christian church as actually engaged in these strifes, though he was writing to such; but he speaks of them as a part of the Jewish people, and refers to the contentions which prevailed among them as a people - contentions in which those who were Christian converts were in great danger of participating, by being drawn into their controversies, and partaking of the spirit of strife which existed among their countrymen. It is known that such a spirit of contention prevailed among the Jews at that time in an eminent degree, and it was well to put those among them who professed to be Christians on their guard against such a spirit, by stating the causes of all wars and contentions. The solution which the apostle has given of the causes of the strifes prevailing then, will apply substantially to all the wars which have ever existed on the earth.
Come they not hence, even of your lusts? - Is not this the true source of all war and contention? The word rendered "lusts"is in the margin rendered "pleasures."This is the usual meaning of the word (
That war in your members - The word "member"(

Barnes: Jam 4:2 - -- Ye lust, and have not - That is, you wish to have something which you do not now possess, and to which you have no just claim, and this prompts...
Ye lust, and have not - That is, you wish to have something which you do not now possess, and to which you have no just claim, and this prompts to the effort to obtain it by force. You desire extension of territory, fame, booty, the means of luxurious indulgence, or of magnificence and grandeur, and this leads to contest and bloodshed. These are the causes of wars on the large scale among nations and of the contentions and strifes of individuals. The general reason is, that others have that which we have not, and which we desire to have; and not content with endeavoring to obtain it, if we can, in a peaceful and honest manner, and not willing to content ourselves without its possession, we resolve to secure it by force. Socrates is reported by Plato to have said on the day of his death, "nothing else but the body and its desires cause wars, seditions, and contests of every kind; for all wars arise through the possession of wealth."
Phaedo of Plato, by Taylor, London, 1793, p. 158. The system of wars in general, therefore, has been a system of great robberies, no more honest or honorable than the purposes of the foot-pad, and more dignified only because it involves greater skill and talent. It has been said that "to kill one man makes a murderer, to kill many makes a hero."So it may be said, that to steal a horse, or to rob a house, makes a man a thief or burglar; to fire a dwelling subjects him to the punishment of arson; but to plunder kingdoms and provinces, and to cause cities, towns, and hamlets to be wrapped in flames, makes an illustrious conqueror, and gives a title to what is deemed a bright page in history. The one enrolls the name among felons, and consigns the perpetrator to the dungeon or the gibbet; the other, accompanied with no more justice, and with the same spirit, sends the name down to future times as immortal. Yet in the two the all-discerning eye of God may see no difference except in the magnitude of the crime, and in the extent of the injury which has been inflicted. In his way, and according to the measure of his ability, the felon who ends his life in a dungeon, or on the gibbet, is as worthy of grateful and honored remembrance as the conqueror triumphing in the spoils of desolated empires.
Ye kill - Margin, or "envy."The marginal reading "envy"has been introduced from some doubt as to the correct reading of the text, whether it should be
Desire to have - That is, what is in the possession of others.
And cannot obtain - By any fair and honest means; by purchase or negotiation: and this leads to bloody conquest. All wars might have been avoided if men had been content with what they had, or could rightfully obtain, and had not desired to have what was in the possession of others, which they could not obtain by honest and honorable means. Every war might have been avoided by fair and honorable negociation.
Ye fight and war, yet ye have not, because ye ask not - Notwithstanding you engage in contentions and strifes, you do not obtain what you seek after. If you sought that from God which you truly need, you would obtain it, for he would bestow upon you all that is really necessary. But you seek it by contention and strife, and you have no security of obtaining it. He who seeks to gain anything by war seeks it in an unjust manner, and cannot depend on the divine help and blessing. The true way of obtaining anything which we really need is to seek it from God by prayer, and then to make use of just and fair means of obtaining it, by industry and honesty, and by a due regard for the rights of others. Thus sought, we shall obtain it if it would be for our good; if it is withheld, it will be because it is best for us that it should not be ours. In all the wars which have been waged on the earth, whether for the settlement of disputed questions, for the adjustment of boundaries, for the vindication of violated rights, or for the permanent extension of empire, how rare has it been that the object which prompted to the war has been secured! The course of events has shown that indisposed as men are to do justice, there is much more probability of obtaining the object by patient negotiation than there is by going to war.

Barnes: Jam 4:3 - -- Ye ask, and receive not - That is, some of you ask, or you ask on some occasions. Though seeking in general what you desire by strife, and with...
Ye ask, and receive not - That is, some of you ask, or you ask on some occasions. Though seeking in general what you desire by strife, and without regard to the rights of others, yet you sometimes pray. It is not uncommon for men who go to war to pray, or to procure the services of a chaplain to pray for them. It sometimes happens that the covetous and the quarrelsome; that those who live to wrong others, and who are fond of litigation, pray. Such men may be professors of religion. They keep up a form of worship in their families. They pray for success in their worldly engagements, though those engagements are all based on covetousness. Instead of seeking property that they may glorify God, and do good; that they may relieve the poor and distressed; that they may be the patrons of learning, philanthropy, and religion, they do it that they may live in splendor, and be able to pamper their lusts. It is not indeed very common that persons with such ends and aims of life pray, but they sometimes do it; for, alas! there are many professors of religion who have no higher aims than these, and not a few such professors feel that consistency demands that they should observe some form of prayer. If such persons do not receive what they ask for, if they are not prospered in their plans, they should not set it down as evidence that God does not hear prayer, but as evidence that their prayers are offered for improper objects, or with improper motives.
Because ye ask amiss - Ye do it with a view to self-indulgence and carnal gratification.
That you may consume it upon your lusts - Margin, "pleasures."This is the same word which is used in Jam 4:1, and rendered lusts. The reference is to sensual gratifications, and the word would include all that comes under the name of sensual pleasure, or carnal appetite. It was not that they might have a decent and comfortable living, which would not be improper to desire, but that they might have the means of luxurious dress and living; perhaps the means of gross sensual gratifications. Prayers offered that we may have the means of sensuality and voluptuousness, we have no reason to suppose God will answer, for he has not promised to hear such prayers; and it becomes every one who prays for worldly prosperity, and for success in business, to examine his motives with the closest scrutiny. Nowhere is deception more likely to creep in than into such prayers; nowhere are we more likely to be mistaken in regard to our real motives, than when we go before God and ask for success in our worldly employments.
Poole: Jam 4:1 - -- Jam 4:1-6 Our evil lusts and passions tend to breed quarrels
among ourselves, and to set us at enmity with God.
Jam 4:7-10 The way to overcome th...
Jam 4:1-6 Our evil lusts and passions tend to breed quarrels
among ourselves, and to set us at enmity with God.
Jam 4:7-10 The way to overcome them, and recover God’ s favour.
Jam 4:11,12 Against detraction and censoriousness.
Jam 4:13-17 We must not presume on the future, but commit
ourselves to God’ s providence.
Wars and fightings either it may be understood properly of insurrections, and tumults, in which, possibly, some carnal professors might be engaged; or rather, strife and contention about outward things, wranglings among themselves, and going to law, especially before unbelieving judges, 1Co 6:1 .
Your lusts Greek, pleasures, i.e. those lusts whereof pleasure is the end, which is therefore put for the lusts themselves: he means the over eager desire of riches, worldly greatness, carnal delights, Tit 3:3 , where lusts and pleasures go together.
That war oppose and tumultuate against reason, conscience, grace, Rom 7:23 1Pe 2:11 .
In your members not only the members of the body, but faculties of the soul, exercised by them; all the parts of man unrenewed, Col 3:5 , which are used as weapons of unrighteousness, Rom 6:13 .

Poole: Jam 4:2 - -- Ye lust passionately and greedily desire.
And have not either soon lose, or rather cannot get, what ye so lust after.
Ye kill some copies have it...
Ye lust passionately and greedily desire.
And have not either soon lose, or rather cannot get, what ye so lust after.
Ye kill some copies have it, ye envy, and many suppose that to be the better reading, as agreeing with the context, and with Jam 3:14 ; envy being the cause of strife there, and joined with emulation, or a desire of having, here. We read it according to other copies, ye kill, which, if he speaketh of wars in a proper sense, Jam 4:1 , was, no doubt, the effect of them; and if he speak only of strife and contentions, yet they might proceed so far, that the death of some (though not intended) might be the consequent of them, and occasioned by them. Or, he may mean their murderous desires, killing men in their hearts, wishing for and gaping after their death, that they might gain by it; and this agrees with what he speaks of the frustration of their greedy desires, none being more frequently disappointed of their hopes than they that hope to be gainers by other men’ s deaths.
And disire to have or, emulate, i.e. ambitiously affect to have what ye see others have, grieving that they should have more than you.
And cannot obtain viz; that which ye envy others’ having.
Ye fight and war: you wrangle and quarrel with your neighbours for what they have, that ye may get it for yourselves.
Yet ye have not ye are still needy, though still craving; your lusts are infinite and insatiable in themselves, and no way helpful to you.
Because ye ask not viz. of God by prayer, who hath promised to give to them that ask, Mat 7:7 , not to them that war and fight. Instead of humble seeking to God for what ye want, ye would extort it by force or fraud from one another.

Poole: Jam 4:3 - -- Ye ask he prevents an objection; q.d. Admit you do pray for the good things you want, or, though you pray for them.
Ye ask amiss though you pray fo...
Ye ask he prevents an objection; q.d. Admit you do pray for the good things you want, or, though you pray for them.
Ye ask amiss though you pray for good things, yet you do not pray well, or in a right manner, not according to God’ s will, 1Jo 5:14 , and therefore ye are not to complain of not being heard.
That ye may consume it upon your lusts you pray for the things of this life only, that you may have wherewith to please the flesh, and gratify your carnal appetites, and so an evil end spoils good means; and while you would have God serve your lusts you lose your prayers.
PBC -> Jam 4:1
PBC: Jam 4:1 - -- Brethren, we better take heed and began to blow the trumpet of King Jesus again. We are wasting time with fences and infighting. If we really love the...
Brethren, we better take heed and began to blow the trumpet of King Jesus again. We are wasting time with fences and infighting. If we really love the Lord Jesus Christ and His cause, it is time to put down our differences and unite in the common cause and common salvation of the faith once delivered. I verily believe that God is calling on His remnant to stand up together and be heard. God help us all if we do not! I have been so convicted that I have not been brave enough to speak the name of Jesus in public. I compromise at home and on the job. It is time to stop and know He is God. Lift the banner of the true gospel of Christ and Him alone again. Yes, count the cost if you do. But, consider the loss if you don’t. We are at war. The enemy has been identified and we have been called. Arm yourselves with Christ and His word and stand in your places lifting up the light of the glorious gospel of Jesus, OUR LORD!
39
Haydock: Jam 4:1 - -- Whence are wars [1] and contentions, in all kinds, but from your lusts and disorderly passions, coveting to have and enjoy what you have not, as to...
Whence are wars [1] and contentions, in all kinds, but from your lusts and disorderly passions, coveting to have and enjoy what you have not, as to pleasures, riches, honours, &c. (Witham)
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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Unde bella et lites? Greek: polemoi kai machai, as also ver. 2, litigatis et belligeratis, Greek: machesthe, kai polemeite. I see no reason to translate it, by lawsuits and pleadings, as Mr. N.

Haydock: Jam 4:2 - -- You covet, and have not. Though God has promised that whosoever asks shall receive, (Matthew vii. 8.) yet no wonder you receive not, because you as...
You covet, and have not. Though God has promised that whosoever asks shall receive, (Matthew vii. 8.) yet no wonder you receive not, because you ask amiss, by asking such temporal things as would be prejudicial to your soul, or because you ask not with humility, devotion, and perseverance. (Witham)
Gill: Jam 4:1 - -- From whence come wars and fightings among you?.... Which are to be understood, not of public and national wars, such as might be between the Jews and ...
From whence come wars and fightings among you?.... Which are to be understood, not of public and national wars, such as might be between the Jews and other nations at this time; for the apostle is not writing to the Jews in Judea, as a nation, or body politic, but to the twelve tribes scattered abroad, and to such of them as were Christians; nor were Christians in general as yet increased, and become such large bodies, or were whole nations become Christians, and much less at war one against another, which has been the case since; and which, when it is, generally speaking arises from a lust after an increase of power; from the pride and ambitious views of men, and their envy at the happiness of other princes and states: nor do these design theological debates and disputes, or contentions about religious principles; but rather lawsuits, commenced before Heathen magistrates, by the rich, to the oppression of the poor; see Jam 2:6 though it seems best of all to interpret them of those stirs and bustlings, strifes, contentions, and quarrels, about honours and riches; endeavouring to get them by unlawful methods, at least at the expense of their own peace, and that of others:
come they not hence, even of your lusts that war in your members? as pride, envy, covetousness, ambition, &c. which, like so many soldiers, are stationed and quartered in the members of the body, and war against the soul; for in the believer, or converted man, however, there is as it were two armies; a law in the members, warring against the law of the mind; the flesh against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; and from this inward war arise external ones; or at least from the corruption of nature, which militates against all that is good, all quarrels and contentions, whether public or private, of a greater or lesser nature, and consequence, spring.

Gill: Jam 4:2 - -- Ye lust, and have not,.... The apostle proceeds to show the unsuccessfulness of many in their desires and pursuits after worldly things; some might be...
Ye lust, and have not,.... The apostle proceeds to show the unsuccessfulness of many in their desires and pursuits after worldly things; some might be like the sluggard, whose soul desireth all good things, and yet he has nothing, Pro 13:4 because he does not make use of any means, even of such as are proper and necessary, and ought to be used:
ye kill, and desire to have, and cannot obtain; some, instead of kill, which seems not so agreeable, read envy; and then the sense is, they envy at the good and happiness of others, and covet after another's property, but cannot enjoy it; all such envy and covetousness are fruitless, as well as sinful:
ye fight and war, yet ye have not; go to law one with another about each other's property; or rather, make a great stir and hustle to get the things of the world; rise early, and sit up late; strive who should get most, and quarrel about what is gotten, and seek to get all advantages of one another; and yet still have not, what at least is desired and strove for:
because ye ask not; of God, whose blessing only makes rich: instead of all this worldly stir and bustle, and these strivings and quarrellings with one another, it would be much more advisable, and, in the issue, be found to turn to more account, to pray to God for a blessing on your endeavours; and to ask of him the good and necessary things of life, in submission to his will, and with thankfulness for what he has bestowed.

Gill: Jam 4:3 - -- Ye ask, and receive not,.... Some there were that did ask of God the blessings of his goodness and providence, and yet these were not bestowed on them...
Ye ask, and receive not,.... Some there were that did ask of God the blessings of his goodness and providence, and yet these were not bestowed on them; the reason was,
because ye ask amiss; not in the faith of a divine promise; nor with thankfulness for past mercies; nor with submission to the will of God; nor with a right end, to do good to others, and to make use of what might be bestowed, for the honour of God, and the interest of Christ: but
that ye may consume it upon your lusts; indulge to intemperance and luxury; as the man that had much goods laid up for many years did, to the neglect of his own soul, Luk 12:19 or the rich man, who spent all upon his back and his belly, and took no notice of Lazarus at his gate; Luk 16:19.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
Geneva Bible: Jam 4:1 From ( 1 ) whence [come] wars and fightings among you? [come they] not hence, [even] of your lusts that war in your members?
( 1 ) He advances the sa...

Geneva Bible: Jam 4:2 Ye lust, and have not: ye kill, and desire to have, and cannot obtain: ye fight and war, yet ye have not, ( 2 ) because ye ask not.
( 2 ) He reprehen...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jam 4:1-17
TSK Synopsis: Jam 4:1-17 - --1 We are to strive against covetousness;4 intemperance;5 pride;11 detraction and rash judgment of others;13 and not to be confident in the good succes...
MHCC -> Jam 4:1-10
MHCC: Jam 4:1-10 - --Since all wars and fightings come from the corruptions of our own hearts, it is right to mortify those lusts that war in the members. Wordly and flesh...
Matthew Henry -> Jam 4:1-10
Matthew Henry: Jam 4:1-10 - -- The former chapter speaks of envying one another, as the great spring of strifes and contentions; this chapter speaks of a lust after worldly things...
Barclay: Jam 4:1-3 - --James is setting before his people a basic question--whether their aim in life is to submit to the will of God or to gratify their own desires for the...

Barclay: Jam 4:1-3 - --This pleasure-dominated life has certain inevitable consequences.
(i) It sets men at each other's throats. Desires, as James sees it, are inherentl...
Constable: Jam 4:1-10 - --A. Interpersonal and Inner Personal Tensions 4:1-10
In this chapter James gave direction to his readers ...

Constable: Jam 4:1 - --1. The source of conflict 4:1
As in the previous chapters, James began this one with a clear int...
