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Text -- James 4:8 (NET)

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Context
4:8 Draw near to God and he will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners, and make your hearts pure, you double-minded.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Washing | Seekers | Righteous | Repentance | Purity | Prayer | NEAR, NIGH | Instability | Hypocrisy | Heart | God | Double Minded | DOUBLE | Commandments | Character | CLEANSE | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Jam 4:8 - -- Draw nigh to God ( eggisate tōi theōi ). First aorist active imperative of eggizō , late verb from eggus (near) as in Mat 3:2. With dative ca...

Draw nigh to God ( eggisate tōi theōi ).

First aorist active imperative of eggizō , late verb from eggus (near) as in Mat 3:2. With dative case again of personal relation. The priests in the sanctuary drew nigh to God (Exo 19:22), as we should now.

Robertson: Jam 4:8 - -- Cleanse your hands ( katharisate cheiras ). First aorist active imperative of katharizō , to cleanse, from dirt in a ritual sense (Exo 30:19-21; Ma...

Cleanse your hands ( katharisate cheiras ).

First aorist active imperative of katharizō , to cleanse, from dirt in a ritual sense (Exo 30:19-21; Mar 7:3, Mar 7:19). Here it is figurative, as in Isa 1:16; Psa 24:4. If we always had clean (from sin) hands and hearts?

Robertson: Jam 4:8 - -- Ye sinners ( hamartōloi ). A sharp term to strike the conscience, "a reproach meant to startle and sting"(Ropes).

Ye sinners ( hamartōloi ).

A sharp term to strike the conscience, "a reproach meant to startle and sting"(Ropes).

Robertson: Jam 4:8 - -- Purify your hearts ( hagnisate kardias ). First aorist active imperative of hagnizō , old verb from hagnos (Jam 3:17), ceremonially (Act 21:24, A...

Purify your hearts ( hagnisate kardias ).

First aorist active imperative of hagnizō , old verb from hagnos (Jam 3:17), ceremonially (Act 21:24, Act 21:26), but here morally as in 1Pe 1:22; 1Jo 3:3. Anarthrous use of kardias as of cheiras (wash hands, purify hearts).

Robertson: Jam 4:8 - -- Ye double-minded ( dipsuchoi ). As in Jam 1:8.

Ye double-minded ( dipsuchoi ).

As in Jam 1:8.

Vincent: Jam 4:8 - -- Purify ( ἁγνίσατε ) One of the three instances in the New Testament in which the word is not used of ceremonial purification. The o...

Purify ( ἁγνίσατε )

One of the three instances in the New Testament in which the word is not used of ceremonial purification. The others are 1Pe 1:22; 1Jo 3:3.

Vincent: Jam 4:8 - -- Double-minded ( δίψυχοι ) Compare Jam 1:8.

Double-minded ( δίψυχοι )

Compare Jam 1:8.

Wesley: Jam 4:8 - -- Cease from doing evil.

Cease from doing evil.

Wesley: Jam 4:8 - -- From all spiritual adultery. Be no more double minded, vainly endeavouring to serve both God and mammon.

From all spiritual adultery. Be no more double minded, vainly endeavouring to serve both God and mammon.

JFB: Jam 4:8 - -- So "cleave unto Him," Deu 30:20, namely, by prayerfully (Jam 4:2-3) "resisting Satan," who would oppose our access to God.

So "cleave unto Him," Deu 30:20, namely, by prayerfully (Jam 4:2-3) "resisting Satan," who would oppose our access to God.

JFB: Jam 4:8 - -- Propitious.

Propitious.

JFB: Jam 4:8 - -- The outward instruments of action. None but the clean-handed can ascend into the hill of the Lord (justified through Christ, who alone was perfectly s...

The outward instruments of action. None but the clean-handed can ascend into the hill of the Lord (justified through Christ, who alone was perfectly so, and as such "ascended" thither).

JFB: Jam 4:8 - -- Literally "make chaste" of your spiritual adultery (Jam 4:4, that is, worldliness) "your hearts": the inward source of all impurity.

Literally "make chaste" of your spiritual adultery (Jam 4:4, that is, worldliness) "your hearts": the inward source of all impurity.

JFB: Jam 4:8 - -- Divided between God and the world. The "double-minded" is at fault in heart; the sinner in his hands likewise.

Divided between God and the world. The "double-minded" is at fault in heart; the sinner in his hands likewise.

Clarke: Jam 4:8 - -- Draw nigh to God - Approach Him, in the name of Jesus, by faith and prayer, and he will draw nigh to you - he will meet you at your coming. When a s...

Draw nigh to God - Approach Him, in the name of Jesus, by faith and prayer, and he will draw nigh to you - he will meet you at your coming. When a soul sets out to seek God, God sets out to meet that soul; so that while we are drawing near to him, he is drawing near to us. The delicacy and beauty of these expressions are, I think, but seldom noted

Clarke: Jam 4:8 - -- Cleanse your hands, ye sinners - This I think to be the beginning of a new address, and to different persons; and should have formed the commencemen...

Cleanse your hands, ye sinners - This I think to be the beginning of a new address, and to different persons; and should have formed the commencement of a new verse. Let your whole conduct be changed; cease to do evil learn to do well. Washing or cleansing the hands was a token of innocence and purity

Clarke: Jam 4:8 - -- Purify your hearts - Separate yourselves from the world, and consecrate yourselves to God: this is the true notion of sanctification. We have often ...

Purify your hearts - Separate yourselves from the world, and consecrate yourselves to God: this is the true notion of sanctification. We have often seen that to sanctify signifies to separate a thing or person from profane or common use, and consecrate it or him to God. This is the true notion of קדש kadash , in Hebrew, and ἁγιαζω in Greek. The person or thing thus consecrated or separated is considered to be holy, and to be God’ s property; and then God hallows it to himself. There are, therefore, two things implied in a man’ s sanctification

1.    That he separates himself from evil ways and evil companions, and devotes himself to God

2.    That God separates guilt from his conscience, and sin from his soul, and thus makes him internally and externally holy

This double sanctification is well expressed in Sohar, Levit. fol. 33, col. 132, on the words, be ye holy, for I the Lord am holy: אותו מלמעלה ארס מקדש עצמו מלמטה מקישין, a man sanctifies himself on the earth, and then he is sanctified from heaven. As a man is a sinner, he must have his hands cleansed from wicked works; as he is double-minded, he must have his heart sanctified. Sanctification belongs to the heart, because of pollution of mind; cleansing belongs to the hands, because of sinful acts. See the note on Jam 1:8, for the signification of double-minded.

Calvin: Jam 4:8 - -- 8.Draw nigh to God. He again reminds us that the aid of God will not be wanting to us, provided we give place to him. For when he bids us to draw nig...

8.Draw nigh to God. He again reminds us that the aid of God will not be wanting to us, provided we give place to him. For when he bids us to draw nigh to God, that we may know him to be near to us, he intimates that we are destitute of his grace, because we withdraw from him. But as God stands on our side, there is no reason to fear succumbing. But if any one concludes from this passage, that the first part of the work belongs to us, and that afterwards the grace of God follows, the Apostle meant no such thing; for though we ought to do this, yet it does [not] immediately follow that we can. And the Spirit of God, in exhorting us to our duty, derogates nothing from himself, or from his own power; but the very thing he bids us to do, he himself fulfills in us.

In short, James meant no other thing in this passage, than that God is never wanting to us, except when we alienate ourselves from him. He is like one who brings the hungry to a table and the thirsty to a fountain. There is this difference, that our steps must be guided and sustained by the Lord, for our feet fail us. But what some cavil at, and say, that God’s grace is secondary to our preparation, and as it were the waiting-maid, is only frivolous; for we know that it is no new thing that he adds now to former graces and thus enriches more and more those to whom he has already given much.

Cleanse your hands. He here addresses all those who were alienated from God and he does not refer to two sorts of men, but he calls the same sinners and double-minded Nor does he understand every kind of sinners, but the wicked and those of a corrupt life. It is said in Joh 9:3,

“God does not hear sinners;”

in the same sense a woman is called a sinner by Luke. (Luk 7:39.) It is said by the same and the other evangelists, “He drinketh and eateth with sinners.” He, therefore, does not smite all indiscriminately to that sort of repentance mentioned here, but those who are wicked and corrupt in heart, and whose life is base and flagitious or at least wicked; it is from these he requires a purity of heart and outward cleanliness.

We hence learn what is the true character of repentance. It is not only an outward amendment of life, but its beginning is the cleansing of the heart. It is also necessary on the other hand that the fruits of inward repentance should appear in the brightness of our works. 133

TSK: Jam 4:8 - -- Draw nigh to God : Gen 18:23; 1Ch 28:9; 2Ch 15:2; Psa 73:28, Psa 145:18; Isa 29:13, Isa 55:6, Isa 55:7; Hos 6:1, Hos 6:2; Zec 1:3; Mal 3:7; Heb 7:19, ...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Jam 4:8 - -- Draw nigh to God, and he will draw nigh to you - Compare 2Ch 15:2. This declaration contains a great and important principle in religion. If we...

Draw nigh to God, and he will draw nigh to you - Compare 2Ch 15:2. This declaration contains a great and important principle in religion. If we wish the favor of God, we must come to him; nor can we hope for his mercy, unless we approach him and ask him for it. We cannot come literally any nearer to God than we always are, for he is always round about us; but we may come nearer in a spiritual sense. We may address him directly in prayer; we may approach him by meditation on his character; we may draw near to him in the ordinances of religion. We can never hope for his favor while we prefer to remain at a distance from him; none who in fact draw near to him will find him unwilling to bestow on them the blessings which they need.

Cleanse your hands, ye sinners - There may possibly be an allusion here to Isa 1:15-16; "Your hands are full of blood; wash you, make you clean; put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes; cease to do evil."The heart is the seat of motives and intentions - that by which we devise anything; the hands, the instruments by which we execute our purposes. The hands here are represented as defiled by blood, or by acts of iniquity. To wash or cleanse the hands was, therefore, emblematic of putting away transgression, Mat 27:24. Compare Deu 21:6; Psa 26:6. The heathen and the Jews were accustomed to wash their hands before they engaged in public worship. The particular idea here is, that in order to obtain the favor of God, it is necessary to put away our sins; to approach him with a desire to be pure and holy. The mere washing of the hands, in itself, could not recommend us to his favor; but that of which the washing of the hands would be an emblem, would be acceptable in his sight. It may be inferred from what is said here that no one can hope for the favor of God who does not abandon his transgressions. The design of the apostle is, evidently, to state one of the conditions on which we can make an acceptable approach to God. It is indispensable that we come with a purpose and desire to wash ourselves from all iniquity, to put away from us all our transgressions. So David said, "I will wash my hands in innocency; so will I compass thine altar. O Lord,"Psa 26:6.

("To obtain the favor of God, it is necessary to put away our sins"- is somewhat unguarded phraseology. If the favor of God were not obtained but on this condition, none ever would obtain it. The passage is a strong injunction to holiness and singleness of heart: it does not say, however, that by these we obtain acceptance with God. Of his favor, holiness is the fruit, the effect, and not the cause. The sinner must not think of getting quit of his sins to prepare him for going to God by Jesus; but he must first go to Jesus to prepare for laying aside his sins. Yet in every approach to God, it is true there must be a "desire "to be free from sin; and this doubtless is the view of the commentary; indeed it is so expressed, though some words are objectionable.)

And purify your hearts - That is, do not rest satisfied with a mere external reformation; with putting away your outward transgressions. There must be a deeper work than that; a work which shall reach to the heart, and which shall purify the affections. This agrees with all the requisitions of the Bible, and is in accordance with what must be the nature of religion. If the heart is wrong, nothing can be right. If, while we seek an external reformation, we still give indulgence to the secret corruptions of the heart, it is clear that we can have no true religion.

Ye double-minded - See the notes at Jam 1:8. The apostle here seems to have had his eye on those who were vacillating in their purposes; whose hearts were not decidedly fixed, but who were halting between good and evil. The heart was not right in such persons. It was not settled and determined in favor of religion, but vibrated between that and the world. The proper business of such persons, therefore, was to cleanse the heart from disturbing influences, that it might settle down in unwavering attachment to that which is good.

Poole: Jam 4:8 - -- Draw nigh to God by faith, which is a coming to God, Heb 7:25 ; by true repentance, which is a returning to God, Hos 14:1 Mal 3:7 ; and by fervent pr...

Draw nigh to God by faith, which is a coming to God, Heb 7:25 ; by true repentance, which is a returning to God, Hos 14:1 Mal 3:7 ; and by fervent prayer to him for the help of his grace, Psa 25:1 .

And he will draw nigh to you by the manifestation of his grace and favour to you, particularly giving you strength against the devil and your lusts.

Cleanse your hands reform your actions, amend your lives. Hands, the principal instruments of bodily actions, being put for the actions themselves; cleanness of hands signifies the innocency of the outward conversation, Job 22:30 Psa 24:4 26:6 Isa 33:15,16 .

Ye sinners you that are openly and notoriously vicious, whose wickedness appears in your ordinary practices: so such are called, Mat 11:19 Mar 2:15 Luk 7:37 15:2 Joh 9:31 .

And purify your hearts your thoughts and inward affections, from whence the evils of your outward actions proceed, Isa 60:7 : see 1Pe 1:22 1Jo 3:3 .

Ye double minded either by the former he understands the profane, and by these, hypocrites, or the same by both, viz. such as had wicked hearts, and led wicked lives; only he shows wherein true repentance consists, viz. in the reformation both of the inward and outward man.

PBC: Jam 4:8 - -- If it were not possible for us to draw nigh unto Him, we would not have been so instructed. When the power of God through the Holy Spirit indwells the...

If it were not possible for us to draw nigh unto Him, we would not have been so instructed. When the power of God through the Holy Spirit indwells the child of God, he is able to do great things through Him that strengthens him. Our strength and our help come from the God of all creation.

433

Haydock: Jam 4:8 - -- Purify your heart from the love of creatures, so that your affections be not divided betwixt God and this world, like persons of two minds [3] or t...

Purify your heart from the love of creatures, so that your affections be not divided betwixt God and this world, like persons of two minds [3] or two souls. (Witham)

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Duplices animo, Greek: dipsuchoi.

Gill: Jam 4:8 - -- Draw nigh to God, and he will draw nigh to you,.... This must be understood consistently with the perfection of God's immensity and omnipresence: the ...

Draw nigh to God, and he will draw nigh to you,.... This must be understood consistently with the perfection of God's immensity and omnipresence: the saints draw nigh to God when they present their bodies in his sanctuary; when they tread in his courts, and attend his ordinances; where they always find it good for them to draw nigh unto him; and blessed is the man that approaches to him in faith and fear: they draw nigh to him when they come to the throne of his grace, for grace and mercy to help them; when they draw near to him in prayer with true hearts, and lift them up with their hands to God; when in the exercise of faith and hope they enter within the vail, and come up even to his seat; and lay hold on him as their covenant God and Father; and he draws nigh to them by granting them his gracious presence, by communicating his love to them, by applying the blessings of his grace, by helping them in times of need and distress, and by protecting them from their enemies; the contrary to which is expressed by standing afar off from them. Now this is not to be understood as if men could first draw nigh to God, before he draws nigh to them; for as God first loves, so he first moves; he takes the first step, and, in conversion, turns and draws men to himself; though this does not respect first conversion, but after acts in consequence of it; nor is it to be considered as a condition of the grace and favour of God, in drawing nigh to his people, but is expressive of what is their duty, and an encouragement to it:

cleanse your hands, ye sinners, and purify your hearts, ye double minded; the persons addressed are not the profane men of the world, but sinners in Zion, formal professors, hypocritical persons; who speak with a double tongue to men, and who draw nigh to God with their mouths, but not with their hearts; who halt between two opinions, and are unstable in all their ways: cleansing of their hands and hearts denotes the purity of outward conversation, and of the inward affections; and supposes impurity both of flesh and spirit, that the body and all its members, the soul and all its powers and faculties, are unclean; and yet not that men have a power to cleanse themselves, either from the filth of an external conversation, or from inward pollution of the heart; though a man attempts the one, he fails in it; and who can say he has done the other? Job 9:30. This is not to be done by ceremonial ablutions, moral services, or evangelical ordinances; this is God's work only, as appears from his promises to cleanse his people from their sins, by sprinkling clean water upon them; from the end of Christ's shedding his blood, and the efficacy of it; and from the prayers of the saints, that God would wash them thoroughly from their iniquity, and cleanse them from their sin, and create clean hearts in them: and yet such exhortations are not in vain, since they may be useful to convince men of their pollution, who are pure in their own eyes, as these hypocritical, nominal professors, might be; and to bring them to a sense of their inability to cleanse themselves, and of the necessity of being cleansed elsewhere; and to lead them to inquire after the proper means of cleansing, and so to the fountain of Christ's blood, which only cleanses from all sin.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Jam 4:8 Or “two-minded” (the same description used in 1:8).

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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 - --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 - -- 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 4:8-10 - --In James' thought the ethical demand of Christianity is never far away. He has talked about the grace which God gives to the humble and which enable...

Barclay: Jam 4:8-10 - --In his demand for a godly sorrow James is going back to the fact that Jesus had said, "Blessed are those who mourn for they shall be comforted" (Mat...

Barclay: Jam 4:8-10 - --James concludes with the demand for a godly humility. All through the Bible there runs the conviction that it is only the humble who can know the ble...

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 4:6-10 - --4. The resources to choose right 4:6-10 4:6 God has set a high standard of wholehearted love and devotion for His people, but He gives grace that is g...

College: Jam 4:1-17 - --JAMES 4 XI. FRIENDS OF THE WORLD OR OF GOD (4:1-10) 1 What causes fights and quarrels among you? Don't they come from your desires that battle withi...

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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 4 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Jam 4:1, We are to strive against covetousness; Jam 4:4, intemperance; Jam 4:5, pride; Jam 4:11, detraction and rash judgment of others; ...

Poole: James 4 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 4

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) (Jam 4:1-10) Here are cautions against corrupt affections, and love of this world, which is enmity to God. (Jam 4:11-17) Exhortations to undertake no...

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter we are directed to consider, I. Some causes of contention, besides those mentioned in the foregoing chapter, and to watch against ...

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) Man's Pleasure Or God's Will? (Jam_4:1-3) The Consequences Of The Pleasure-Dominated Life (Jam_4:1-3 Continued) Infidelity To God (Jam_4:4-7) Fri...

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JAMES 4 In this chapter the apostle gives the true cause of contentions and strifes; and cautions against intemperance, covetousnes...

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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