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Text -- James 5:1-3 (NET)

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Context
Warning to the Rich
5:1 Come now, you rich! Weep and cry aloud over the miseries that are coming on you. 5:2 Your riches have rotted and your clothing has become moth-eaten. 5:3 Your gold and silver have rusted and their rust will be a witness against you. It will consume your flesh like fire. It is in the last days that you have hoarded treasure!
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Wicked | WEALTH, WEALTHY | SILVER | Riches | Rich, The | RUST | Moth | HEAP | GOLD | GO | GANGRENE | ESCHATOLOGY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT, I-V | DRESS | Canker | CANKERED | Amusements and Worldly Pleasures | more
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Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Jam 5:1 - -- Come now, ye rich ( age nun hoi plousioi ). Exclamatory interjection as in Jam 4:13. Direct address to the rich as a class as in 1Ti 6:17. Apparently...

Come now, ye rich ( age nun hoi plousioi ).

Exclamatory interjection as in Jam 4:13. Direct address to the rich as a class as in 1Ti 6:17. Apparently here James has in mind the rich as a class, whether believer, as in Jam 1:10., or unbeliever, as in Jam 2:1., Jam 2:6. The plea here is not directly for reform, but a warning of certain judgment (Jam 5:1-6) and for Christians "a certain grim comfort in the hardships of poverty"(Ropes) in Jam 5:7-11.

Robertson: Jam 5:1 - -- Weep and howl ( klausate ololuzontes ). "Burst into weeping (ingressive aorist active imperative of klaiō as in Jam 4:9), howling with grief"(pre...

Weep and howl ( klausate ololuzontes ).

"Burst into weeping (ingressive aorist active imperative of klaiō as in Jam 4:9), howling with grief"(present active participle of the old onomatopoetic verb ololuzō , here only in N.T., like Latin ululare , with which compare alalazō in Mat 5:38.

Robertson: Jam 5:1 - -- For your miseries ( epi tais talaipōriais humōn ). Old word from talaipōros (Rom 7:24) and like talaipōreō in Jam 4:9 (from tlaō to...

For your miseries ( epi tais talaipōriais humōn ).

Old word from talaipōros (Rom 7:24) and like talaipōreō in Jam 4:9 (from tlaō to endure and pōros a callus).

Robertson: Jam 5:1 - -- That are coming upon you ( tais eperchomenais ). Present middle participle of the old compound eperchomai to come upon, used here in futuristic pro...

That are coming upon you ( tais eperchomenais ).

Present middle participle of the old compound eperchomai to come upon, used here in futuristic prophetic sense.

Robertson: Jam 5:2 - -- Riches ( ho ploutos ). Masculine singular, but occasionally neuter to ploutos in nominative and accusative (2Co 8:2). Apparently pleotos fulness ...

Riches ( ho ploutos ).

Masculine singular, but occasionally neuter to ploutos in nominative and accusative (2Co 8:2). Apparently pleotos fulness (from pleos full, pimplēmi to fill). "Wealth."

Robertson: Jam 5:2 - -- Are corrupted ( sesēpen ). Second perfect active indicative of sēpō (root sap as in sapros , rotten), to corrupt, to destroy, here intransi...

Are corrupted ( sesēpen ).

Second perfect active indicative of sēpō (root sap as in sapros , rotten), to corrupt, to destroy, here intransitive "has rotted."Only here in N.T. On the worthlessness of mere wealth see Mat 6:19, Mat 6:24.

Robertson: Jam 5:2 - -- Were moth-eaten ( sētobrōta gegonen ). "Have become (second perfect indicative of ginomai , singular number, though himatia , neuter plural, trea...

Were moth-eaten ( sētobrōta gegonen ).

"Have become (second perfect indicative of ginomai , singular number, though himatia , neuter plural, treated collectively) moth-eaten"(sētobrōta , late and rare compound from sēs , moth, Mat 6:19. and brōtos , verbal adjective of bibrōskō to eat Joh 6:13. This compound found only here, Job 13:28, Sibyll. Orac. Proem. 64). Rich robes as heirlooms, but moth-eaten. Vivid picture. Witness the 250 "lost millionaires"in the United States in 1931 as compared with 1929. Riches have wings.

Robertson: Jam 5:3 - -- Are rusted ( katiōtai ). Perfect passive indicative (singular for chrusos and arguros are grouped as one) of katioō , late verb (from ios , r...

Are rusted ( katiōtai ).

Perfect passive indicative (singular for chrusos and arguros are grouped as one) of katioō , late verb (from ios , rust) with perfective sense of kata , to rust through (down to the bottom), found only here, Sir. 12:11, Epictetus ( Diss. 4, 6, 14).

Robertson: Jam 5:3 - -- Rust ( ios ). Poison in Jam 3:8; Rom 3:13 (only N.T. examples of old word). Silver does corrode and gold will tarnish. Dioscorides (V.91) tells about...

Rust ( ios ).

Poison in Jam 3:8; Rom 3:13 (only N.T. examples of old word). Silver does corrode and gold will tarnish. Dioscorides (V.91) tells about gold being rusted by chemicals. Modern chemists can even transmute metals as the alchemists claimed.

Robertson: Jam 5:3 - -- For a testimony ( eis marturion ). Common idiom as in Mat 8:4 (use of eis with accusative in predicate).

For a testimony ( eis marturion ).

Common idiom as in Mat 8:4 (use of eis with accusative in predicate).

Robertson: Jam 5:3 - -- Against you ( humin ). Dative of disadvantage as in Mar 6:11 (eis marturion autois ) where in the parallel passage (Luk 9:5) we have eis marturion e...

Against you ( humin ).

Dative of disadvantage as in Mar 6:11 (eis marturion autois ) where in the parallel passage (Luk 9:5) we have eis marturion ep' autous . "To you"will make sense, as in Mat 8:4; Mat 10:18, but "against"is the idea here as in Luk 21:13.

Robertson: Jam 5:3 - -- Shall eat ( phagetai ). Future middle (late form from ephagon ) of defective verb esthiō , to eat.

Shall eat ( phagetai ).

Future middle (late form from ephagon ) of defective verb esthiō , to eat.

Robertson: Jam 5:3 - -- Your flesh ( tas sarkas ). The plural is used for the fleshy parts of the body like pieces of flesh (Rev 17:16; Rev 19:18, Rev 19:21). Rust eats like...

Your flesh ( tas sarkas ).

The plural is used for the fleshy parts of the body like pieces of flesh (Rev 17:16; Rev 19:18, Rev 19:21). Rust eats like a canker, like cancer in the body.

Robertson: Jam 5:3 - -- As fire ( hōs pur ). Editors differ here whether to connect this phrase with phagetai , just before (as Mayor), for fire eats up more rapidly than ...

As fire ( hōs pur ).

Editors differ here whether to connect this phrase with phagetai , just before (as Mayor), for fire eats up more rapidly than rust, or with the following, as Westcott and Hort and Ropes, that is the eternal fire of Gehenna which awaits them (Mat 25:41; Mar 9:44). This interpretation makes a more vivid picture for ethēsaurisate (ye have laid up, first aorist active indicative of thēsaurizō , Mat 6:19 and see Pro 16:27), but it is more natural to take it with phagetai .

Vincent: Jam 5:1 - -- Go to See on Jam 4:13.

Go to

See on Jam 4:13.

Vincent: Jam 5:1 - -- Weep and howl ( κλαύσατε ὀλολύζοντες ) Lit., weep, howling. The latter is a descriptive word, ol -ol -uz -o . Only her...

Weep and howl ( κλαύσατε ὀλολύζοντες )

Lit., weep, howling. The latter is a descriptive word, ol -ol -uz -o . Only here in New Testament, and denoting a more demonstrative and passionate expression of grief than weeping.

Vincent: Jam 5:1 - -- Miseries ( ταλαιπωρίαις ) Only here and Rom 3:16. See on be afflicted, Jam 4:9.

Miseries ( ταλαιπωρίαις )

Only here and Rom 3:16. See on be afflicted, Jam 4:9.

Vincent: Jam 5:1 - -- That shall come upon ( ἐπερχομέναις ) Present participle. More correctly, as Rev., that are coming.

That shall come upon ( ἐπερχομέναις )

Present participle. More correctly, as Rev., that are coming.

Vincent: Jam 5:2 - -- Are corrupted ( σέσηπεν ) Only here in New Testament.

Are corrupted ( σέσηπεν )

Only here in New Testament.

Vincent: Jam 5:2 - -- Are moth-eaten ( σητόβρωτα γέγονεν ) Lit., have become moth-eaten. Only here in New Testament, but compare σκωληκό...

Are moth-eaten ( σητόβρωτα γέγονεν )

Lit., have become moth-eaten. Only here in New Testament, but compare σκωληκόβρωτος , eaten of worms, Act 12:23; and see Mat 6:19, Mat 6:20.

Vincent: Jam 5:3 - -- Is cankered ( κατίωται ) Only here in New Testament, from ἰός , rust, as in the following sentence. Also poison , as Jam 3:8....

Is cankered ( κατίωται )

Only here in New Testament, from ἰός , rust, as in the following sentence. Also poison , as Jam 3:8. The preposition κατά indicates thoroughness, completely rusted.

Vincent: Jam 5:3 - -- Flesh ( τὰς σάρκας ) The noun is plural: the fleshy parts of the body. So Sept. (2 Kings 9:36): " the flesh (τὰς σάρκ...

Flesh ( τὰς σάρκας )

The noun is plural: the fleshy parts of the body. So Sept. (2 Kings 9:36): " the flesh (τὰς σάρκας ) of Jezebel." So Rev 19:18.

Wesley: Jam 5:1 - -- The apostle does not speak this so much for the sake of the rich themselves, as of the poor children of God, who were then groaning under their cruel ...

The apostle does not speak this so much for the sake of the rich themselves, as of the poor children of God, who were then groaning under their cruel oppression.

Wesley: Jam 5:1 - -- Quickly and unexpectedly. This was written not long before the siege of Jerusalem; during which, as well as after it, huge calamities came on the Jewi...

Quickly and unexpectedly. This was written not long before the siege of Jerusalem; during which, as well as after it, huge calamities came on the Jewish nation, not only in Judea, but through distant countries. And as these were an awful prelude of that wrath which was to fall upon them in the world to come, so this may likewise refer to the final vengeance which will then be executed on the impenitent.

Wesley: Jam 5:2 - -- The riches of the ancients consisted much in large stores of corn, and of costly apparel.

The riches of the ancients consisted much in large stores of corn, and of costly apparel.

Wesley: Jam 5:3 - -- Your perishing stores and motheaten garments.

Your perishing stores and motheaten garments.

Wesley: Jam 5:3 - -- Of your having buried those talents in the earth, instead of improving them according to your Lord's will.

Of your having buried those talents in the earth, instead of improving them according to your Lord's will.

Wesley: Jam 5:3 - -- Will occasion you as great torment as if fire were consuming your flesh.

Will occasion you as great torment as if fire were consuming your flesh.

Wesley: Jam 5:3 - -- When it is too late; when you have no time to enjoy them.

When it is too late; when you have no time to enjoy them.

JFB: Jam 5:1 - -- Come now. A phrase to call solemn attention.

Come now. A phrase to call solemn attention.

JFB: Jam 5:1 - -- Who have neglected the true enjoyment of riches, which consists in doing good. James intends this address to rich Jewish unbelievers, not so much for ...

Who have neglected the true enjoyment of riches, which consists in doing good. James intends this address to rich Jewish unbelievers, not so much for themselves, as for the saints, that they may bear with patience the violence of the rich (Jam 5:7), knowing that God will speedily avenge them on their oppressors [BENGEL].

JFB: Jam 5:1 - -- Literally, "that are coming upon you" unexpectedly and swiftly, namely, at the coming of the Lord (Jam 5:7); primarily, at the destruction of Jerusale...

Literally, "that are coming upon you" unexpectedly and swiftly, namely, at the coming of the Lord (Jam 5:7); primarily, at the destruction of Jerusalem; finally, at His visible coming to judge the world.

JFB: Jam 5:2 - -- About to be destroyed through God's curse on your oppression, whereby your riches are accumulated (Jam 5:4). CALVIN thinks the sense is, Your riches p...

About to be destroyed through God's curse on your oppression, whereby your riches are accumulated (Jam 5:4). CALVIN thinks the sense is, Your riches perish without being of any use either to others or even to yourselves, for instance, your garments which are moth-eaten in your chests.

JFB: Jam 5:2 - -- Referring to Mat 6:19-20.

Referring to Mat 6:19-20.

JFB: Jam 5:3 - -- "rusted through" [ALFORD].

"rusted through" [ALFORD].

JFB: Jam 5:3 - -- In the day of judgment; namely, that your riches were of no profit to any, lying unemployed and so contracting rust.

In the day of judgment; namely, that your riches were of no profit to any, lying unemployed and so contracting rust.

JFB: Jam 5:3 - -- The rust which once ate your riches, shall then gnaw your conscience, accompanied with punishment which shall prey upon your bodies for ever.

The rust which once ate your riches, shall then gnaw your conscience, accompanied with punishment which shall prey upon your bodies for ever.

JFB: Jam 5:3 - -- Not with the slow process of rusting, but with the swiftness of consuming fire.

Not with the slow process of rusting, but with the swiftness of consuming fire.

JFB: Jam 5:3 - -- Ye have heaped together, not treasures as ye suppose (compare Luk 12:19), but wrath against the last days, namely, the coming judgment of the Lord. AL...

Ye have heaped together, not treasures as ye suppose (compare Luk 12:19), but wrath against the last days, namely, the coming judgment of the Lord. ALFORD translates more literally, "In these last days (before the coming judgment) ye laid up (worldly) treasure" to no profit, instead of repenting and seeking salvation (see on Jam 5:5).

Clarke: Jam 5:1 - -- Go to now - See on Jam 4:13

Go to now - See on Jam 4:13

Clarke: Jam 5:1 - -- Weep and howl for your miseries - St. James seems to refer here, in the spirit of prophecy, to the destruction that was coming upon the Jews, not on...

Weep and howl for your miseries - St. James seems to refer here, in the spirit of prophecy, to the destruction that was coming upon the Jews, not only in Judea, but in all the provinces where they sojourned. He seems here to assume the very air and character of a prophet; and in the most dignified language and peculiarly expressive and energetic images, foretells the desolations that were coming upon this bad people.

Clarke: Jam 5:2 - -- Your riches are corrupted - Σεσηπε· Are putrefied. The term πλουτος, riches, is to be taken here, not for gold, silver, or precious...

Your riches are corrupted - Σεσηπε· Are putrefied. The term πλουτος, riches, is to be taken here, not for gold, silver, or precious stones, (for these could not putrefy), but for the produce of the fields and flocks, the different stores of grain, wine, and oil, which they had laid up in their granaries, and the various changes of raiment which they had amassed in their wardrobes.

Clarke: Jam 5:3 - -- Your gold and silver is cankered - Instead of helping the poor, and thus honoring God with your substance, ye have, through the principle of covetou...

Your gold and silver is cankered - Instead of helping the poor, and thus honoring God with your substance, ye have, through the principle of covetousness, kept all to yourselves

Clarke: Jam 5:3 - -- The rust of them shall be a witness against you - Your putrefied stores, your moth-eaten garments, and your tarnished coin, are so many proofs that ...

The rust of them shall be a witness against you - Your putrefied stores, your moth-eaten garments, and your tarnished coin, are so many proofs that it was not for want of property that you assisted not the poor, but through a principle of avarice; loving money, not for the sake of what it could procure, but for its own sake, which is the genuine principle of the miser. This was the very character given to this people by our Lord himself; he called them φιλαργυροι, lovers of money. Against this despicable and abominable disposition, the whole of the 12th chapter of St. Luke is levelled; but it was their easily besetting sin, and is so to the present day

Clarke: Jam 5:3 - -- Shall eat your flesh as it were fire - This is a very bold and sublime figure. He represents the rust of their coin as becoming a canker that should...

Shall eat your flesh as it were fire - This is a very bold and sublime figure. He represents the rust of their coin as becoming a canker that should produce gangrenes and phagedenous ulcers in their flesh, till it should be eaten away from their bones

Clarke: Jam 5:3 - -- Ye have heaped treasure together - This verse is variously pointed. The word ὡς, like as, in the preceding clause, is left out by the Syriac, a...

Ye have heaped treasure together - This verse is variously pointed. The word ὡς, like as, in the preceding clause, is left out by the Syriac, and some others; and πυρ, fire, is added here from that clause; so that the whole verse reads thus: "Your gold and your silver is cankered; and the rust of them shall be a witness against you, and shall consume your flesh. Ye have treasured up Fire against the last days."This is a bold and fine image: instead of the treasures of corn, wine, and oil, rich stuffs, with silver and gold, which ye have been laying up, ye shall find a treasure, a magazine of fire, that shall burn up your city, and consume even your temple. This was literally true; and these solemn denunciations of Divine wrath were most completely fulfilled. See the notes on Matthew 24 (note), where all the circumstances of this tremendous and final destruction are particularly noted

By the last days we are not to understand the day of judgment, but the last days of the Jewish commonwealth, which were not long distant from the date of this epistle, whether we follow the earlier or later computation, of which enough has been spoken in the preface.

Calvin: Jam 5:1 - -- 1.Go to now. They are mistaken, as I think, who consider that James here exhorts the rich to repentance. It seems to me to be a simple denunciation o...

1.Go to now. They are mistaken, as I think, who consider that James here exhorts the rich to repentance. It seems to me to be a simple denunciation of God’s judgment, by which he meant to terrify them without giving them any hope of pardon; for all that he says tends only to despair. He, therefore, does not address them in order to invite them to repentance; but, on the contrary, he has a regard to the faithful, that they, hearing of the miserable and of the rich, might not envy their fortune, and also that knowing that God would be the avenger of the wrongs they suffered, they might with a calm and resigned mind bear them. 136

But he does not speak of the rich indiscriminately, but of those who, being immersed in pleasures and inflated with pride, thought of nothing but of the world, and who, like inexhaustible gulfs, devoured everything; for they, by their tyranny, oppressed others, as it appears from the whole passage.

Weep and howl, or, Lament, howling. Repentance has indeed its weeping, but being mixed with consolation, it does not proceed to howling. Then James intimates that the heaviness of God’s vengeance will be so horrible and severe on the rich, that they will be constrained to break forth into howling, as though he had said briefly to them, “Woe to you!” But it is a prophetic mode of speaking: the ungodly have the punishment which awaits them set before them, and they are represented as already enduring it. As, then, they were now flattering themselves, and promising to themselves that the prosperity in which they thought themselves happy would be perpetual, he declared that the most grievous miseries were nigh at hand.

Calvin: Jam 5:2 - -- 2.Your riches. The meaning may be twofold: — that he ridicules their foolish confidence, because the riches in which they placed their happiness, w...

2.Your riches. The meaning may be twofold: — that he ridicules their foolish confidence, because the riches in which they placed their happiness, were wholly fading, yea, that they could be reduced to nothing by one blast from God — or that he condemns as their insatiable avarice, because they heaped together wealth only for this, that they might perish without any benefit. This latter meaning is the most suitable. It is, indeed, true that those rich men are insane who glory in things so fading as garments, gold, silver, and such things, since it is nothing else than to make their glory subject to rust and moths; and well known is that saying “What is ill got is soon lost;” because the curse of God consumes it all, for it is not right that the ungodly or their heirs should enjoy riches which they have snatched, as it were, by violence from the hand of God.

But as James enumerates the vices of which the rich brought on themselves the calamity which he mentions, the context requires, as I think, that we should say, that what he condemns here is the extreme rapacity of the rich, in retaining everything they could lay hold on, that it might rot uselessly in their chests. For thus it was, that what God had created for the use of men, they destroyed, as though they were the enemies of mankind. 137

But it must be observed, that the vices which he mentions here do not belong to all the rich; for some of them indulge themselves in luxury, some spend much in show and display, and some pinch themselves, and live miserably in their own filth. Let us, then, know that he here reproves some vices in some, and some vices in others. However, all those are generally condemned who unjustly accumulate riches, or who foolishly abuse them. But what James now says, is not only suitable to the rich of extreme tenacity, (such as Euclio of Plautus,) but to those also who delight in pomp and luxury, and yet prefer to heap up riches rather than to employ them for necessary purposes. For such is the malignity of some, that they grudge to others the common sun and air.

Calvin: Jam 5:3 - -- 3.A witness against you. He confirms the explanation I have already given. For God has not appointed gold for rust, nor garments for moths; but, on t...

3.A witness against you. He confirms the explanation I have already given. For God has not appointed gold for rust, nor garments for moths; but, on the contrary, be has designed them as aids and helps to human life. Therefore, even spending without benefit is a witness of inhumanity. The rusting of gold and silver will be, as it were, the occasion of inflaming the wrath of God, so that it will, like fire, consume them.

Ye have heaped treasure together: These words may also admit of two explanations: — that the rich, as they would always live, are never satisfied, but weary themselves in heaping together what may be sufficient to the end of the world, — or, that they heap together the wrath and curse of God for the last day; and this second view I embrace. 138

Defender: Jam 5:3 - -- This section (Jam 5:1-9) is obviously set in the context of "the last days." While it is true that the disparity between rich and poor has always been...

This section (Jam 5:1-9) is obviously set in the context of "the last days." While it is true that the disparity between rich and poor has always been a great problem (and thus any period in church history could have been held to fulfill this prophecy), it also seems true that the problem grows more severe every year. Communism, which all but conquered the world before it suddenly disintegrated, was fueled by intellectuals who took advantage of the feeling of hopelessness in the downtrodden masses, on whose backs had been built the great fortunes of the wealthy classes. The institution of slavery had already contributed to the amassing of wealth by prosperous merchants and landowners in many nations. Even now, despite the development of a superficial democracy in various nations, the reality is that wealth and political influence in greater and more insidious - even conspiratorial - financial empires have concentrated the wealth of the world in the hands of a relatively small number of multi-national power brokers. That this will still be the case in the very last days before Christ returns is evident from the graphic description of the destruction of commercial Babylon in Revelation 18."

TSK: Jam 5:1 - -- Go : Jam 4:13 ye : Jam 1:11, Jam 2:6; Deu 8:12-14, Deu 32:15; Neh 9:25, Neh 9:26; Job 20:15-29; Psa 17:14; Psa 49:6-20, Psa 73:3-9, Psa 73:18-20; Pro ...

TSK: Jam 5:2 - -- Your riches : Jer 17:11; Mat 6:19, Mat 6:20; Luk 12:33; 1Pe 1:4 your garments : Jam 2:2; Job 13:28; Psa 39:11; Isa 50:9, Isa 51:8; Hos 5:12

TSK: Jam 5:3 - -- cankered : 2Ti 2:17 a witness : Gen 31:48, Gen 31:52; Jos 24:27; Job 16:8 and shall : Jer 19:9; Mic 3:3; Rev 17:16, Rev 20:15, Rev 21:8 Ye have : Deu ...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Jam 5:1 - -- Go to now - Notes, Jam 4:13. Ye rich men - Not all rich men, but only that class of them who are specified as unjust and oppressive. Ther...

Go to now - Notes, Jam 4:13.

Ye rich men - Not all rich men, but only that class of them who are specified as unjust and oppressive. There is no sin in merely being rich; where sin exists peculiarly among the rich, it arises from the manner in which wealth is acquired, the spirit which it tends to engender in the heart, and the way in which it is used. Compare the Luk 6:24 note; 1Ti 6:9 note.

Weep and howl - Greek: "Weep howling."This would be expressive of very deep distress. The language is intensive in a high degree, showing that the calamities which were coming upon them were not only such as would produce tears, but tears accompanied with loud lamentations. In the East, it is customary to give expression to deep sorrow by loud outcries. Compare Isa 13:6; Isa 14:31; Isa 15:2; Isa 16:7; Jer 4:8; Jer 47:2; Joe 1:5.

For your miseries that shall come upon you - Many expositors, as Benson, Whitby, Macknight, and others, suppose that this refers to the approaching destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans, and to the miseries which would be brought in the siege upon the Jewish people, in which the rich would be the peculiar objects of cupidity and vengeance. They refer to passages in Josephus, which describe particularly the sufferings to which the rich were exposed; the searching of their houses by the zealots, and the heavy calamities which came upon them and their families. But there is no reason to suppose that the apostle referred particularly to those events. The poor as well as the rich suffered in that siege, and there were no such special judgments then brought upon the rich as to show that they were the marked objects of the divine displeasure. It is much more natural to suppose that the apostle means to say that such men as he here refers to exposed themselves always to the wrath of God, and that they had great reason to weep in the anticipation of his vengeance. The sentiments here expressed by the apostle are not applicable merely to the Jews of his time. If there is any class of men which has special reason to dread the wrath of God at all times, it is just the class of men here referred to.

Barnes: Jam 5:2 - -- Your riches are corrupted - The word here rendered "corrupted"( σήπω sēpō ) does not occur elsewhere in the New Testament. It mea...

Your riches are corrupted - The word here rendered "corrupted"( σήπω sēpō ) does not occur elsewhere in the New Testament. It means, to cause to rot, to corrupt, to destroy. The reference here is to their hoarded treasures; and the idea is, that they had accumulated more than they needed for their own use; and that, instead of distributing them to do good to others, or employing them in any useful way, they kept them until they rotted or spoiled. It is to be remembered, that a considerable part of the treasures which a man in the East would lay up, consisted of perishable materials, as garments, grain, oil, etc. Such articles of property were often stored up, expecting that they would furnish a supply for many years, in case of the prevalence of famine or wars. Compare Luk 12:18-19. A suitable provision for the time to come cannot be forbidden; but the reference here is to cases in which great quantities had been laid up, perhaps while the poor were suffering, and which were kept until they became worthless.

Your garments are moth-eaten - The same idea substantially is expressed here in another form. As the fashions in the East did not change as they do with us, wealth consisted much in the garments that were laid up for show or for future use. See the notes at Mat 6:19. Q. Curtius says that when Alexander the Great was going to take Persepolis, the riches of all Asia were gathered there together, which consisted not only of a great abundance of gold and silver, but also of garments, Lib. vi. c. 5. Horace tells us that when Lucullus the Roman was asked if he could lend a hundred garments for the theater, he replied that he had five thousand in his house, of which they were welcome to take part or all. Of course, such property would be liable to be moth-eaten; and the idea here is, that they had amassed a great amount of this kind of property which was useless to them, and which they kept until it became destroyed.

Barnes: Jam 5:3 - -- Your gold and silver is cankered - That is, that you have heaped together, by injustice and fraud, a large amount, and have kept it from those ...

Your gold and silver is cankered - That is, that you have heaped together, by injustice and fraud, a large amount, and have kept it from those to whom it is due, Jam 5:4, until it has become corroded. The word rendered is "cankered"( κατίωται katiōtai ,) does not occur elsewhere in the New Testament. It properly means "to cause to rust; to rust out"(Passow); "to be corroded with rust"(Robinson); to be spotted with rust. It is true that gold and silver do not properly rust, or become oxidized, and that they will not be corroded like iron and steel; but by being kept long in a damp place they will contract a dark color, resembling rust in appearance. This seems to be the idea in the mind of the apostle. He speaks of gold and silver as they appear after having been long laid up without use; and undoubtedly the word which he uses here is one which would to an ancient have expressed that idea, as well as the mere literal idea of the rusting or oxidizing of metals. There is no reason to suppose that the word was then used in the strict chemical sense of rusting, for there is no reason to suppose that the nature of oxidization was then fully understood.

And the rust of them - Another word is used here - ἰὸς ios . This properly denotes something sent out or emitted, (from ἕημι hēmi ), and is applied to a missile weapon, as an arrow; to poison, as emitted from the tooth of a serpent; and to rust, as it seems to be emitted from metals. The word refers to the dark discoloration which appears on gold and silver, when they have remained long without use.

Shall be a witness against you - That is, the rust or discoloration shall bear testimony against you that the money is not used as it should be, either in paying those to whom it is due, or in doing good to others. Among the ancients, the gold and silver which anyone possessed was laid up in some secret and safe place. Compare the notes at Isa 45:3. There were no banks then in which money might be deposited; there were few ways of investing money so as to produce regular interest; there were no corporations to employ money in joint operations; and it was not very common to invest money in the purchase of real estate, and stocks and mortgages were little known.

And shall eat your flesh as it were fire - This cannot be taken literally. It must mean that the effect would be as if it should corrode or consume their very flesh; that is, the fact of their laying up treasures would be followed by painful consequences. The thought is very striking, and the language in which it is conveyed is singularly bold and energetic. The effect of thus heaping up treasure will be as corroding as fire in the flesh. The reference is to the punishment which God would bring on them for their avarice and in-justice - effects that will come on all now for the same offences.

Ye have heaped treasure together for the last days - The day of judgment; the closing scenes of this world. You have been heaping up treasure; but it will be treasure of a different kind from what you have supposed. It is treasure not laid up for ostentation, or luxury, or use in future life, but treasure the true worth of which will be seen at the judgment-day. So Paul speaks of "treasuring up wrath against the day of wrath, and revelation of the righteous judgment of God,"Rom 2:5. There are many who suppose they are accumulating property that may be of use to them, or that may secure them the reputation of possessing great wealth, who are in fact accumulating a most fearful treasure against the day of final retribution. Every man who is rich should examine himself closely to see whether there is anything in the manner in which he has gained his property, or in which he now holds it, that will expose him to the wrath of God in the last day. That on which he so much prides himself may yet bring down on him the vengeance of heaven; and in the day of judgment he may curse his own madness and folly in wasting his probation in efforts to amass property.

Poole: Jam 5:1 - -- Jam 5:1-6 Wicked rich men are warned of God’ s impending judgment. Jam 5:7-11 The brethren are exhorted to patience, after the example of th...

Jam 5:1-6 Wicked rich men are warned of God’ s impending judgment.

Jam 5:7-11 The brethren are exhorted to patience, after the

example of the prophets and of Job,

Jam 5:12 to abstain from swearing,

Jam 5:13-15 to pray in affliction and sickness, and sing psalms

in prosperity,

Jam 5:16-18 to acknowledge mutually their faults, and to pray for one

another,

Jam 5:19,20 and to endeavour to reclaim sinners.

Go to now: see Jam 4:13 .

Ye rich men he speaks to them not simply as rich, (for riches and grace sometimes may go together), but as wicked, not only wallowing in wealth, but abusing it to pride, luxury, oppression, and cruelty. Against these, either as looking on them as incurable, or upon supposition of their impenitency, he denounceth God’ s judgments; and that whether they were unconverted Jews, vexing the believing Jews; or Gentiles, oppressing the Christian Jews; or Christians in profession and name, who yet were so vile in their practice, as to condemn and kill the just; and that they might more speciously do it, to draw them before the judgment-seats, &c.

Weep and howl to denote the extremity of the calamities coming upon them, in which they should not only weep like men, but howl like wild beasts: see Jer 4:8 Mic 1:8 Joe 1:10,13 .

For your miseries that shall come upon you or, are coming upon you, to signify the certainty and nearness of them. The miseries he means may be both temporal and eternal.

Poole: Jam 5:2 - -- Your riches are corrupted: either by riches he means the general, and by garments gold and silver, the particulars in which their riches consiste...

Your riches are corrupted: either by riches he means the general, and by

garments gold and silver, the particulars in which their riches consisted; and then being corrupted, is to be taken generally, as comprehending the several ways whereby the several kinds of their riches were spoiled: or else, by riches he understands such things as were liable to corruption, or putrefaction, as corn, wine, oil, which were a great part of their riches.

And your garments are moth-eaten costly garments, in which rich men are wont to pride themselves; and under them may be comprehended all such clothes as may be eaten by worms or moths.

Poole: Jam 5:3 - -- Your gold and silver is cankered the most precious and lasting metals; yet even they, with long disuse, canker, and go to decay. Under these, other m...

Your gold and silver is cankered the most precious and lasting metals; yet even they, with long disuse, canker, and go to decay. Under these, other metals in esteem among them may be understood.

And the rust of them shall be a witness against you: by a prosopopoeia, that which properly belongs to living persons is ascribed to dead things, as Hab 2:11 Luk 19:40 . It is as much as if he had said: The rust shall be a certain evidence against you, and which will as effectually convict you, as any living witness could do, of your folly in putting your trust in perishing things, your greediness in hoarding them up, your unmercifulness in not supplying the wants of others, and your unreasonableness in denying the use of them to yourselves, when you had rather let them lie by and perish, than enjoy the comfort of them, or do good with them. The like expression we have, Mar 6:11 .

And shall eat your flesh the rust (the witness of your covetousness and cruelty) which now eats your money, shall hereafter devour yourselves, soul and body, (which he means by flesh ), viz. by procuring and kindling the wrath of God upon you, (compared to fire), and likewise by galling your consciences with a vexatious remembrance of your sin and folly; and so what in the judgment is a witness against you, in hell will be a tormentor to you.

As it were fire as if you had reserved fire in your treasure, as well as treasure in your chests.

Ye have heaped treasure together for the last days: either this may be understood metaphorically, ye have heaped a treasure of wrath for the last days, Rom 2:5 ; or literally, ye have hoarded up your wealth against the last and fatal days, in which God is bringing those judgments upon you which will consume all.

Haydock: Jam 5:1-6 - -- Go now rich men, &c. In the first six verses, he gives admonitions to those among the Christians who were rich, not to rely on riches, nor value t...

Go now rich men, &c. In the first six verses, he gives admonitions to those among the Christians who were rich, not to rely on riches, nor value themselves on this account. You must look upon your riches and treasures as if they were already putrefied and corrupted, your gold and silver eaten and consumed with rust: and their rust shall rise in testimony and judgment against you, for not making better use of them. As your coin is eaten with rust, so shall your bodies be hereafter as it were eaten and consumed by fire. You heap up to yourselves a treasure in the day of wrath, while through covetousness, and hard heartedness, you defraud labourers of their hire, living at the same time in feasting and luxury, as in the day of slaughter. That is, feasting as men are accustomed to do, on the days when victims are slaughtered, offered, and eaten with great rejoicing. Others expound it, as if you were feeding, and making yourselves fit sacrifices and victims for God's anger and indignation. (Witham) ---

You have feasted, &c. The Greek is, "you have lived in delicacies and debaucheries, and have feasted upon your hearts as for the day of sacrifice:" Greek: Etruphesate, kai espatalesate ethrepsate tas kardias umon os en emera sphages. That is, you have fattened yourselves with good cheer and sensual pleasures, like victims prepared for solemn sacrifice. (Calmet) ---

Others among you have unjustly oppressed, accused, and brought to condemnation the just one, by which seems to be understood just and innocent men, who are divers times deprived of their fortunes, and even of their lives, by the unjust contrivances of powerful wicked men. (Witham)

Gill: Jam 5:1 - -- Go to now, ye rich men,.... All rich men are not here designed; there are some rich men who are good men, and make a good use of their riches, and do ...

Go to now, ye rich men,.... All rich men are not here designed; there are some rich men who are good men, and make a good use of their riches, and do not abuse them, as these here are represented; and yet wicked rich men, or those that were the openly profane, are not here intended neither; for the apostle only writes to such who were within the church, and not without, who were professors of religion; and such rich men are addressed here, who, notwithstanding their profession, were not rich towards God, but laid up treasure for themselves, and trusted in their riches, and boasted of the multitude of their wealth; and did not trust in God, and make use of their substance to his glory, and the good of his interest, as they should have done:

weep and howl for your miseries that shall come upon you; meaning, not temporal calamities that should come upon them at the destruction of Jerusalem, in which the rich greatly suffered by the robbers among themselves, as well as by the Roman soldiers; for the apostle is not writing to the Jews in Judea, and at Jerusalem; but to the Christians of the twelve tribes scattered in the several parts of the world, and who were not distressed by that calamity; but eternal miseries, or the torments of hell are intended, which, unless they repented of their sins, would shortly, suddenly, and unavoidably come upon them, when their present joy and laughter would be turned into howling and weeping.

Gill: Jam 5:2 - -- Your riches are corrupted,.... Either through disuse of them; and so the phrase is expressive of their tenaciousness, withholding that from themselves...

Your riches are corrupted,.... Either through disuse of them; and so the phrase is expressive of their tenaciousness, withholding that from themselves and others which is meet, and which is keeping riches for the owners thereof, to their hurt; or these are corrupted, and are corruptible things, fading and perishing, and will stand in no stead in the day of wrath, and therefore it is great weakness to put any trust and confidence in them:

and your garments are moth eaten; being neither wore by themselves, nor put upon the backs of others, as they should, but laid up in wardrobes, or in chests and coffers, and so became the repast of moths, and now good for nothing.

Gill: Jam 5:3 - -- Your gold and silver is cankered,.... Or grown rusty like iron, by lying long without use; this is not easily and quickly done, but in length of time ...

Your gold and silver is cankered,.... Or grown rusty like iron, by lying long without use; this is not easily and quickly done, but in length of time gold and silver will change, and contract a rustiness; and so this conveys the same idea of hoarding up riches and laying up money, without making use of it in trade, for the support of the poor, and without distributing it to their necessities:

and the rust of them shall be a witness against you: at the day of judgment; which will be a proof that they have not been employed to such services, and for such usefulness, for which they were designed and given.

And shall eat your flesh as it were fire; that is, a remembrance of this, a sense of it impressed upon them, shall be like fire in their bones; shall distress their minds, gnaw their consciences, and be in them the worm that never dies, and the fire that shall never be quenched:

ye have heaped treasure together for the last days; either for many years, as the fool in the Gospel, for the times of old age, the last days of men, for fear they should then want; or for the last days of the world, or of time, as if they thought they should live for ever: the Vulgate Latin version reads, "ye have treasured up wrath for yourselves in the last days"; instead of riches, as they imagined; and that by their covetousness and wickedness, by a wicked disuse of their riches, and an unrighteous detention of them; but this supplement seems to be taken from Rom 2:5 though the sense is confirmed by some copies which connect the phrase, "as it were fire", in the preceding clause, with this, "ye have treasured up as it were fire"; and the Syriac version renders it, "ye have treasured up fire"; the fire of divine wrath; this is the fruit of treasuring up riches in an ill way, and without making a proper use of them.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Jam 5:1 Or “wail”; Grk “crying aloud.”

NET Notes: Jam 5:3 Or “hoarded up treasure for the last days”; Grk “in the last days.”

Geneva Bible: Jam 5:1 Go ( 1 ) to now, [ye] rich men, weep and howl for your miseries that shall come upon [you]. ( 1 ) He denounces utter destruction to the wicked and pr...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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

MHCC: Jam 5:1-6 - --Public troubles are most grievous to those who live in pleasure, and are secure and sensual, though all ranks suffer deeply at such times. All idolize...

Matthew Henry: Jam 5:1-11 - -- The apostle is here addressing first sinners and then saints. I. Let us consider the address to sinners; and here we find James seconding what his g...

Barclay: Jam 5:1-3 - --Jam 5:1-6has two aims. First, to show the ultimate worthlessness of all earthly riches; and second, to show the detestable character of those who ...

Barclay: Jam 5:1-3 - --Not even the most cursory reader of the Bible can fail to be impressed with the social passion which blazes through its pages. No book condemns disho...

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

Constable: Jam 5:1-6 - --A. Warnings for the Rich 5:1-6 It is characteristic of James' well-balanced style that he opened and clo...

Constable: Jam 5:1 - --1. The introduction of the problem 5:1 Rich people are usually happy that they have wealth. Howe...

Constable: Jam 5:2-3 - --2. The corrosive effect of wealth 5:2-3 5:2 The riches that rot are presumably perishable commodities such as food and drink. Garments were one of the...

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

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Commentary -- Other

Critics Ask: Jam 5:1 JAMES 5:1-6 —Are riches a blessing or a curse? PROBLEM: Solomon lauded riches as a blessing from God, saying, “In the house of the righteous ...

Critics Ask: Jam 5:2 JAMES 5:1-6 —Are riches a blessing or a curse? PROBLEM: Solomon lauded riches as a blessing from God, saying, “In the house of the righteous ...

Critics Ask: Jam 5:3 JAMES 5:1-6 —Are riches a blessing or a curse? PROBLEM: Solomon lauded riches as a blessing from God, saying, “In the house of the righteous ...

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Introduction / Outline

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

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

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

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

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

Poole: James 5 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 5

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


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