
Text -- James 5:7-12 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Jam 5:7 - -- Be patient therefore ( makrothumēsate oun ).
A direct corollary (oun , therefore) from the coming judgment on the wicked rich (Jam 5:1-6). First ao...
Be patient therefore (
A direct corollary (

Robertson: Jam 5:7 - -- Until the coming of the Lord ( heōs tēs parousias ).
The second coming of Christ he means, the regular phrase here and in Jam 5:8 for that idea (...

Robertson: Jam 5:7 - -- The husbandman ( ho geōrgos ).
The worker in the ground (gē , ergō ) as in Mat 21:33.
The husbandman (
The worker in the ground (

Robertson: Jam 5:7 - -- Waiteth for ( ekdechetai ).
Present middle indicative of ekdechomai , old verb for eager expectation as in Act 17:16.
Waiteth for (
Present middle indicative of

Robertson: Jam 5:7 - -- Precious ( timion ).
Old adjective from timē (honor, price), dear to the farmer because of his toil for it. See 1Pe 1:19.
Precious (
Old adjective from

Robertson: Jam 5:7 - -- Being patient over it ( makrothumōn ep' autōi ).
Present active participle of makrothumeō just used in the exhortation, picturing the farmer ...
Being patient over it (
Present active participle of

Robertson: Jam 5:7 - -- Until it receive ( heōs labēi ).
Temporal clause of the future with heōs and the second aorist active subjunctive of lambanō , vividly desc...
Until it receive (
Temporal clause of the future with

Robertson: Jam 5:7 - -- The early and latter rain ( promon kai opsimon ).
The word for rain (hueton Act 14:17) is absent from the best MSS. The adjective promos (fro...
The early and latter rain (
The word for rain (

Ye also (
As well as the farmers.

Robertson: Jam 5:8 - -- Stablish ( stērixate ).
First aorist active imperative of stērizō , old verb, (from stērigx , a support) to make stable, as in Luk 22:32; 1Th...

Robertson: Jam 5:8 - -- Is at hand ( ēggiken ).
Present perfect active indicative of eggizō , common verb, to draw near (from eggus ), in Jam 4:8, for drawing near. Sam...
Is at hand (
Present perfect active indicative of

Robertson: Jam 5:9 - -- Murmur not ( mē stenazete ).
Prohibition with mē and the present active imperative of stenazō , old verb, to groan. "Stop groaning against on...
Murmur not (
Prohibition with

Robertson: Jam 5:9 - -- That ye be not judged ( hina mē krithēte ).
Negative purpose clause with hina mē and the first aorist passive subjunctive of krinō . As alr...

Robertson: Jam 5:9 - -- Standeth before the doors ( pro tōn thurōn hestēken ).
Perfect active indicative of histēmi , "is standing now."Again like the language of Je...

Robertson: Jam 5:10 - -- For an example ( hupodeigma ).
Late word for the old paradeigma , from hupodeiknumi , to copy under, to teach (Luk 6:47), here for copy to be imitate...
For an example (
Late word for the old

Robertson: Jam 5:10 - -- Of suffering ( tēs kakopathias ).
Old word from kakopathēs (suffering evil, kakopatheō in Jam 5:13; 2Ti 2:3, 2Ti 2:9), here only in N.T.

Robertson: Jam 5:10 - -- Of patience ( makrothumias ).
Like makrothumeō in Jam 5:7. See both makrothumia and hupomonē in 2Co 4:6; Col 1:11 (the one restraint from r...

Robertson: Jam 5:10 - -- In the name of ( en tōi onomati ).
As in Jer 20:9. With the authority of the Lord (Deissmann, Bible Studies , p. 198).
In the name of (
As in Jer 20:9. With the authority of the Lord (Deissmann, Bible Studies , p. 198).

Robertson: Jam 5:11 - -- We call blessed ( makarizomen ).
Old word (present active indicative of makarizō ), from makarios (happy), in N.T. only here and Luk 1:48. "We f...

Robertson: Jam 5:11 - -- Ye have heard ( ēkousate ).
First aorist (constative) active indicative of akouō . As in Mat 5:21, Mat 5:27, Mat 5:33, Mat 5:38, Mat 5:43. Ropes ...

Robertson: Jam 5:11 - -- Of Job ( Iōb ).
Job did complain, but he refused to renounce God (Job 1:21; Job 2:10; Job 13:15; Job 16:19; Job 19:25.). He had become a stock illu...

Robertson: Jam 5:11 - -- Ye have seen ( eidete ).
Second aorist (constative) active indicative of horaō . In Job’ s case.
Ye have seen (
Second aorist (constative) active indicative of

Robertson: Jam 5:11 - -- The end of the Lord ( to telos kuriou ).
The conclusion wrought by the Lord in Job’ s case (Job 42:12).
The end of the Lord (
The conclusion wrought by the Lord in Job’ s case (Job 42:12).

Robertson: Jam 5:11 - -- Full of pity ( polusplagchnos ).
Late and rare compound (polus , splagchnon ), only here in N.T. It occurs also in Hermas ( Sim. v. 7. 4; Mand. iv...
Full of pity (
Late and rare compound (

Robertson: Jam 5:11 - -- Merciful ( oiktirmōn ).
Late and rare adjective (from oikteirō to pity), in N.T. only here and Luk 6:36.
Merciful (
Late and rare adjective (from

Robertson: Jam 5:12 - -- Above all things ( pro pantōn ).
No connection with what immediately precedes. Probably an allusion to the words of Jesus (Mat 5:34-37). It is not ...
Above all things (
No connection with what immediately precedes. Probably an allusion to the words of Jesus (Mat 5:34-37). It is not out of place here. See the same phrase in 1Pe 4:8. Robinson ( Ephesians , p. 279) cites like examples from the papyri at the close of letters. Here it means "But especially"(Ropes).

Robertson: Jam 5:12 - -- Swear not ( mē omnuete ).
Prohibition of the habit (or to quit doing it if guilty) with mē and the present active imperative of omnuō . The v...
Swear not (
Prohibition of the habit (or to quit doing it if guilty) with

Robertson: Jam 5:12 - -- Let be ( ētō ).
Imperative active third singular of eimi , late form (1Co 16:22) for estō . "Your yea be yea"(and no more). A different form fr...

Robertson: Jam 5:12 - -- That ye fall not under judgment ( hina mē hupo krisin pesēte ).
Negative purpose with hina mē and the second aorist active subjunctive of pip...
Vincent: Jam 5:7 - -- Be patient ( μακροθυμήσατε )
From μακρός , long , and θυμός , soul or spirit, but with the sense of strong pass...
Be patient (
From

Vincent: Jam 5:7 - -- Therefore
Since things are so. Referring to the condition of things described in the previous passage.
Therefore
Since things are so. Referring to the condition of things described in the previous passage.

Brethren
In contrast with the rich just addressed.


Vincent: Jam 5:7 - -- The early and latter rain ( ὑετὸν πρώιμον καὶ ὄψιμον )
Both adjectives only here in New Testament. Ὑετὸ...
The early and latter rain (
Both adjectives only here in New Testament.

Vincent: Jam 5:9 - -- Grudge not ( μὴ στενάζετε )
Better, as Rev., murmur not. The verb means to sigh or groan.
Grudge not (
Better, as Rev., murmur not. The verb means to sigh or groan.

Standeth before the doors
In the act of entering.

Vincent: Jam 5:10 - -- Of suffering affliction ( κακοπαθείας )
Only here in New Testament. The word does not mean the endurance of affliction, but affli...
Of suffering affliction (
Only here in New Testament. The word does not mean the endurance of affliction, but affliction itself. Hence, Rev., rightly, suffering.

Vincent: Jam 5:11 - -- Endure ( ὑπομένοντας )
Present participle. But the later texts read ὑπομείναντας , the aorist participle, which e...
Endure (
Present participle. But the later texts read

Vincent: Jam 5:11 - -- The end of the Lord ( τὸ τέλος κυρίου )
A peculiar expression. The happy conclusion to which God brought Job's trials.
The end of the Lord (
A peculiar expression. The happy conclusion to which God brought Job's trials.

Vincent: Jam 5:11 - -- Very pitiful and of tender mercy ( πολυσπλαγχνός καὶ οἰκτίρμων )
The former adjective only here in New Testament...
Very pitiful and of tender mercy (
The former adjective only here in New Testament; the latter here and Luk 6:36. Rev., full of pity and merciful.
Which will recompense his labour and patience.

And so is his last coming to the eye of a believer.

Hearing every word, marking every thought.

Wesley: Jam 5:10 - -- Once persecuted like you, even for speaking in the name of the Lord. The very men that gloried in having prophets yet could not bear their message: no...
Once persecuted like you, even for speaking in the name of the Lord. The very men that gloried in having prophets yet could not bear their message: nor did either their holiness or their high commission screen them from suffering.

Wesley: Jam 5:11 - -- That suffered patiently. The more they once suffered, the greater is their present happiness.
That suffered patiently. The more they once suffered, the greater is their present happiness.

Wesley: Jam 5:12 - -- However provoked. The Jews were notoriously guilty of common swearing, though not so much by God himself as by some of his creatures. The apostle here...
However provoked. The Jews were notoriously guilty of common swearing, though not so much by God himself as by some of his creatures. The apostle here particularly forbids these oaths, as well as all swearing in common conversation. It is very observable, how solemnly the apostle introduces this command: above all things, swear not - As if he had said, Whatever you forget, do not forget this. This abundantly demonstrates the horrible iniquity of the crime. But he does not forbid the taking a solemn oath before a magistrate. Let your yea be yea; and your nay, nay - Use no higher asseverations in common discourse; and let your word stand firm. Whatever ye say, take care to make it good.
JFB: Jam 5:7 - -- As judgment is so near (Jam 5:1, Jam 5:3), ye may well afford to be "patient" after the example of the unresisting Just one (Jam 5:6).

Christ, when the trial of your patience shall cease.

JFB: Jam 5:7 - -- That is, patiently bears toils and delays through hope of the harvest at last. Its "preciousness" (compare Psa 126:6, "precious seed") will more than ...

JFB: Jam 5:7 - -- "until it receive" [ALFORD]. Even if English Version be retained, the receiving of the early and latter rains is not to be understood as the object of...
"until it receive" [ALFORD]. Even if English Version be retained, the receiving of the early and latter rains is not to be understood as the object of his hope, but the harvest for which those rains are the necessary preliminary. The early rain fell at sowing time, about November or December; the latter rain, about March or April, to mature the grain for harvest. The latter rain that shall precede the coming spiritual harvest, will probably be another Pentecost-like effusion of the Holy Ghost.

JFB: Jam 5:8 - -- The Greek expresses present time and a settled state. 1Pe 4:7, "is at hand." We are to live in a continued state of expectancy of the Lord's coming, a...
The Greek expresses present time and a settled state. 1Pe 4:7, "is at hand." We are to live in a continued state of expectancy of the Lord's coming, as an event always nigh. Nothing can more "stablish the heart" amidst present troubles than the realized expectation of His speedy coming.

JFB: Jam 5:9 - -- Rather "Murmur not"; "grumble not." The Greek is literally, "groan": a half-suppressed murmur of impatience and harsh judgment, not uttered aloud or f...
Rather "Murmur not"; "grumble not." The Greek is literally, "groan": a half-suppressed murmur of impatience and harsh judgment, not uttered aloud or freely. Having exhorted them to patience in bearing wrongs from the wicked, he now exhorts them to a forbearing spirit as to the offenses given by brethren. Christians, who bear the former patiently, sometimes are impatient at the latter, though much less grievous.

JFB: Jam 5:9 - -- The best manuscript authorities read, "judged." James refers to Mat 7:1, "Judge not lest ye be judged." To "murmur against one another" is virtually t...
The best manuscript authorities read, "judged." James refers to Mat 7:1, "Judge not lest ye be judged." To "murmur against one another" is virtually to judge, and so to become liable to be judged.

JFB: Jam 5:9 - -- Referring to Mat 24:33. The Greek is the same in both passages, and so ought to be translated here as there, "doors," plural. The phrase means "near a...
Referring to Mat 24:33. The Greek is the same in both passages, and so ought to be translated here as there, "doors," plural. The phrase means "near at hand" (Gen 4:7), which in the oldest interpretations [Targums of Jonathan and Jerusalem] is explained, "thy sin is reserved unto the judgment of the world to come." Compare "the everlasting doors" (Psa 24:7, whence He shall come forth). The Lord's coming to destroy Jerusalem is primarily referred to; and ultimately, His coming again visibly to judgment.

Who were especially persecuted, and therefore were especially "blessed."

Rather, simply, "of affliction," literally, "evil treatment."

JFB: Jam 5:11 - -- The oldest authorities read, "which have endured," which suits the sense better than English Version: "Those who in past days, like the prophets and J...
The oldest authorities read, "which have endured," which suits the sense better than English Version: "Those who in past days, like the prophets and Job, have endured trials." Such, not those who "have lived in pleasure and been wanton on the earth" (Jam 5:5), are "happy."

JFB: Jam 5:11 - -- Rather, "endurance," answering to "endure": the Greek words similarly corresponding. Distinct from the Greek word for "patience" Jam 5:10. The same wo...

JFB: Jam 5:11 - -- This passage shows the history of him is concerning a real, not an imaginary person; otherwise his case could not be quoted as an example at all. Thou...
This passage shows the history of him is concerning a real, not an imaginary person; otherwise his case could not be quoted as an example at all. Though he showed much of impatience, yet he always returned to this, that he committed himself wholly to God, and at last showed a perfect spirit of enduring submission.

JFB: Jam 5:11 - -- (with the eyes of your mind). ALFORD translates from the old and genuine reading, "see also," &c. The old reading is, however, capable of being transl...
(with the eyes of your mind). ALFORD translates from the old and genuine reading, "see also," &c. The old reading is, however, capable of being translated as English Version.

JFB: Jam 5:11 - -- The end which the Lord gave. If Job had much to "endure," remember also Job's happy "end." Hence, learn, though much tried, to "endure to the end."
The end which the Lord gave. If Job had much to "endure," remember also Job's happy "end." Hence, learn, though much tried, to "endure to the end."

ALFORD and others translate, "inasmuch as," "for."

JFB: Jam 5:11 - -- The former refers to the "feeling"; the latter, to the act. His pity is shown in not laying on the patient endurer more trials than he is able to bear...
The former refers to the "feeling"; the latter, to the act. His pity is shown in not laying on the patient endurer more trials than he is able to bear; His mercy, in His giving a happy "end" to the trials [BENGEL].

As swearing is utterly alien to the Christian meek "endurance" just recommended.

JFB: Jam 5:12 - -- Through impatience, to which trials may tempt you (Jam 5:10-11). In contrast to this stands the proper use of the tongue, Jam 5:13. James here refers ...
Through impatience, to which trials may tempt you (Jam 5:10-11). In contrast to this stands the proper use of the tongue, Jam 5:13. James here refers to Mat 5:34, &c.

JFB: Jam 5:12 - -- Do not use oaths in your everyday conversation, but let a simple affirmative or denial be deemed enough to establish your word.
Do not use oaths in your everyday conversation, but let a simple affirmative or denial be deemed enough to establish your word.
Clarke: Jam 5:7 - -- Be patient, therefore - Because God is coming to execute judgment on this wicked people, therefore be patient till he comes. He seems here to refer ...
Be patient, therefore - Because God is coming to execute judgment on this wicked people, therefore be patient till he comes. He seems here to refer to the coming of the Lord to execute judgment on the Jewish nation, which shortly afterwards took place

Clarke: Jam 5:7 - -- The husbandman waiteth - The seed of your deliverance is already sown, and by and by the harvest of your salvation will take place. God’ s coun...
The husbandman waiteth - The seed of your deliverance is already sown, and by and by the harvest of your salvation will take place. God’ s counsels will ripen in due time

Clarke: Jam 5:7 - -- The early and latter rain - The rain of seed time; and the rain of ripening before harvest: the first fell in Judea, about the beginning of November...
The early and latter rain - The rain of seed time; and the rain of ripening before harvest: the first fell in Judea, about the beginning of November, after the seed was sown; and the second towards the end of April, when the ears were filling, and this prepared for a full harvest. Without these two rains, the earth would have been unfruitful. These God had promised: I will give you the rain of your land in his due season, the first rain and the latter rain, that thou mayest gather in thy corn, and thy wine, and thy oil, Deu 11:14. But for these they were not only to wait patiently, but also to pray, Ask ye of the Lord rain in the time of the latter rain; so shall the Lord make bright clouds, and give them showers of rain, to every one grass in the field; Zec 10:1.

Clarke: Jam 5:8 - -- Be ye also patient - Wait for God’ s deliverance, as ye wait for his bounty in providence
Be ye also patient - Wait for God’ s deliverance, as ye wait for his bounty in providence

Stablish your hearts - Take courage; do not sink under your trials

Clarke: Jam 5:8 - -- The coming of the Lord draweth nigh - Ηγγικε· Is at hand. He is already on his way to destroy this wicked people, to raze their city and te...
The coming of the Lord draweth nigh -

Clarke: Jam 5:9 - -- Grudge not - Μη στεναζετε· Groan not; grumble not; do not murmur through impatience; and let not any ill treatment which you receive, ...
Grudge not -

Clarke: Jam 5:9 - -- Lest ye be condemned - By giving way to a spirit of this kind, you will get under the condemnation of the wicked
Lest ye be condemned - By giving way to a spirit of this kind, you will get under the condemnation of the wicked

Clarke: Jam 5:9 - -- The judge standeth before the door - His eye is upon every thing that is wrong in you, and every wrong that is done to you; and he is now entering i...
The judge standeth before the door - His eye is upon every thing that is wrong in you, and every wrong that is done to you; and he is now entering into judgment with your oppressors.

Clarke: Jam 5:10 - -- Take - the prophets - The prophets who had spoken to their forefathers by the authority of God, were persecuted by the very people to whom they deli...
Take - the prophets - The prophets who had spoken to their forefathers by the authority of God, were persecuted by the very people to whom they delivered the Divine message; but they suffered affliction and persecution with patience, commending their cause to him who judgeth righteously; therefore, imitate their example.

Clarke: Jam 5:11 - -- We count them happy which endure - According to that saying of our blessed Lord, Blessed are ye when men shall persecute and revile you - for so per...

Clarke: Jam 5:11 - -- Ye have heard of the patience of Job - Stripped of all his worldly possessions, deprived at a stroke of all his children, tortured in body with sore...
Ye have heard of the patience of Job - Stripped of all his worldly possessions, deprived at a stroke of all his children, tortured in body with sore disease, tempted by the devil, harassed by his wife, and calumniated by his friends, he nevertheless held fast his integrity, resigned himself to the Divine dispensations, and charged not God foolishly

Clarke: Jam 5:11 - -- And have seen the end of the Lord - The issue to which God brought all his afflictions and trials, giving him children, increasing his property, len...
And have seen the end of the Lord - The issue to which God brought all his afflictions and trials, giving him children, increasing his property, lengthening out his life, and multiplying to him every kind of spiritual and secular good. This was God’ s end with respect to him; but the devil’ s end was to drive him to despair, and to cause him to blaspheme his Maker. This mention of Job shows him to have been a real person; for a fictitious person would not have been produced as an example of any virtue so highly important as that of patience and perseverance. The end of the Lord is a Hebraism for the issue to which God brings any thing or business

Clarke: Jam 5:11 - -- The Lord is very pitiful, and of tender mercy - Instead of πολυσπλαγχνος, which we translate very pitiful, and which might be rendered...
The Lord is very pitiful, and of tender mercy - Instead of

Clarke: Jam 5:12 - -- Above all things - swear not - What relation this exhortation can have to the subject in question, I confess I cannot see. It may not have been desi...
Above all things - swear not - What relation this exhortation can have to the subject in question, I confess I cannot see. It may not have been designed to stand in any connection, but to be a separate piece of advice, as in the several cases which immediately follow. That the Jews were notoriously guilty of common swearing is allowed on all hands; and that swearing by heaven, earth, Jerusalem, the temple, the altar, different parts of the body, was not considered by them as binding oaths, has been sufficiently proved. Rabbi Akiba taught that "a man might swear with his lips, and annul it in his heart; and then the oath was not binding."See the notes on Mat 5:33, etc., where the subject is considered in great detail

Clarke: Jam 5:12 - -- Let your yea be yea, etc. - Do not pretend to say yea with your lips, and annul it in your heart; let the yea or the nay which you express be bona f...
Let your yea be yea, etc. - Do not pretend to say yea with your lips, and annul it in your heart; let the yea or the nay which you express be bona fide such. Do not imagine that any mental reservation can cancel any such expressions of obligation in the sight of God

Clarke: Jam 5:12 - -- Lest ye fall into condemnation - Ἱνα μη ὑπο κρισιν πεσητε· Lest ye fall under judgment. Several MSS. join ὑπο and ...
Lest ye fall into condemnation -
Calvin: Jam 5:7 - -- 7.Be patient therefore. From this inference it is evident that what has hitherto been said against the rich, pertains to the consolation of those who...
7.Be patient therefore. From this inference it is evident that what has hitherto been said against the rich, pertains to the consolation of those who seemed for a time to be exposed to their wrongs with impunity. For after having mentioned the causes of those calamities which were hanging over the rich, and having stated this among others, that they proudly and cruelly ruled over the poor, he immediately adds, that we who are unjustly oppressed, have this reason to be patient, because God would become the judge. For this is what he means when he says, unto the coming of the Lord, that is, that the confusion of things which is now seen in the world will not be perpetual, because the Lord at his coming will reduce things to order, and that therefore our minds ought to entertain good hope; for it is not without reason that the restoration of all things is promised to us at that day. And though the day of the Lord is everywhere called in the Scriptures a manifestation of his judgment and grace, when he succors his people and chastises the ungodly, yet I prefer to regard the expression here as referring to our final deliverance.
Behold, the husbandman. Paul briefly refers to the same similitude in 2Ti 2:6, when he says that the husbandman ought to labor before he gathers the fruit; but James more fully expresses the idea, for he mentions the daily patience of the husbandman, who, after having committed the seed to the earth, confidently, or at least patiently, waits until the time of harvest comes; nor does he fret because the earth does not immediately yield a ripe fruit. He hence concludes, that we ought not to be immoderately anxious, if we must now labor and sow, until the harvest as it were comes, even the day of the Lord.
The precious fruit. He calls it precious, because it is the nourishment of life and the means of sustaining it. And James intimates, that since the husbandman suffers his life, so precious to him, to lie long deposited in the bosom of the earth, and calmly suspends his desire to gather the fruit, we ought not to be too hasty and fretful, but resignedly to wait for the day of our redemption. It is not necessary to specify particularly the other parts of the comparison.
The early and the latter rains. By the two words, early and latter, two seasons are pointed out; the first follows soon after sowing; and the other when the corn is ripening. So the prophets spoke, when they intended to set forth the time for rain, (Deu 28:12; Joe 2:23; Hos 6:3.) And he has mentioned both times, in order more fully to shew that husbandmen are not disheartened by the slow progress of time, but bear with the delay.

Calvin: Jam 5:8 - -- 8.Stablish your hearts. Lest any should object and say, that the time of deliverance was too long delayed, he obviates this objection and says, that ...
8.Stablish your hearts. Lest any should object and say, that the time of deliverance was too long delayed, he obviates this objection and says, that the Lord was at hand, or (which is the same thing) that his coming was drawing nigh. In the meantime, he bids us to correct the softness of the heart, which weakens us, so as not to persevere in hope. And doubtless the time appears long, because we are too tender and delicate. We ought, then, to gather strength that we may become hardened and this cannot be better attained than by hope, and as it were by a realizing view of the near approach of our Lord.

Calvin: Jam 5:9 - -- 9.Grudge not, or, groan not. As the complaints of many were heard, that they were more severely treated than others, this passage is so explained b...
9.Grudge not, or, groan not. As the complaints of many were heard, that they were more severely treated than others, this passage is so explained by some, as though James bade each to be contented with his own lot, not to envy others, nor grudge if the condition of others was more tolerable. But I take another view; for after having spoken of the unhappiness of those who distress good and quiet men by their tyranny, he now exhorts the faithful to be just towards one another and ready to pass by offenses. That this is the real meaning may be gathered from the reason that is added: Be not querulous one against another; lest ye be condemned. We may, indeed, groan, when any evil torments us; but he means an accusing groan, when one expostulates with the Lord against another. And he declares that thus they would all be condemned, because there is no one who does not offend his brethren, and afford them an occasion of groaning. Now, if everyone complained, they would all have accused one another; for no one was so innocent, that he did not do some harm to others.
God will be the common judge of all. What, then, will be the case, but that every one who seeks to bring judgment on others, must allow the same against himself; and thus all will be given up to the same ruin. Let no one, then, ask for vengeance on others, except he wishes to bring it on his own head. And lest they should be hasty in making complaints of this kind, he declares that the judge was at the door. For as our propensity is to profane the name of God, in the slightest offenses we appeal to his judgment. Nothing is a fitter bridle to check our rashness, than to consider that our imprecations vanish not into air, because God’s judgment is at hand.

Calvin: Jam 5:10 - -- 10.Take, my brethren, the prophets. The comfort which he brings is not that which is according to the common proverb, that the miserable hope for lik...
10.Take, my brethren, the prophets. The comfort which he brings is not that which is according to the common proverb, that the miserable hope for like companions in evils. That they set before them associates, in whose number it was desirable to be classed; and to have the same condition with them, was no misery. For as we must necessarily feel extreme grief, when any evil happens to us which the children of God have never experienced, so it is a singular consolation when we know that we suffer nothing different from them; nay, when we know that we have to sustain the same yoke with them.
When Job heard from his friends,
“Turn to the saints, can you find any like to thee?”
(Job 5:1,)
it was the voice of Satan, because he wished to drive him to despair. When, on the other hand, the Spirit by the mouth of James designs to raise us up to a good hope, he shews to us all the fore-going saints, who as it were stretch out their hand to us, and by their example encourage us to undergo and to conquer afflictions.
The life of men is indeed indiscriminately subject to troubles and adversities; but James did not bring forward any kind of men for examples, for it would have availed nothing to perish with the multitude; but he chose the prophets, a fellowship with whom is blessed. Nothing so breaks us down and disheartens us as the feeling of misery; it is therefore a real consolation to know that those things commonly deemed evils are aids and helps to our salvation. This is, indeed, what is far from being understood by the flesh; yet the faithful ought to be convinced of this, that they are happy when by various troubles they are proved by the Lord. To convince us of this, James reminds us to consider the end or design of the afflictions endured by the prophets; for as our own evils we are without judgment, being influenced by grief, sorrow, or some other immoderate feelings, as we see nothing under a foggy sky and in the midst of storms, and being tossed here and there as it were by a tempest, it is therefore necessary for us to cast our eyes to another quarter, where the sky is in a manner serene and bright. When the afflictions of the saints are related to us, there is no one who will allow that they were miserable, but, on the contrary, that they were happy.
Then James has done well for us; for he has laid before our eyes a pattern, that we may learn to look at it whenever we are tempted to impatience or to despair: and he takes this principle as granted, that the prophets were blessed in their afflictions, for they courageously sustained them. Since it was so, he concludes that the same judgment ought to be formed of us when afflicted.
And he says, the prophets who have spoken in the name of the Lord; by which he intimates that they were accepted and approved by God. If, then, it had been useful for them to have been free from miseries, doubtless God would have kept them free. But it was otherwise. It hence follows that afflictions are salutary to the faithful. He, therefore, bids them to be taken as an example of suffering affliction. But patience also must be added, which is a real evidence of our obedience. Hence he has joined them both together.

Calvin: Jam 5:11 - -- 11.The patience of Job. Having spoken generally of the prophets, he now refers to an example remarkable above others; for no one, as far as we can le...
11.The patience of Job. Having spoken generally of the prophets, he now refers to an example remarkable above others; for no one, as far as we can learn from histories, has ever been overwhelmed with troubles so hard and so various as Job; and yet he emerged from so deep a gulf. Whosoever, then, will imitate his patience, will no doubt find God’s hand, which at length delivered him, to be the same. We see for what end his history has been written. God suffered not his servant Job to sink, because he patiently endured his afflictions. Then he will disappoint the patience of no one.
If, however, it be asked, Why does the Apostle so much commend the patience of Job, as he had displayed many signs of impatience, being carried away by a hasty spirit? To this I reply, that though he sometimes failed through the infirmity of the flesh, or murmured within himself, yet he ever surrendered himself to God, and was ever willing to be restrained and ruled by him. Though, then, his patience was somewhat deficient, it is yet deservedly commended.
The end of the Lord By these words he intimates that afflictions ought ever to be estimated by their end. For at first God seems to be far away, and Satan in the meantime revels in the confusion; the flesh suggests to us that we are forsaken of God and lost. We ought, then, to extend our view farther, for near and around us there appears no light. Moreover, he has called it the end of the Lord, because it is his work to give a prosperous issue to adversities. If we do our duty in bearing evils obediently, he will by no means be wanting in performing his part. Hope directs us only to the end; God will then shew himself very merciful, how ever rigid and severe he may seem to be while afflicting us. 140

Calvin: Jam 5:12 - -- 12.But above all things. It has been a common vice almost in all ages, to swear lightly and inconsiderately. For so bad is our nature that we do not ...
12.But above all things. It has been a common vice almost in all ages, to swear lightly and inconsiderately. For so bad is our nature that we do not consider what an atrocious crime it is to profane the name of God. For though the Lord strictly commands us to reverence his name, yet men devise various subterfuges, and think that they can swear with impunity. They imagine, then, that there is no evil, provided they do not openly mention the name of God; and this is an old gloss. So the Jews, when they swore by heaven or earth, thought that they did not profane God’s name, because they did not mention it. But while men seek to be ingenious in dissembling with God, they delude themselves with the most frivolous evasions.
It was a vain excuse of this kind that Christ condemned in Mat 5:34. James, now subscribing to the decree of his master, commands us to abstain from these indirect forms of swearing: for whosoever swears in vain and on frivolous occasions, profanes God’s name, whatever form he may give to his words. Then the meaning is, that it is not more lawful to swear by heaven or by the earth, than openly by the name of God. The reason is mentioned by Christ — because the glory of God is everywhere inscribed, and everywhere shines forth. Nay, men take the words, heaven and earth, in their oaths, in no other sense and for no other purpose, than if they named God himself; for by thus speaking they only designate the Worker by his works.
But he says, above all things; because the profanation of God’s name is not a slight offense. The Anabaptists, building on this passage, condemn all oaths, but they only shew their ignorance. For James does not speak of oaths in general, nor does Christ in the passage to which I have referred; but both condemn that evasion which had been devised, when men took the liberty to swear without expressing the name of God, which was a liberty repugnant to the prohibition of the law.
And this is what the words clearly mean, Neither by heaven, neither by the earth. For, if the question had been as to oaths in themselves, to what purpose were these forms mentioned? It then appears evident that both by Christ and by James the puerile astuteness of those is reproved who taught that they could swear with impunity, provided they adopted some circuitous expressions. That we may, then, understand the meaning of James, we must understand first the precept of the law, “Thou shalt not take the name of God in vain. ” It hence appears clear, that there is a right and lawful use of God’s name. Now, James condemns those who did not indeed dare in a direct way to profane God’s name, but endeavored to evade the profanation which the law condemns, by circumlocutions.
But let your yea be yea. He brings the best remedy to correct the vice which he condemns, that is, that they were habitually to keep themselves to truth and faithfulness in all their sayings. For whence is the wicked habit of swearing, except that such is the falsehood of men, that their words alone are not believed? For, if they observed faithfulness, as they ought, in their words, there would have been no necessity of so many superfluous oaths. As, then, the perfidy or levity of men is the fountain from which the vice of swearing flows, in order to take away the vice, James teaches us that the fountain ought to be removed; for the right way of healing is to begin with the cause of illness.
Some copies have, “Let your word (or speech) be, yea, yea; no, no.” The true reading however, is what I have given, and is commonly received; and what he means I have already explained, that is, that we ought to tell the truth, and to be faithful in our words. To the same purpose is what Paul says in 2Co 1:18, that he was not in his preaching yea and nay, but pursued the same course from the beginning.
Lest ye fall into condemnation. There is a different reading, owing to the affinity of the words
Defender: Jam 5:8 - -- In fact, the great "judge standeth before the door," as it were (Jam 5:9; Rev 3:20; Mar 13:29). Even though a great majority of Christian believers in...
In fact, the great "judge standeth before the door," as it were (Jam 5:9; Rev 3:20; Mar 13:29). Even though a great majority of Christian believers in every nation are among those of whom the rich have taken unjust advantage, the Lord would advise prayerful patience rather than rebellion and retribution. He will make all things right when He comes in judgment."

Defender: Jam 5:11 - -- Many modern theologians have alleged that the book of Job was a great dramatic poem, with Job merely a fictional character concerned with the perennia...
Many modern theologians have alleged that the book of Job was a great dramatic poem, with Job merely a fictional character concerned with the perennial problem of undeserved suffering. James, however, confirms the historicity of Job and his experiences."
TSK: Jam 5:7 - -- Be patient : or, Be long patient, or, Suffer with long patience, Luk 8:15; Rom 2:7, Rom 8:24, Rom 8:25, Rom 15:4; 2Co 6:4, 2Co 6:5; Gal 5:5, Gal 6:9; ...

TSK: Jam 5:8 - -- ye also : Gen 49:18; Psa 37:7, Psa 40:1-3, Psa 130:5; Lam 3:25, Lam 3:26; Mic 7:7; Hab 2:3; Rom 8:25; Gal 5:22; 1Th 1:10; 2Th 3:5; Heb 10:35-37
stabli...

TSK: Jam 5:9 - -- Grudge not : or, Groan not, or, grieve not, Jam 4:11; Lev 19:18; Psa 59:15; Mar 6:19 *marg. 2Co 9:7; Gal 5:14, Gal 5:26; 1Pe 4:9
lest : Mat 6:14, Mat ...

TSK: Jam 5:10 - -- who : Isa 39:8; Jer 23:22, Jer 26:16; Act 3:21; Heb 13:7
for : 2Ch 36:16; Jer 2:30; Mat 5:11, Mat 5:12, Mat 21:34-39, Mat 23:34-37; Luk 6:23, Luk 13:3...

TSK: Jam 5:11 - -- we count : Jam 1:12; Psa 94:12; Mat 5:10,Mat 5:11, Mat 10:22; Heb 3:6, Heb 3:14, Heb 10:39
Ye : Job 1:21, 22-2:9, Job 2:10, Job 13:15, Job 13:16, Job ...
we count : Jam 1:12; Psa 94:12; Mat 5:10,Mat 5:11, Mat 10:22; Heb 3:6, Heb 3:14, Heb 10:39
Ye : Job 1:21, 22-2:9, Job 2:10, Job 13:15, Job 13:16, Job 23:10
and have : Job 42:10-17; Psa 37:37; Ecc 7:8; 1Pe 1:6, 1Pe 1:7, 1Pe 1:13; 2Pe 2:9
the Lord is : Exo 34:6; Num 14:18; 1Ch 21:13; 2Ch 30:9; Neh 9:17, Neh 9:31; Psa 25:6, Psa 25:7; Psa 51:1, Psa 78:38, Psa 86:5, Psa 86:15, Psa 103:8, Psa 103:13, Psa 116:5, Psa 119:132, 136:1-26; Psa 145:8; Isa 55:6, Isa 55:7, Isa 63:7, Isa 63:9; Lam 3:22; Dan 9:9, Dan 9:18, Dan 9:19; Joe 2:13; Jon 4:2; Mic 7:18; Luk 1:50, Luk 6:36; Rom 2:4; Eph 1:6, Eph 2:4

TSK: Jam 5:12 - -- above : 1Pe 4:8; 3Jo 1:2
swear not : Mat 5:33-37, Mat 23:16-22
but : 2Co 1:17-20
lest : Jam 3:1, Jam 3:2; 1Co 11:34
swear not : Mat 5:33-37, Mat 23:16-22
but : 2Co 1:17-20

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Jam 5:7 - -- Be patient therefore, brethren - That is, under such wrongs as the apostle had described in the previous verses. Those whom he addressed were d...
Be patient therefore, brethren - That is, under such wrongs as the apostle had described in the previous verses. Those whom he addressed were doubtless suffering under those oppressions, and his object was to induce them to bear their wrongs without murmuring and without resistance. One of the methods of doing this was by showing them, in an address to their rich oppressors, that those who injured and wronged them would be suitably punished at the day of judgment, or that their cause was in the hands of God; and another method of doing it was by the direct inculcation of the duty of patience. Compare the notes at Mat 5:38-41, Mat 5:43-45. The margin here is, "be long patient,"or "suffer with long patience."The sense of the Greek is, "be long-suffering, or let not your patience be exhausted. Your courage, vigor, and forbearance is not to be short-lived, but is to be enduring. Let it continue as long as there is need of it, even to the coming of the Lord. Then you will be released from sufferings."
Unto the coming of the Lord - The coming of the Lord Jesus - either to remove you by death, or to destroy the city of Jerusalem and bring to an end the Jewish institutions, or to judge the world and receive his people to himself. The "coming of the Lord"in any way was an event which Christians were taught to expect, and which would be connected with their deliverance from troubles. As the time of his appearing was not revealed, it was not improper to refer to that as an event that might possibly be near; and as the removal of Christians by death is denoted by the phrase "the coming of the Lord"- that is, his coming to each one of us - it was not improper to speak of death in that view. On the general subject of the expectations entertained among the early Christians of the second advent of the Saviour, see the 1Co 15:51 note; 2Th 2:2-3 note.
Behold, the husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth - The farmer waits patiently for the grain to grow. It requires time to mature the crop, and he does not become impatient. The idea seems to be, that we should wait for things to develop themselves in their proper season, and should not be impatient before that season arrives. In due time we may expect the harvest to be ripened. We cannot hasten it. We cannot control the rain, the sun, the season; and the farmer therefore patiently waits until in the regular course of events he has a harvest. So we cannot control and hasten the events which are in God’ s own keeping; and we should patiently wait for the developments of his will, and the arrangements of his providence, by which we may obtain what we desire.
And hath long patience for it - That is, his patience is not exhausted. It extends through the whole time in which, by the divine arrangements, he may expect a harvest.
Until he receive the early and latter rain - In the climate of Palestine there are two rainy seasons, on which the harvest essentially depends - the autumnal and the spring rains - called here and elsewhere in the Scriptures the early and the latter rains. See Deu 11:14; Job 29:23; Jer 5:24. The autumnal or early rains of Scripture, usually commence in the latter half of October or the beginning of November; not suddenly, but by degrees, which gives opportunity for the husbandman to sow his fields of wheat and barley. The rains come mostly from the west or south-west, continuing for two or three days at a time, and falling especially during the nights. The wind then chops round to the north or east, and several days of fine weather succeed. During the months of November and December the rains continue to fail heavily; afterwards they return only at longer intervals, and are less heavy; but at no period during the winter do they entirely cease to occur.
Snow often falls in Jerusalem, in January and February, to the depth of a foot or more, but it does not last long. Rain continues to fall more or less through the month of March, but it is rare after that period. At the present time there are not any particular periods of rain, or successions of showers, which might be regarded as distinct rainy seasons. The whole period from October to March now constitutes only one continued rainy season, without any regularly intervening time of prolonged fair weather. Unless, therefore, there has been some change in the climate since the times of the New Testament, the early and the latter rains for which the husbandman waited with longing, seem rather to have implied the first showers of autumn, which revived the parched and thirsty earth, and prepared it for the seed; and the latter showers of spring, which continued to refresh and forward the ripening crops and the vernal products of the fields. In ordinary seasons, from the cessation of the showers in spring until their commencement in October or November, rain never falls, and the sky is usually serene. - Robinson’ s Biblical Researches , vol. ii., pp. 96-100.

Barnes: Jam 5:8 - -- Be ye also patient - As the farmer is. In due time, as he expects the return of the rain, so you may anticipate deliverance from your trials. ...
Be ye also patient - As the farmer is. In due time, as he expects the return of the rain, so you may anticipate deliverance from your trials.
Stablish your hearts - Let your purposes and your faith be firm and unwavering. Do not become weary and fretful; but bear with constancy all that is laid upon you, until the time of your deliverance shall come.
For the coming of the Lord draweth nigh - Compare Rev 22:10, Rev 22:12, Rev 22:20; the notes at 1Co 15:51. It is clear, I think, from this place, that the apostle expected that that which he understood by "the coming of the Lord"was soon to occur; for it was to be that by which they would obtain deliverance from the trials which they then endured. See Jam 5:7. Whether it means that he was soon to come to judgment, or to bring to an end the Jewish policy and to set up his kingdom on the earth, or that they would soon be removed by death, cannot be determined from the mere use of the language. The most natural interpretation of the passage, and one which will accord well with the time when the Epistle was written, is, that the predicted time of the destruction of Jerusalem Matt. 24 was at hand; that there were already indications that that would soon occur; and that there was a prevalent expectation among Christians that that event would be a release from many trials of persecution, and would be followed by the setting up of the Redeemer’ s kingdom.
Perhaps many expected that the judgment would occur at that time, and that the Saviour would set up a personal reign on the earth. But the expectation of others might have been merely - what is indeed all that is necessarily implied in the predictions on the subject - that there would be after that a rapid and extensive spread of the principles of the Christian religion in the world. The destruction of Jerusalem and of the temple would contribute to that by bringing to an end the whole system of Jewish types and sacrifices; by convincing Christians that there was not to be one central rallying-point, thus destroying their lingering prejudices in favor of the Jewish mode of worship; and by scattering them abroad through the world to propagate the new religion. The Epistle was written, it is supposed, some ten or twelve years before the destruction of Jerusalem, (Introduction, Section 3,) and it is not improbable that there were already some indications of that approaching event.

Barnes: Jam 5:9 - -- Grudge not one against another - Margin, "groan, grieve."The Greek word ( στενάζω stenazō ) means, "to sigh, to groan,"as of per...
Grudge not one against another - Margin, "groan, grieve."The Greek word (
Lest ye be condemned - That is, for judging others with this spirit - for this spirit is in fact judging them. Compare the notes at Mat 7:1.
Behold, the judge standeth before the door - The Lord Jesus, who is soon to come to judge the world. See Jam 5:8. He is, as it were, even now approaching the door - so near that he can hear all that you say.

Barnes: Jam 5:10 - -- Take, my brethren, the prophets - That is, in your trials and persecutions. To encourage them to the exercise of patience, he points them to th...
Take, my brethren, the prophets - That is, in your trials and persecutions. To encourage them to the exercise of patience, he points them to the example of those who had trod the same thorny path before them. The prophets were in general a much persecuted race of men; and the argument on which the apostle relies from their example is this:
(1)\caps1 t\caps0 hat if the prophets were persecuted and tried, it may be expected that other good men will be;
(2)\caps1 t\caps0 hat they showed such patience in their trials as to be a model for us.
An example of suffering affliction - That is, they showed us how evils are to be borne.

Barnes: Jam 5:11 - -- Behold, we count them happy which endure - The word rendered "we count them happy"( μακαρίζομεν makarizomen ,) occurs only her...
Behold, we count them happy which endure - The word rendered "we count them happy"(
Ye have heard of the patience of Job - As one of the most illustrious instances of patient sufferers. See Job 1:21. The book of Job was written, among other reasons, to show that true religion would bear any form of trial to which it could be subjected. See Job 1:9-11; Job 2:5-6.
And have seen the end of the Lord - That is, the end or design which the Lord had in the trials of Job, or the result to which he brought the case at last - to wit, that he showed himself to be very merciful to the poor sufferer; that he met him with the expressions of his approbation for the manner in which he bore his trials; and that he doubled his former possessions, and restored him to more than his former happiness and honor. See Job 13. Augustine, Luther, Wetstein, and others, understand this as referring to the death of the Lord Jesus, and as meaning that they had seen the manner in which he suffered death, as an example for us. But, though this might strike many as the true interpretation, yet the objections to it are insuperable.
\caps1 (1) i\caps0 t does not accord with the proper meaning of the word "end,"(
\tx720 \tx1080 (a) To denote the end, the termination, or the last of anything, Mar 3:26; 1Co 15:24; Luk 21:9; Heb 7:3;
(b) An event, issue, or result, Mat 26:58; Rom 6:21; 2Co 11:18;
© The final purpose, that to which all the parts tend, and in which they terminate, 1Ti 1:5;
(d) Tax, custom, or tribute - what is paid for public ends or purposes, Mat 17:25; Rom 13:7.
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 his interpretation, referring it to the death of the Saviour, would not accord with the remark of the apostle in the close of the verse, "that the Lord is very merciful."That is, what he says was "seen,"or this was what was particularly illustrated in the ease referred to. Yet this was not particularly seen in the death of the Lord Jesus. He was indeed most patient and submissive in his death, and it is true that he showed mercy to the penitent malefactor; but this was not the particular and most prominent trait which he evinced in his death. Besides, if it had been, that would not have been the thing to which the apostle would have referred here. His object was to recommend patience under trials, not mercy shown to others; and this he does by showing:
\tx720 \tx1080 (a) That Job was an eminent instance of it, and,
(b) That the result was such as to encourage us to be patient.
The end or the result of the divine dealings in his case was, that the Lord was "very pitiful and of tender mercy;"and we may hope that it will be so in our case, and should therefore be encouraged to be patient under our trials.
That the Lord is very pitiful - As he showed deep compassion in the case of Job, we have equal reason to suppose that he will in our own.

Barnes: Jam 5:12 - -- But above all things - That is be especially careful on this point; whatever else is done, let not this be. The manner in which James speaks o...
But above all things - That is be especially careful on this point; whatever else is done, let not this be. The manner in which James speaks of the practice referred to here, shows that he regarded it as a sin of a very heinous nature; one that was by all means to be avoided by those whom he addressed. The habit of swearing by various things was a very common one among the Jews, and it was important to guard those who from among them had been converted to Christianity on that subject.
Swear not - See this command illustrated in the notes at Mat 5:33-34. Nearly the same things are mentioned here, as objects by which they were accustomed to swear, which are referred to by the Saviour.
But let our yea be yea - Let there be a simple affirmation, unaccompanied by any oath or appeal to God or to any of his works. A man who makes that his common method of speech is the man who will be believed. See the notes at Mat 5:37.
Lest you fall into condemnation - That is, for profaning the name of God. "The Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain,"Exo 20:7.
Poole: Jam 5:7 - -- Be patient therefore, brethren, unto the coming of the Lord viz. to judgment, and that either particular, to avenge the quarrels of innocent sufferer...
Be patient therefore, brethren, unto the coming of the Lord viz. to judgment, and that either particular, to avenge the quarrels of innocent sufferers upon their tyrannical persecutors; or rather, to the general judgment, in which a full retribution is to be made both to the just and unjust, Rom 2:5,6 , &c. To which judgment the Scripture calls all to look, especially those that are under oppression and persecution, 2Th 1:6,7 , &c.
Behold, the husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth which cost him hard labour, and by which he receives great benefit, the sustentation of his life.
Until he receive the early and latter rain the rain soon after the sowing, which caused the corn to spring up; and that before the harvest, which plumped it, and made it fit for reaping, Deu 11:14 Jer 5:24 Hos 6:3 Joe 2:23 .

Poole: Jam 5:8 - -- Be ye also patient viz. in expectation of your harvest, and the fruit of your labours, as the husbandman is in looking for his.
Stablish your hearts...
Be ye also patient viz. in expectation of your harvest, and the fruit of your labours, as the husbandman is in looking for his.
Stablish your hearts let your hearts be stedfast in faith and constant in holiness, encouraging yourselves to both by the coming of the Lord.
For the coming of the Lord draweth nigh as before, his coming to the general judgment, which is said to be nigh, because of the certainty of its coming, and the uncertainty of the time when it will come, and because it is continually drawing on, and the whole time of the world’ s duration till then is but short in comparison of the eternity following; and likewise because the particular judgment of every man is nigh at hand. See Phi 4:5 Heb 10:37 .

Poole: Jam 5:9 - -- Grudge not Greek: Groan not; the sense may be, either: Envy not one another, (or, as we translate it: Grudge not ), it being the nature of envy to g...
Grudge not Greek: Groan not; the sense may be, either: Envy not one another, (or, as we translate it: Grudge not ), it being the nature of envy to groan at other men’ s good; or, Groan not by way of accusation or complaint to God against others, desiring him to avenge your quarrels, as if you were too good to suffer injuries, or God were unjnst or forgetful of righting you.
One against another brother against brother, Christian against Christian: they were injured not only by rich worldlings and open oppressors, but by their fellow professors, and gave one another mutual cause of sighing and groaning.
Lest ye be condemned lest God punish you all; there being none of you but have given others cause of grief and complaint, as well as others have given you, Mat 7:1 .
Behold, the Judge standeth before the door the Lord Jesus Christ, the Judge of you all, is at hand, Phi 4:5in a readiness either to bring those evils upon you which you wish may fall upon others, or to give you your reward, if through patient continuance in well doing you seek for it, Rom 2:7 . The like phrase we have, Mat 24:33 Mar 13:29 ; or it may allude to Gen 4:7 .

Poole: Jam 5:10 - -- Take, my brethren, the prophets as being most eminent among God’ s people, and leaders of them; he intimates that it is an honour to suffer amon...
Take, my brethren, the prophets as being most eminent among God’ s people, and leaders of them; he intimates that it is an honour to suffer among the best.
Who have spoken in the name of the Lord by his command and authority, and so were employed in the highest services in the church, and thereby appeared to be approved of God, and most dear to him.
For an example of suffering affliction: as much as God honoured and loved them, yet they were not exempted from afflictions, but were maligned, traduced, and persecuted by men, 1Ki 18:13 19:14 2Ki 6:31 Amo 7:10 Heb 11:1-40 ; and therefore when they suffered such hard things, it is no shame for you to suffer the like, Mat 5:12 .
And of patience as the example of their sufferings should prevent your discouragement, so the example of their patience should provoke your imitation; God having set them forth as examples of both, that if you suffer the same things, you may suffer with the same minds.

Poole: Jam 5:11 - -- We count them happy which endure we ourselves count them happy that endure, and therefore should be patient, and not count ourselves miserable if we ...
We count them happy which endure we ourselves count them happy that endure, and therefore should be patient, and not count ourselves miserable if we endure too.
Which endure viz. patiently and constantly, Mat 5:10,11 .
Ye have heard of the patience of Job for which he was as eminent as for his sufferings; and though some signs of impatience be showed, yet his patience and submission to God being prevalent, and most remarkable to him, that only is taken notice of, and his failings overlooked.
And have seen the end of the Lord: Job’ s patience is heard of, but God’ s end seen: seeing being a clearer way of perception than hearing, is put in this latter clause, because God’ s bounty and recompence was more evident than Job’ s patience.
The end of the Lord the good issue God gave to all Job’ s sufferings, in restoring him to his former state, and doubling his prosperity.
That the Lord is very pitiful full of bowels, Greek; the bowels being the seat of compassion, (in which we feel a stirring when strong affections are working in us), are frequently put to signify the most tender and movable affections, such as mothers have toward their children, Gen 43:30 1Ki 3:26 Isa 43:15 Col 3:12 : this seems to note the affection itself, or God’ s readiness to show mercy, Luk 1:78 .
And of tender mercy: this may imply acts of mercy suitable to a merciful nature, the former mercy within, and this mercy breaking out.

Poole: Jam 5:12 - -- Because it is a great sin to swear upon every slight occasion, and it was very usual among the Jews, and it was the more difficult to bring them off...
Because it is a great sin to swear upon every slight occasion, and it was very usual among the Jews, and it was the more difficult to bring them off from it who were so much accustomed to it; therefore the apostle commands them, that
above all things they should not swear, i.e. should take special care they did not, and watch diligently against a sin so many were addicted to, and into which they might so easily fall.
Swear not all swearing is not forbidden, any more than Mat 5:34 ; (for oaths are made use of by holy men both in the Old and New Testament, Gen 21:23,24 24:3 26:28 1Ki 17:1,2 2Co 1:23 Gal 1:20 ; and the use of an oath is permitted and approved of by God himself, Psa 15:4 Heb 6:16 ); but such oaths as are false, rash, vain, without just cause, or customary and frequent in ordinary discourse, 1Ki 19:2 Jer 5:2 Mat 5:37 .
Neither by heaven, neither by the earth by which the Jews thought they might lawfully swear, as likewise by other creatures, so the name of God were not interposed; not considering that where it is not expressed yet it is implied, Mat 23:20,21 .
Neither by any other oath viz. of the like kind.
But let your yea be yea; and your nay, nay: either:
1. Let your speech be yea, yea, and nay, nay; i.e. by plain affirmations and negations, without the addition of any oath for confirmation, Mat 5:37 : or:
2. Let your yea be yea, and your nay, nay i.e. let your words be in truth and sincerity, your speech seconded by your actions; accustom yourselves to truth and plainness in speaking, and that will take away the occasion of swearing. See the like, 2Co 1:17-19 .
Lest ye fall into condemnation viz. for taking the name of God in vain, Exo 20:7 , which is always done in an unwarrantable oath.
Haydock: Jam 5:7-11 - -- Be patient, &c. He now in these five following verses turns his discourse from the rich to the poor, exhorting them to patience till the coming of t...
Be patient, &c. He now in these five following verses turns his discourse from the rich to the poor, exhorting them to patience till the coming of the Lord to judgment, which draweth near; his coming to judge every one is at his death. Imitate the patience of the husbandman, waiting for fruit after that the earth hath received the timely and early [1] rain soon after the corn is sown, and again more rain, that comes later to fill the grain before it comes to be ripe. This seems to be the sense by the Greek: others expound it, till he receive the early and latter fruits. (Witham) ---
Behold the judge standeth before the door. This expression is synonymous with that in the foregoing verse. "The coming of the Lord is at hand." This way of speaking is not uncommon in Scripture. Thus God said to Cain: "If thou hast done evil, shall not sin forth with be present at the door?" St. James is here speaking of the approaching ruin of Jerusalem, the destruction of the temple, and the dispersion of the Jews by the Romans. (Calmet) ---
Call to mind for your encouragement the trials and constancy[2] of the prophets: the patience of Job, after which God rewarded him with great blessings and property, and you have seen the end of the Lord; that is, what end the Lord was pleased to give to Job's sufferings. But St. Augustine, Ven. Bede, &c. would have these words, the end of the Lord, to be understood of the death of our Lord Jesus Christ, on the cross, for which God exalted him, &c. (Witham)

Haydock: Jam 5:7 - -- [BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Temporaneum et Serotinum. In most Greek manuscripts Greek: ueton proimon kai opsimon, pluviam priorem et posteriorem.
[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Temporaneum et Serotinum. In most Greek manuscripts Greek: ueton proimon kai opsimon, pluviam priorem et posteriorem.

Haydock: Jam 5:10 - -- [BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Exemplum accipite, exitus mali, et laboris, et patientiæ, Greek: kakopatheias kai makrothumias. There is nothing in the Greek fo...
[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Exemplum accipite, exitus mali, et laboris, et patientiæ, Greek: kakopatheias kai makrothumias. There is nothing in the Greek for laboris, which the Latin interpreter may have added to express the full sense.

Haydock: Jam 5:12 - -- but above all things....swear not, &c. This earnest admonition is against all kind of oaths in common conversation, (not against oaths made on just ...
but above all things....swear not, &c. This earnest admonition is against all kind of oaths in common conversation, (not against oaths made on just and necessary occasions) and in the very same words, as our blessed Saviour warned all people against this sin of swearing. (Matthew, chap. v.) How unaccountably is this commandment of God contemned? And what a dreadful account will some day be exacted for so many oaths, curses, and blasphemies, which are now so common, that we may rather wonder at the patience of God and that already exemplary punishments have not fallen upon whole cities and kingdoms for this continued profanation of the holy name of God? (Witham) ---
St. James here repeats the injunctions of our Saviour, not to swear al all. (Matthew v. 34.) See the annotations in that place.
Gill: Jam 5:7 - -- Be patient therefore, brethren,.... The apostle here addresses himself to the poor who were oppressed by the rich men, and these he calls "brethren" o...
Be patient therefore, brethren,.... The apostle here addresses himself to the poor who were oppressed by the rich men, and these he calls "brethren" of whom he was not ashamed; when he does not bestow this title upon the rich, though professors of the same religion: these poor brethren he advises to be patient under their sufferings, to bear them with patience,
unto the coming of the Lord; not to destroy Jerusalem, but either at death, or at the last, judgment; when he will take vengeance on their oppressors, and deliver them from all their troubles, and put them into the possession of that kingdom, and glory, to which they are called; wherefore, in the mean while, he would have them be quiet and easy, not to murmur against God, nor seek to take vengeance on men, but leave it to God, to whom it belongs, who will judge his people:
behold, the husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth; ripe fruit, which arises from the seed he sows in the earth; and which may be called "precious", because useful both to man and beast; see Deu 33:14 and between this, and the sowing of the seed, is a considerable time, during which the husbandman waits; and this may be an instruction in the present case:
and hath patience for it until he receive the early and latter rain; the Jews had seldom rains any more than twice a year; the early, or former rain, was shortly after the feast of tabernacles u, in the month Marchesvan, or October, when the seed was sown in the earth; and if it did not rain, they prayed for it, on the third or seventh day of the month w; and the latter rain was in Nisan, or March x, just before harvest; and to this distinction the passage refers.

Gill: Jam 5:8 - -- Be ye also patient,.... As well as the husbandman, and like him; and wait for the rains and dews of divine grace to fall, and make fruitful, and for t...
Be ye also patient,.... As well as the husbandman, and like him; and wait for the rains and dews of divine grace to fall, and make fruitful, and for the ripe fruit of eternal life; and in the mean while cheerfully and patiently bear all injuries, and oppressions:
stablish your hearts; though the state of the saints is stable, they being fixed in the everlasting love of God, in the covenant of grace, in the hands of Christ, and on the rock of ages; yet their hearts are very unstable, and so are their frames, and the exercise of grace in them, and need establishing, which God's work; which is often done by the means of the word and ordinances; and these the saints should make use of, for the establishing of their hearts: the sense may be, take heart, be of good cheer, do not be dismayed, or faint, or sink under your pressures, but be of good courage, pluck up your spirits, lift up your heads: for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh; when he will render tribulation to them that trouble them, free them from all their sorrows and afflictions, and enter them into the joy of their Lord; which will be either at death, which was not very far off, or at the last day, which was drawing nearer and nearer, and which with God was near; with whom a thousand years are as one day.

Gill: Jam 5:9 - -- Grudge not one against another, brethren,.... On account of any happiness, temporal or spiritual, which another enjoys; do not inwardly repine at it; ...
Grudge not one against another, brethren,.... On account of any happiness, temporal or spiritual, which another enjoys; do not inwardly repine at it; or secretly sigh and groan in an envious manner at it, though nothing may be said, as the word used signifies; much less complain of, accuse, and condemn one another, or meditate and seek revenge:
lest ye be condemned; hereafter, at the bar of Christ, by the Judge of the whole earth, who is privy to the secret murmurings and grumblings, and the envious sighs and groans of men; see Mat 7:1
behold the judge standeth before the door; there is another that judgeth, who is the Lord, and he is at hand; he is just at the door; a little while and he will come, and not tarry; which may refer not to Christ's coming to destroy Jerusalem, but to his second coming to judgment, which will be quickly; for the Gospel times are the last times; there will be no other age; at the end of this, Christ will come.

Gill: Jam 5:10 - -- Take, my brethren, the prophets, who have spoken in the name of the Lord,.... Men who have been highly honoured of God, with a gift of prophesying, or...
Take, my brethren, the prophets, who have spoken in the name of the Lord,.... Men who have been highly honoured of God, with a gift of prophesying, or foretelling things to come; to whom God revealed his secrets, doing nothing without acquainting them with it; and who were sent forth by him, and prophesied in his name what were made known unto them; and yet, though these were his favourites, they suffered much; as cruel mockings, scourgings, imprisonment, famine, nakedness, and death in various shapes; some being stoned, others sawn asunder, and others killed by the sword; all which they endured with incredible patience. And therefore the apostle proposes them to be taken,
for an example suffering affliction, and of patience; their afflictions were many and great, and yet they were very patient under them; and through faith and patience they went through them, and now inherit the promises; and so are a very proper example and pattern for New Testament saints to follow and copy after.

Gill: Jam 5:11 - -- Behold, we count them happy which endure,.... Affliction, with courage, constancy, and patience, and hold out to the end; for such shall be saved; the...
Behold, we count them happy which endure,.... Affliction, with courage, constancy, and patience, and hold out to the end; for such shall be saved; theirs is the kingdom of heaven; they are happy now, and will be so hereafter: the Spirit of God, and of glory, now rests upon them; and it is an honour done them that they are counted worthy to suffer for Christ; and they will be glorified with him to all eternity; the consideration of which may serve to encourage and increase patience.
Ye have heard of the patience of Job; from the account which is given of him, and his patience, in the book that bears his name; how he behaved under every trial, which came one upon the back of another; as the plundering of his substance, the loss of his children, and of the health of his body; and yet in all this Job sinned not, nor murmured against God, nor charged him foolishly, and was a mirror of patience; and though he afterwards let fall some expressions of impatience, yet he was humbled for them, and brought to repentance: this shows, that as the Apostle James, so the Jews, to whom he writes, believed that there had been really such a man as Job; and that the book which bears his name is an authentic piece of holy Scripture, and contains a narrative of matters of fact; or otherwise this reference to him would have been impertinent. How long Job endured the chastenings of the Lord cannot be said. The Jews y say they continued on him twelve months, which they gather from Job 7:3.
And have seen the end of the Lord; that is, the happy end, or exodus, out of all his troubles; which the Lord gave "to him", as the Oriental versions add; for he gave him twice as much as he had before, and blessed his latter end more than his beginning, Job 42:10. Some understand this of the Lord Jesus Christ, both of his great patience in sufferings, in which he is an example to his people, and they would do well to look to, and consider him; and of the end of his sufferings, his glorious resurrection from the dead, and session at the right hand of God, where he is crowned with glory and honour; but the former sense is best:
that the Lord is very pitiful and of tender mercy; as to Job, so to all his people; his paternal relation to them engages his pity towards them; nor does he willingly afflict them; and when he does, he sympathizes with them; he is afflicted with them, and in his pity redeems them; his heart moves towards them, and he earnestly remembers them, and works deliverance for them in his own time and way; and therefore it becomes them to be patient.

Gill: Jam 5:12 - -- But above all things, my brethren, swear not,.... As impatience should not show itself in secret sighs, groans, murmurings, and repinings, so more esp...
But above all things, my brethren, swear not,.... As impatience should not show itself in secret sighs, groans, murmurings, and repinings, so more especially it should not break forth in rash oaths, or in profane swearing; for of such sort of swearing, and of such oaths, is the apostle to be understood; otherwise an oath is very lawful, when taken in the fear and name of God, and made by the living God, and is used for the confirmation of anything of moment, and in order to put an end to strife; God himself, and the Lord Jesus Christ, and angels, and good men, are in Scripture sometimes represented as swearing: and that the apostle is so to be understood, appears from the form of swearing prohibited,
neither by the heaven, neither by the earth, neither by any other oath; of the like kind; such as are forbidden, and cautioned, and reasoned against by our Lord, in Mat 5:34 to which the apostle manifestly refers; See Gill on Mat 5:34, Mat 5:35, Mat 5:36.
But let your yea be yea, and your nay, nay; that is, whenever there is an occasion for affirming, or denying anything, let it be done nakedly, simply, and absolutely, without any form of oath annexed to it; for whatever addition of that kind is made comes from evil, and tends to it, and is evil:
lest ye fall into condemnation; by the Lord; for either false, or rash, or profane swearing; for he will not suffer it to go unpunished; see Exo 20:7. Some copies read, "lest ye fall into hypocrisy"; or dissimulation, and get into a habit and custom of lying and deceiving, as common swearers do; and so reads the Arabic version.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Jam 5:9 The term gates is used metaphorically here. The physical referent would be the entrances to the city, but the author uses the term to emphasize the im...



Geneva Bible: Jam 5:7 ( 2 ) Be patient therefore, brethren, unto the coming of the Lord. ( 3 ) Behold, the husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth, and hath ...

Geneva Bible: Jam 5:9 ( 4 ) ( d ) Grudge not one against another, brethren, lest ye be condemned: ( 5 ) behold, the judge standeth before the door.
( 4 ) He commends Chris...

Geneva Bible: Jam 5:10 ( 6 ) Take, my brethren, the prophets, who have spoken in the name of the Lord, for an example of suffering affliction, and of patience.
( 6 ) Becaus...

Geneva Bible: Jam 5:11 Behold, we count them happy which endure. Ye have heard of the patience of Job, and have seen the ( e ) end of the Lord; that the Lord is very pitiful...

Geneva Bible: Jam 5:12 ( 7 ) But above all things, my brethren, swear not, neither by heaven, neither by the earth, neither by any other oath: but let ( f ) your yea be yea;...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jam 5:1-20
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 5:7-11; Jam 5:12-18
MHCC: Jam 5:7-11 - --Consider him that waits for a crop of corn; and will not you wait for a crown of glory? If you should be called to wait longer than the husbandman, is...

MHCC: Jam 5:12-18 - --The sin of swearing is condemned; but how many make light of common profane swearing! Such swearing expressly throws contempt upon God's name and auth...
Matthew Henry -> Jam 5:1-11; Jam 5:12-20
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...

Matthew Henry: Jam 5:12-20 - -- This epistle now drawing to a close, the penman goes off very quickly from one thing to another: hence it is that matters so very different are insi...
Barclay: Jam 5:7-9 - --The early church lived in expectation of the immediate Second Coming of Jesus Christ; and James exhorts his people to wait with patience for the few ...

Barclay: Jam 5:7-9 - --We may now gather up briefly the teaching of the New Testament about the Second Coming and the various uses it makes of the idea.
(i) The New Testamen...

Barclay: Jam 5:10-11 - --It is always a comfort to feel that others have gone through what we have to go through. James reminds his readers that the prophets and the men of G...

Barclay: Jam 5:12 - --James is repeating the teaching of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount (Mat 5:33-37), teaching which was very necessary in the days of the early church....
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 5:7-12 - --B. The Proper Attitude 5:7-12
Essentially the attitude of the rich that James condemned was: Get all you...

Constable: Jam 5:7-9 - --1. The exhortation to be patient 5:7-9
5:7 Because of the dangers James just expounded, believers should adopt a patient attitude. The verb makrothyme...

Constable: Jam 5:10-11 - --2. Examples of endurance 5:10-11
5:10 One could use just about any one of the Hebrew prophets as an example of patient endurance in suffering (cf. 1:4...

College -> Jam 5:1-20
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...
