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Text -- James 3:11 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
3:11 A spring does not pour out fresh water and bitter water from the same opening, does it?
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: WELL | Spring | SALT | Righteousness | PLACE | BITTER; BITTERNESS | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes


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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Jam 3:11 - -- The fountain ( hē pēgē ). Old word for spring (Joh 4:14).

The fountain ( hē pēgē ).

Old word for spring (Joh 4:14).

Robertson: Jam 3:11 - -- Opening ( opēs ). Old word for fissure in the earth, in N.T. only here and Heb 11:38 (caves).

Opening ( opēs ).

Old word for fissure in the earth, in N.T. only here and Heb 11:38 (caves).

Robertson: Jam 3:11 - -- Send forth ( bruei ). Present active indicative of bruō , old verb, to bubble up, to gush forth, here only in N.T. The use of mēti shows that a...

Send forth ( bruei ).

Present active indicative of bruō , old verb, to bubble up, to gush forth, here only in N.T. The use of mēti shows that a negative answer is expected in this rhetorical question.

Robertson: Jam 3:11 - -- The sweet and the bitter ( to gluku kai to pikron ). Cognate accusatives with bruei . Separate articles to distinguish sharply the two things. The ne...

The sweet and the bitter ( to gluku kai to pikron ).

Cognate accusatives with bruei . Separate articles to distinguish sharply the two things. The neuter singular articular adjective is a common way of presenting a quality. Glukus is an old adjective (in N.T. only here and Rev 10:9.), the opposite of pikron (from old root, to cut, to prick), in N.T. only here and Jam 3:14 (sharp, harsh).

Vincent: Jam 3:11 - -- Doth a fountain, etc The interrogative particle, μήτι , which begins the sentence, expects a negative answer. Fountain has the article, "...

Doth a fountain, etc

The interrogative particle, μήτι , which begins the sentence, expects a negative answer. Fountain has the article, " the fountain," generic. See Introduction, on James' local allusions. The Land of Promise was pictured to the Hebrew as a land of springs (Deu 8:7; Deu 11:11). " Palestine," says Dean Stanley, " was the only country where an Eastern could have been familiar with the language of the Psalmsist: 'He sendeth the springs into the valleys which run among the mountains.' Those springs, too, however short-lived, are remarkable for their copiousness and beauty. Not only not in the East, but hardly in the West, can any fountains and sources of streams be seen, so clear, so full-grown even at their birth, as those which fall into the Jordan and its lakes throughout its whole course from north to south" (" Sinai and Palestine" ). The Hebrew word for a fountain or spring is áyin , meaning an eye. " The spring," says the same author, " is the bright, open source, the eye of the landscape."

Vincent: Jam 3:11 - -- Send forth ( βρύει ) An expressive word, found nowhere else in the New Testament, and denoting a full, copious discharge. Primarily it means...

Send forth ( βρύει )

An expressive word, found nowhere else in the New Testament, and denoting a full, copious discharge. Primarily it means to be full to bursting; and is used, therefore, of budding plants, teeming soil, etc., as in the charming picture of the sacred grove at the opening of the " Oedipus Coloneus" of Sophocles: " full (βρύων ) of bay, olive, and vine." Hence, to burst forth or gush. Though generally in-transitive, it is used transitively here.

Vincent: Jam 3:11 - -- Place ( ὀπῆς ) Rather, opening or hole in the earth or rock. Rev., opening. Compare caves, Heb 11:38. The word is pleasantly sugg...

Place ( ὀπῆς )

Rather, opening or hole in the earth or rock. Rev., opening. Compare caves, Heb 11:38. The word is pleasantly suggestive in connection with the image of the eye of the landscape. See above.

Vincent: Jam 3:11 - -- Sweet water and bitter The readers of the epistle would recall the bitter waters of Marah (Exo 15:23), and the unwholesome spring at Jericho (2Ki...

Sweet water and bitter

The readers of the epistle would recall the bitter waters of Marah (Exo 15:23), and the unwholesome spring at Jericho (2Ki 2:19-21).

JFB: Jam 3:11 - -- An image of the heart: as the aperture (so the Greek for "place" is literally) of the fountain is an image of man's mouth. The image here is appropria...

An image of the heart: as the aperture (so the Greek for "place" is literally) of the fountain is an image of man's mouth. The image here is appropriate to the scene of the Epistle, Palestine, wherein salt and bitter springs are found. Though "sweet" springs are sometimes found near, yet "sweet and bitter" (water) do not flow "at the same place" (aperture). Grace can make the same mouth that "sent forth the bitter" once, send forth the sweet for the time to come: as the wood (typical of Christ's cross) changed Marah's bitter water into sweet.

Clarke: Jam 3:11 - -- Doth a fountain send forth - sweet water and bitter? - In many things nature is a sure guide to man; but no such inconsistency is found in the natur...

Doth a fountain send forth - sweet water and bitter? - In many things nature is a sure guide to man; but no such inconsistency is found in the natural world as this blessing and cursing in man. No fountain, at the same opening, sends forth sweet water and bitter; no fig tree can bear olive berries; no vine can bear figs; nor can the sea produce salt water and fresh from the same place. These are all contradictions, and indeed impossibilities, in nature. And it is depraved man alone that can act the monstrous part already referred to.

Calvin: Jam 3:11 - -- 11.Doth a fountain. He adduces these comparisons in order to shew that a cursing tongue is something monstrous, contrary to all nature, and subverts ...

11.Doth a fountain. He adduces these comparisons in order to shew that a cursing tongue is something monstrous, contrary to all nature, and subverts the order everywhere established by God. For God hath so arranged things which are contrary, that inanimate things ought to deter us from a chaotic mixture, sure as is found in a double tongue. 123

TSK: Jam 3:11 - -- place : or, hole, Jam 3:11

place : or, hole, Jam 3:11

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Jam 3:11 - -- Doth a fountain send forth at the same place - Margin, "hole."The Greek word means "opening, fissure,"such as there is in the earth, or in rock...

Doth a fountain send forth at the same place - Margin, "hole."The Greek word means "opening, fissure,"such as there is in the earth, or in rocks from which a fountain gushes.

Sweet water and bitter - Fresh water and salt, Jam 3:12. Such things do not occur in the works of nature, and they should not be found in man.

Poole: Jam 3:11 - -- Ordinarily and naturally; if any such be, it is looked upon as uncouth and prodigious.

Ordinarily and naturally; if any such be, it is looked upon as uncouth and prodigious.

Haydock: Jam 3:9-13 - -- By it we bless God, &c. Such different effects from the same cause, as of blessing God, and cursing men, created to the likeness of God, seem co...

By it we bless God, &c. Such different effects from the same cause, as of blessing God, and cursing men, created to the likeness of God, seem contrary to the ordinary course of nature; from a fountain from the same source doth not send forth both sweet and bitter streams. ---

Who is a wise man, and endued with knowledge among you? &c. This seems to be connected with the admonition given at the beginning of the chapter, be not many masters; let none pretend to this but who have wisdom and knowledge, which also may be known by their prudent and mild conversation.

Gill: Jam 3:11 - -- Doth a fountain send forth at the same place,.... "Or hole"; for at divers places, and at different times, as Pliny m observes, it may send forth s...

Doth a fountain send forth at the same place,.... "Or hole"; for at divers places, and at different times, as Pliny m observes, it may send forth

sweet water and bitter: and it is reported n, there is a lake with the Trogloditae, a people in Ethiopia, which becomes thrice a day bitter, and then as often sweet; but then it does not yield sweet water and bitter at the same time: this simile is used to show how unnatural it is that blessing and cursing should proceed out of the same mouth.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Jam 3:1-18 - --1 We are not rashly or arrogantly to reprove others;5 but rather to bridle the tongue, a little member, but a powerful instrument of much good, and gr...

Maclaren: Jam 3:1-13 - --A Watch On The Door Of The Lips My brethren, be not many masters, knowing that we shall receive the greater condemnation. 2. For in many things we of...

MHCC: Jam 3:1-12 - --We are taught to dread an unruly tongue, as one of the greatest evils. The affairs of mankind are thrown into confusion by the tongues of men. Every a...

Matthew Henry: Jam 3:1-12 - -- The foregoing chapter shows how unprofitable and dead faith is without works. It is plainly intimated by what this chapter first goes upon that such...

Barclay: Jam 3:9-12 - --We know only too well from experience that there is a cleavage in human nature. In man there is something of the ape and something of the angel, som...

Constable: Jam 3:1-12 - --A. Controlling the Tongue 3:1-12 One of the most important aspects of our works, which James had been di...

Constable: Jam 3:9-12 - --5. The inconsistency of the tongue 3:9-12 3:9 We honor God with our words, but then we turn right around and dishonor other people with what we say. T...

College: Jam 3:1-18 - --JAMES 3 IX. TAMING THE TONGUE (3:1-12) 1 Not many of you should presume to be teachers, my brothers, because you know that we who teach will be judg...

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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 3 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Jam 3:1, We are not rashly or arrogantly to reprove others; Jam 3:5, but rather to bridle the tongue, a little member, but a powerful ins...

Poole: James 3 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 3

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) (Jam 3:1-12) Cautions against proud behaviour, and the mischief of an unruly tongue. (Jam 3:13-18) The excellence of heavenly wisdom, in opposition t...

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) The apostle here reproves ambition, and an arrogant magisterial tongue; and shows the duty and advantage of bridling it because of its power to do ...

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) The Teacher's Peril (Jam_3:1) The Universal Danger (Jam_3:2) Little But Powerful (Jam_3:3-5) A Destructive Fire (Jam_3:5-6) The Corruption Within...

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JAMES 3 In this chapter the apostle cautions against censoriousness, and reproving others with a magisterial air; advises to bridle...

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

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

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