
Text -- James 3:6 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Jam 3:6 - -- The tongue is a fire ( hē glōssa pur ).
So necessarily since there is no article with pur (apparently same word as German feuer , Latin puru...
The tongue is a fire (
So necessarily since there is no article with

Robertson: Jam 3:6 - -- The world of iniquity ( ho kosmos tēs adikias ).
A difficult phrase, impossible to understand according to Ropes as it stands. If the comma is put ...
The world of iniquity (
A difficult phrase, impossible to understand according to Ropes as it stands. If the comma is put after

Robertson: Jam 3:6 - -- Which defileth the whole body ( hē spilousa holon to sōma ).
Present active participle of spiloō late Koiné , verb, to stain from spilos ...

Robertson: Jam 3:6 - -- Setteth on fire ( phlogizousa ).
Present active participle of phlogizō , old verb, to set on fire, to ignite, from phlox (flame), in N.T. only in...
Setteth on fire (
Present active participle of

Robertson: Jam 3:6 - -- The wheel of nature ( ton trochon geneseōs ).
Old word for wheel (from trechō , to run), only here in N.T. "One of the hardest passages in the Bi...
The wheel of nature (
Old word for wheel (from

Robertson: Jam 3:6 - -- And is set on fire by hell ( kai phlogizomenē hupo gehennēs ).
Present passive participle of phlogizō , giving the continual source of the fire...
And is set on fire by hell (
Present passive participle of
Vincent: Jam 3:6 - -- World of iniquity ( κόσμος τῆς ἀδικίας )
Κόσμος , primarily, means order, and is applied to the world or unive...
World of iniquity (

Vincent: Jam 3:6 - -- Is the tongue ( καθίσταται )
This differs a little from the simple is, though it is not easy to render it accurately. The verb me...
Is the tongue (
This differs a little from the simple is, though it is not easy to render it accurately. The verb means to appoint, establish, institute, and is used of the tongue as having an appointed and definite place in a system (among our members). It might be rendered hath its place.

Vincent: Jam 3:6 - -- Defileth ( σπιλοῦσα )
Lit., defiling. Only here and Jud 1:23. See on 2Pe 2:13.

Vincent: Jam 3:6 - -- Setteth on fire ( φλογίζουσα )
Lit., setting on fire. Only in this verse in New Testament.
Setteth on fire (
Lit., setting on fire. Only in this verse in New Testament.

Vincent: Jam 3:6 - -- The course of nature ( τροχὸν τῆς γενέσεως )
A very obscure passage. Τροχός , (only here in New Testament), from ...
The course of nature (
A very obscure passage.
" The chariot-wheel, like life, runs rolling round,"
Tertullian says: " The whole revolving wheel of existence bears witness to the resurrection of the dead." The Rev., which gives nature, puts birth in margin. This revolving wheel is kindled by the tongue, and rolls on in destructive blaze. The image is justified by the fact. The tongue works the chief mischief, kindles the most baleful fires in the course of life.
Containing an immense quantity of all manner of wickedness.

All the passions, every wheel of his soul.
JFB: Jam 3:6 - -- Translate, "The tongue, that world of iniquity, is a fire." As man's little world is an image of the greater world, the universe, so the tongue is an ...
Translate, "The tongue, that world of iniquity, is a fire." As man's little world is an image of the greater world, the universe, so the tongue is an image of the former [BENGEL].

JFB: Jam 3:6 - -- Literally, "is constituted." "The tongue is (constituted), among the members, the one which defileth," &c. (namely, as fire defiles with its smoke).
Literally, "is constituted." "The tongue is (constituted), among the members, the one which defileth," &c. (namely, as fire defiles with its smoke).

JFB: Jam 3:6 - -- Habitually and continually. While a man inflames others, he passes out of his own power, being consumed in the flame himself.
Habitually and continually. While a man inflames others, he passes out of his own power, being consumed in the flame himself.
Clarke: Jam 3:6 - -- The tongue is a fire - It is often the instrument of producing the most desperate contentions and insurrections
The tongue is a fire - It is often the instrument of producing the most desperate contentions and insurrections

Clarke: Jam 3:6 - -- A world of iniquity - This is an unusual form of speech, but the meaning is plain enough; World signifies here a mass, a great collection, an abunda...
A world of iniquity - This is an unusual form of speech, but the meaning is plain enough; World signifies here a mass, a great collection, an abundance. We use the term in the same sense - a world of troubles, a world of toil, a world of anxiety; for great troubles, oppressive toil, most distressing anxiety. And one of our lexicographers calls his work a world of words; i.e. a vast collection of words: so we also say, a deluge of wickedness, a sea of troubles; and the Latins, oceanus malorum , an ocean of evils. I do not recollect an example of this use of the word among the Greek writers; but in this sense it appears to be used by the Septuagint, Pro 17:6 :

Clarke: Jam 3:6 - -- So is the tongue among our members - I think St. James refers here to those well known speeches of the rabbins, Vayikra Rabba, sec. 16, fol. 159. "R...
So is the tongue among our members - I think St. James refers here to those well known speeches of the rabbins, Vayikra Rabba, sec. 16, fol. 159. "Rabbi Eleazar said, Man has one hundred and forty-eight members, some confined, others free. The tongue is placed between the jaws; and from under it proceeds a fountain of water, (the great sublingual salivary gland), and it is folded with various foldings. Come and see what a flame the tongue kindles! Were it one of the unconfined members, what would it not do?"The same sentiment, with a little variation, may be found in Midrash, Yalcut Simeoni, par. 2, fol. 107; and in Erachin, fol. xv. 2, on Psa 120:3 : What shall be given unto thee, or what shall be done unto thee, thou false tongue? "The holy blessed God said to the tongue: All the rest of the members of the body are erect, but thou liest down; all the rest are external, but thou art internal. Nor is this enough: I have built two walls about thee; the one bone, the other flesh: What shall be given unto thee, and what shall be done unto thee, O thou false tongue?

Clarke: Jam 3:6 - -- Setteth on fire the course of nature - Φλογιζουσα τον τροχον της γενεσεως· And setteth on fire the wheel of life. I...
Setteth on fire the course of nature -
1. St. James does not intend to express the whole circle of human affairs, so much affected by the tongue of man; but rather the penal wheel of the Greeks, and not unknown to the Jews, on which they were accustomed to extend criminals, to induce them to confess, or to punish them for crimes; under which wheels, fire was often placed to add to their torments. In the book, De Maccabaeis, attributed to Josephus, and found in Haverkamp’ s edition, vol. ii., p. 497-520, where we have the account of the martyrdom of seven Hebrew brothers, in chap. ix, speaking of the death of the eldest, it is said:
The fire and the wheel are mentioned by Achilles Tatius, lib. 7, p. 449. "Having stripped me of my garments, I was carried aloft,
2. But is it not possible that by the wheel of life St. James may have the circulation of the blood in view? Angry or irritating language has an astonishing influence on the circulation of the blood: the heart beats high and frequent; the blood is hurried through the arteries to the veins, through the veins to the heart, and through the heart to the arteries again, and so on; an extraordinary degree of heat is at the same time engendered; the eyes become more prominent in their sockets; the capillary vessels suffused with blood; the face flushed; and, in short, the whole wheel of nature is set on fire of hell. No description can be more natural than this: but it may be objected that this intimates that the circulation of the blood was known to St. James. Now supposing it does, is the thing impossible? It is allowed by some of the most judicious medical writers, that Solomon refers to this in his celebrated portraiture of old age, particularly in Ecc 12:6 : "Or ever the silver cord be loosed, or the golden bowl be broken, or the pitcher be broken at the fountain, or the wheel broken at the cistern."Here is the very wheel of life from which St. James might have borrowed the idea; and the different times evidently refer to the circulation of the blood, which might be as well known to St. James as the doctrine of the parallax of the sun. See on Jam 1:17 (note)
3. It is true, however, that the rabbins use the term
Calvin -> Jam 3:6
Calvin: Jam 3:6 - -- He now explains the evils which proceed from the neglect of restraining the tongue, in order that we may know that the tongue may do much good or muc...
He now explains the evils which proceed from the neglect of restraining the tongue, in order that we may know that the tongue may do much good or much evil, — that if it be modest and well regulated, it becomes a bridle to the whole life, but that if it be petulant and violent, like a fire it destroys all things.
He represents it as a small or little fire, to intimate that this smallness of the tongue will not be a hindrance that its power should not extend far and wide to do harm.
6. By adding that it is a world of iniquity, it is the same as though he had called it the sea or the abyss. And he suitably connects the smallness of the tongue with the vastness of the world; according to this meaning, A slender portion of flesh contains in it the whole world of iniquity.
So is the tongue. He explains what he meant by the term world, even because the contagion of the tongue spreads through every part of life; or rather he shews what he understood by the metaphor fire, even that the tongue pollutes the whole man. He however immediately returns to the fire, and says, that the whole course of nature is set on fire by the tongue. And he compares human life to a course or a wheel: and
The meaning is, that when other vices are corrected by age or by the succession of time, or when at least then do not possess the whole man, the vice of the tongue spreads and prevails over every part of life; except one prefers to take setting on fire as signifying a violent impulse, for we call that fervid which is accompanied with violence. And thus Horace speaks of wheels, for he calls chariots in battle fervid, on account of their rapidity. The meaning then would be, that the tongue is like untamed horses; for as these draw violently the chariots, so the tongue hurries a man headlong by its own wantonness. 121
When he says that it is set on fire by hell, it is the same as though he had said, that the outrageousness of the tongue is the flame of the infernal fire. 122 For as heathen poets imagined that the wicked are tormented by the torches of the Furies; so it is true, that Satan by the fans of temptations kindles the fire of all evils in the world: but James means, that fire, sent by Satan, is most easily caught by the tongue, so that it immediately burns; in short, that it is a material fitted for receiving or fostering and increasing the fire of hell.
Defender -> Jam 3:6
Defender: Jam 3:6 - -- The word for "hell" here is gehenna, the "everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels" (Mat 25:41). This is the only one of its eleven occu...
The word for "hell" here is
TSK -> Jam 3:6
TSK: Jam 3:6 - -- the tongue : Jdg 12:4-6; 2Sa 19:43, 2Sa 20:1; 2Ch 10:13-16, 2Ch 13:17; Psa 64:3, Psa 140:3; Pro 15:1, Pro 16:27, Pro 26:20,Pro 26:21; Isa 30:27
a worl...
the tongue : Jdg 12:4-6; 2Sa 19:43, 2Sa 20:1; 2Ch 10:13-16, 2Ch 13:17; Psa 64:3, Psa 140:3; Pro 15:1, Pro 16:27, Pro 26:20,Pro 26:21; Isa 30:27
a world : Jam 2:7; Gen 3:4-6; Lev 24:11; Num 25:2, Num 31:16; Deu 13:6; Jdg 16:15-20; 1Sa 22:9-17; 2Sa 13:26-29, 2Sa 15:2-6, 2Sa 16:20-23, 2Sa 17:1, 2Sa 17:2; 1Ki 21:5-15; Pro 1:10-14, Pro 6:19, Pro 7:5, Pro 7:21-23; Jer 20:10, Jer 28:16; Mat 12:24, Mat 12:32-36; Mat 15:11-20; Mar 7:15, Mar 7:20-22, Mar 14:55-57; Act 6:13, Act 20:30; Rom 3:13, Rom 3:14; Rom 16:17, Rom 16:18; Eph 5:3, Eph 5:4; Col 3:8, Col 3:9; 2Th 2:10-12; Tit 1:11; 2Pe 2:1, 2Pe 2:2; 2Pe 3:3; 3Jo 1:10; Jud 1:8-10,Jud 1:15-18; Rev 2:14, Rev 2:15, Rev 13:1-5, Rev 13:14, Rev 18:23; Rev 19:20
it is : Luk 16:24; Act 5:3; 2Co 11:13-15; 2Th 2:9; Rev 12:9

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Jam 3:6
Barnes: Jam 3:6 - -- And the tongue is a fire - In this sense, that it produces a "blaze,"or a great conflagration. It produces a disturbance and an agitation that ...
And the tongue is a fire - In this sense, that it produces a "blaze,"or a great conflagration. It produces a disturbance and an agitation that may be compared with the conflagration often produced by a spark.
A world of iniquity - A little world of evil in itself. This is a very expressive phrase, and is similar to one which we often employ, as when we speak of a town as being a world in miniature. We mean by it that it is an epitome of the world; that all that there is in the world is represented there on a small scale. So when the tongue is spoken of as being "a world of iniquity,"it is meant that all kinds of evil that are in the world are exhibited there in miniature; it seems to concentrate all sorts of iniquity that exist on the earth. And what evil is there which may not be originated or fomented by the tongue? What else is there that might, with so much propriety, be represented as a little world of iniquity? With all the good which it does, who can estimate the amount of evil which it causes? Who can measure the evils which arise from scandal, and slander, and profaneness, and perjury, and falsehood, and blasphemy, and obscenity, and the inculcation of error, by the tongue? Who can gauge the amount of broils, and contentions, and strifes, and wars, and suspicions, and enmities, and alienations among friends and neighbors, which it produces? Who can number the evils produced by the "honeyed"words of the seducer; or by the tongue of the eloquent in the maintenance of error, and the defense of wrong? If all men were dumb, what a portion of the crimes of the world would soon cease! If all men would speak only that which ought to be spoken, what a change would come over the face of human affairs!
So is the tongue among our members, that it defileth the whole body - It stains or pollutes the whole body. It occupies a position and relation so important in respect to every part of our moral frame, that there is no portion which is not affected by it. Of the truth of this, no one can have any doubt. There is nothing else pertaining to us as moral and intellectual beings, which exerts such an influence over ourselves as the tongue. A man of pure conversation is understood and felt to be pure in every respect; but who has any confidence in the virtue of the blasphemer, or the man of obscene lips, or the calumniator and slanderer? We always regard such a man as corrupt to the core.
And setteth on fire the course of nature - The margin is "the wheel of nature."The Greek word also (
And it is set on fire of hell - Hell, or Gehenna, is represented as a place where the fires continually burn. See the notes at Mat 5:22. The idea here is, that that which causes the tongue to do so much evil derives its origin from hell. Nothing could better characterize much of that which the tongues does, than to say that it has its origin in hell, and has the spirit which reigns there. The very spirit of that world of fire and wickedness - a spirit of falsehood, and slander, and blasphemy, and pollution - seems to inspire the tongue. The image which seems to have been before the mind of the apostle was that of a torch which enkindles and burns everything as it goes along - a torch itself lighted at the fires of hell. One of the most striking descriptions of the woes and curses which there may be in hell, would be to portray the sorrows caused on the earth by the tongue.
Poole -> Jam 3:6
Poole: Jam 3:6 - -- The application of the similitude in the foregoing words.
The tongue is a fire i.e. hath the force of fire, and resembles it in the mischief it do...
The application of the similitude in the foregoing words.
The tongue is a fire i.e. hath the force of fire, and resembles it in the mischief it doth.
A world of iniquity a heap or aggregation of evils, (as the natural world is an aggregation of many several beings), as we say, an ocean, or a world, of troubles, meaning, a great multitude of them. And the words may be understood, earlier with an ellipsis of the word matter, expressed just before, and supplied here; and the pointing a little altered, they may be thus read, And the tongue is a fire, a world of iniquity (or an unrighteous world, viz. which lies in wickedness, 1Jo 5:19 ) is the matter, namely, which it inflames. A wicked world is fit fuel for a wicked tongue, and soon catcheth the fire which it kindles. Or rather, as they stand plainly, without any such defect: The tongue is a world of iniquity, i.e. a heap or mass of various sorts of sins; though it be but a little piece of flesh, yet it contains a whole world of wickedness in it, or is as full of evils as the world is of bodies.
It defileth the whole body infecteth the whole man with sin, Ecc 5:6 , as being the cause of sin committed by all the members of the body; for though sin begin in the soul, yet it is executed by the body, which therefore seems here put as Jam 3:2for the man.
And setteth on fire the course of nature or, setteth on fire the wheel of geniture, or nativity, (in allusion to a wheel set on fire by a violent, rapid motion), meaning the course of nativity, i.e. the natural course of life, as the face of nativity or geniture, Jam 1:23 , for the natural face: the sense is, it inflames with various lusts, wrath, malice, wantonness, pride, &c., the whole course of man’ s life, so that there is no state nor age free from the evils of it. Whereas other vices either do not extend to the whole man, or are abated with age, or worn away with length of time; the vices of the tongue reach the whole man, and the whole time of his life.
And it is set on fire of hell i.e. by the devil, the father of lies and slanders, and other tongue sins, Job 1:10 Joh 8:44 Rev 12:10 ; the tongue being the fire, the devil, by the bellows of temptations, inflames it yet more, and thereby kindles the fire of all mischiefs in the world.
Haydock -> Jam 3:5-6
Haydock: Jam 3:5-6 - -- The tongue is indeed a little member, yet doth great things: [2] causeth great evils and mischiefs, when it is not carefully governed; as a little ...
The tongue is indeed a little member, yet doth great things: [2] causeth great evils and mischiefs, when it is not carefully governed; as a little fire, [3] it kindleth and consumeth a great wood. It is a world of iniquity, the cause of infinite evils, dissensions, quarrels, seditions, wars, &c. It defileth the whole body, even the body politic of kingdoms. This fire, kindled by hell, sets all in a flame during the course of our lives, (literally, the wheel of our nativity ) from our cradle to our grave. (Witham)
Gill -> Jam 3:6
Gill: Jam 3:6 - -- And the tongue is a fire,.... It is like to fire, very useful in its place, to warm and comfort; so is the tongue in Christian conversation, and in th...
And the tongue is a fire,.... It is like to fire, very useful in its place, to warm and comfort; so is the tongue in Christian conversation, and in the ministry of the word; the hearts of God's children burn within them, while they are talking together, and while the Scriptures of truth are opening to them; but as fire should be carefully watched, and kept, so should men take heed to their ways, that they sin not with their tongue, and keep their tongue from evil, and their lips from speaking guile; for as fire kindles and rises up into a flame, so unchaste, angry, and passionate words, stir up the flame of lust, anger, envy, and revenge; and as fire is of a spreading nature, so are lies, scandal, and evil reports vented by the tongue; and as fire devours all that comes in its way, such are the words of an evil tongue; and therefore are called devouring words, Psa 52:4 they devour the good names of men, and corrupt their good manners, and destroy those who make use of them; and what wood is to fire, and coals to burning coals, that are whisperers, tale bearers, backbiters, and contentious persons to strife, Pro 26:20
a world of iniquity; that is, as the world is full of things, and full of sin, for it lies in wickedness, so is the tongue full of iniquity; there is a world of it in it; it abounds with it; it cannot well be said how much sin is in it, and done, or occasioned by it; as blasphemy against God, Father, Son, and Spirit; cursing of men, imprecations on themselves, their souls, and bodies, and on others, with a multitude of profane and dreadful oaths; obscene, filthy, and unchaste words; angry, wrathful, and passionate ones; lies, flatteries, reproaches, backbitings, whisperings, tale bearings, &c. And the Jews say, that he that uses an evil tongue multiplies transgression, and that it is equal to idolatry, adultery, and murder h, and the cause of all sin; and which they express by way of fable, in this manner i:
"when Adam sinned, God laid hold on him, and slit his tongue into two parts, and said unto him, the wickedness which is, or shall be in the world, thou hast begun with an evil tongue; wherefore I will make all that come into the world know that thy tongue is the cause of all this.''
The Syriac version renders this clause thus, "and the world of iniquity is as wood"; or the branch of a tree; the tongue is fire, and a wicked world is fuel to it.
So is the tongue amongst our members, that it defileth the whole body: the body politic, a whole nation, filling it with contention, strife, division, and confusion; and the ecclesiastical body, the church, by sowing discord, fomenting animosities, making parties, and spreading errors and heresies, whereby the temple of God is defiled; and the natural body, and the several members of it, even the whole person of a man, soul and body, bringing upon him a blot of infamy and reproach never to be wiped off; as for instance, the vice of the tongue, lying, does; and oftentimes through the tongue, the actions done in the body, which seem good, are quite spoiled:
and setteth on fire the course of nature, or "wheel of nature": the natural body, as before, in which there is a continual rotation or circulation of the blood, by which it is supported; this is the wheel broken at the cistern at death, in Ecc 12:6 or the course of a man's life and actions, yea, of all generations, and the vicissitudes and changes which have happened in them, on which the tongue has a great influence; and so the Syriac version renders it, "and sets on fire the series of our genealogies, or our generations, which run like wheels": or it may intend the frame of nature, the whole fabric of the universe, and the general conflagration of it, which will be owing to the tongue; or because men's tongues are against the Lord, to provoke the eyes of his glory, because of the hard speeches which ungodly sinners have spoken against Christ and his people, of which they will be convinced by flames of fire about them:
and it is set on fire of hell; that is, by the devil; for as heaven sometimes is put for God, who dwells in heaven, Mat 21:25 so hell is put for the devil, whose habitation it is; see Mat 16:18, and the sense is, that the tongue is influenced, instigated, and stirred up by Satan, to speak many evil things, and it will be hereafter set on fire in hell, as the tongue of the rich man in Luk 16:24. To which purpose are those words of the Talmud k;
"whoever uses an evil tongue, the holy blessed God says to hell, I concerning him above, and thou concerning him below, will judge him, as it is said, Psa 120:3. "What shall be done to thee, thou false tongue? sharp arrows of the mighty, with coals of juniper", there is no arrow but the tongue, according to Jer 9:8 and there is no mighty one but God, Isa 42:13 "coals of juniper",

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Jam 3:6 The word translated hell is “Gehenna” (γέεννα, geenna), a Greek transliteration of the Hebrew words ge hinno...
Geneva Bible -> Jam 3:6
Geneva Bible: Jam 3:6 And the tongue [is] a fire, a ( b ) world of iniquity: so is the tongue among our members, that it defileth the whole body, and ( c ) setteth on fire ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Jam 3:1-18
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
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
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
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 3:5-6 - --The damage the tongue can cause is like that caused by a forest fire. The picture of the forest fire is common in the Bible. It is the prayer of the...

Barclay: Jam 3:5-6 - --We must spend a little longer on this passage, because in it there are two specially difficult phrases.
(i) The tongue, says the Revised Standard Ve...
Constable -> Jam 3:1-12; Jam 3:3-6
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 3:3-6 - --3. Examples of the danger 3:3-6
3:3 It is the same with horses as it is with humans. If we can control the tongue, we can bring the whole animal under...
College -> Jam 3:1-18
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...
