James 4:4-10
Context4:4 Adulterers, do you not know that friendship with the world means hostility toward God? 1 So whoever decides to be the world’s friend makes himself God’s enemy. 4:5 Or do you think the scripture means nothing when it says, 2 “The spirit that God 3 caused 4 to live within us has an envious yearning”? 5 4:6 But he gives greater grace. Therefore it says, “God opposes the proud, but he gives grace to the humble.” 6 4:7 So submit to God. But resist the devil and he will flee from you. 4:8 Draw near to God and he will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners, and make your hearts pure, you double-minded. 7 4:9 Grieve, mourn, 8 and weep. Turn your laughter 9 into mourning and your joy into despair. 4:10 Humble yourselves before the Lord and he will exalt you.
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[4:4] 1 tn Grk “is hostility toward God.”
[4:5] 3 tn Grk “he”; the referent (God) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
[4:5] 4 tc The Byzantine text and a few other
[4:5] 5 tn Interpreters debate the referent of the word “spirit” in this verse: (1) The translation takes “spirit” to be the lustful capacity within people that produces a divided mind (1:8, 14) and inward conflicts regarding God (4:1-4). God has allowed it to be in man since the fall, and he provides his grace (v. 6) and the new birth through the gospel message (1:18-25) to counteract its evil effects. (2) On the other hand the word “spirit” may be taken positively as the Holy Spirit and the sense would be, “God yearns jealously for the Spirit he caused to live within us.” But the word for “envious” or “jealous” is generally negative in biblical usage and the context before and after seems to favor the negative interpretation.
[4:6] 3 sn A quotation from Prov 3:34.
[4:8] 4 tn Or “two-minded” (the same description used in 1:8).
[4:9] 5 tn This term and the following one are preceded by καί (kai) in the Greek text, but contemporary English generally uses connectives only between the last two items in such a series.