

      
 2. My brethren--a phrase often found in James, marking community 
 of nation and of faith.
 
      
 all joy--cause for the highest joy 
 [GROTIUS]. Nothing but joy
 [PISCATOR]. Count all "divers temptations"
 to be each matter of joy [BENGEL].
 
      
 fall into--unexpectedly, so as to be encompassed by them 
 (so the original Greek).
 
      
 temptations--not in the limited sense of allurements to sin, but 
 trials or distresses of any kind which test and purify the 
 Christian character. Compare "tempt," that is, try,
 Ge 22:1.
 Some of those to whom James writes were "sick," or otherwise 
 "afflicted"
 (Jas 5:13).
 Every possible trial to the child of God is a masterpiece of strategy 
 of the Captain of his salvation for his good.

      
 3. the trying--the testing or proving of your 
 faith, namely, by "divers temptations." Compare
 Ro 5:3,
 tribulation worketh patience, and patience experience (in 
 the original dokime, akin to dokimion, "trying," here; 
 there it is experience: here the "trying" or testing, 
 whence experience flows).
 
      
 patience--The original implies more; persevering 
 endurance and continuance (compare
 Lu 8:15).

      
 4. Let endurance have a perfect work (taken out of the 
 previous "worketh patience" or endurance), that is, have its 
 full effect, by showing the most perfect degree of endurance, 
 namely, "joy in bearing the cross" [MENOCHIUS], 
 and enduring to the end
 (Mt 10:22)
 
 [CALVIN].
 
      
 ye may be perfect--fully developed in all the attributes of a
 Christian character. For this there is required "joy" 
 [BENGEL], as part of the "perfect work" of
 probation. The work of God in a man is the man. If God's teachings by
 patience have had a perfect work in you, you are perfect 
 [ALFORD].
 
      
 entire--that which has all its parts complete, wanting no 
 integral part;
 1Th 5:23,
 "your whole (literally, 'entire') spirit, soul, and body"; as "perfect" 
 implies without a blemish in its parts.

      
 5. English Version omits "But," which the Greek 
 has, and which is important. "But (as this perfect entireness 
 wanting nothing is no easy attainment) if any," &c.
 
      
 lack--rather, as the Greek word is repeated after James's 
 manner, from
 Jas 1:4,
 "wanting nothing," translate, "If any of you want 
 wisdom," namely, the wisdom whereby ye may "count it all joy when ye 
 fall into divers temptations," and "let patience have her perfect 
 work." This "wisdom" is shown in its effects in detail,
 Jas 3:7.
 The highest wisdom, which governs patience alike in poverty and riches, 
 is described in
 Jas 1:9, 10.
 
      
 ask--
 (Jas 4:2).
 
      
 liberally--So the Greek is rendered by English 
 Version. It is rendered with simplicity,
 Ro 12:8.
 God gives without adding aught which may take off from the graciousness 
 of the gift [ALFORD]. God requires the same 
 "simplicity" in His children ("eye . . . single,"
 Mt 6:22,
 
 literally, "simple").
 
      
 upbraideth not--an illustration of God's giving simply. 
 He gives to the humble suppliant without upbraiding him with his past 
 sin and ingratitude, or his future abuse of God's goodness. The Jews 
 pray, "Let me not have need of the gifts of men, whose gifts are few, 
 but their upbraidings manifold; but give me out of Thy large and full 
 hand." Compare Solomon's prayer for "wisdom," and God's gift above what 
 he asked, though God foresaw his future abuse of His goodness would 
 deserve very differently. James has before his eye the Sermon on the 
 Mount (see my
 Introduction). 
 God hears every true prayer and grants either the thing asked, or else 
 something better than it; as a good physician consults for his 
 patient's good better by denying something which the latter asks not 
 for his good, than by conceding a temporary gratification to his 
 hurt.

      
 6. ask in faith--that is, the persuasion that God can and will 
 give.  James begins and ends with faith. In the middle of the 
 Epistle he removes the hindrances to faith and shows its true character 
 [BENGEL].
 
      
 wavering--between belief and unbelief. Compare the case of the
 Israelites, who seemed to partly believe in God's power, but leaned 
 more to unbelief by "limiting" it. On the other hand, compare
 Ac 10:20;
 Ro 4:20 
 ("staggered not . . . through unbelief," literally, as 
 here, "wavered not");
 1Ti 2:8.
 
      
 like a wave of the sea--
 
 Isa 57:20;
 Eph 4:14,
 where the same Greek word occurs for "tossed to and fro," as is
 here translated, "driven with the wind."
 
      
 driven with the wind--from without.
 
      
 tossed--from within, by its own instability
 [BENGEL]. At one time cast on the shore of faith
 and hope, at another rolled back into the abyss of unbelief; at one 
 time raised to the height of worldly pride, at another tossed in the 
 sands of despair and affliction [WIESINGER].

      
 7. For--resumed from "For" in
 Jas 1:6.
 
      
 that man--such a wavering self-deceiver.
 
      
 think--Real faith is something more than a mere 
 thinking or surmise.
 
      
 anything--namely, of the things that he prays for: he does 
 receive many things from God, food, raiment, &c., but these are the 
 general gifts of His providence: of the things specially granted in 
 answer to prayer, the waverer shall not receive "anything," much less 
 wisdom.

8. double-minded--literally, "double-souled," the one soul directed towards God, the other to something else. The Greek favors ALFORD'S translation, "He (the waverer, Jas 1:6) is a man double-minded, unstable," &c.; or better, BEZA'S. The words in this Jas 1:8 are in apposition with "that man," Jas 1:7; thus the "us," which is not in the original, will not need to be supplied, "A man double-minded, unstable in all his ways!" The word for "double-minded" is found here and in Jas 4:8, for the first time in Greek literature. It is not a hypocrite that is meant, but a fickle, "wavering" man, as the context shows. It is opposed to the single eye (Mt 6:22).

9, 10. Translate, "But let the brother," &c. that is, the best remedy against double-mindedness is that Christian simplicity of spirit whereby the "brother," low in outward circumstances, may "rejoice" (answering to Jas 1:2) "in that he is exalted," namely, by being accounted a son and heir of God, his very sufferings being a pledge of his coming glory and crown (Jas 1:12), and the rich may rejoice "in that he is made low," by being stripped of his goods for Christ's sake [MENOCHIUS]; or in that he is made, by sanctified trials, lowly in spirit, which is true matter for rejoicing [GOMARUS]. The design of the Epistle is to reduce all things to an equable footing (Jas 2:1; 5:13). The "low," rather than the "rich," is here called "the brother" [BENGEL].

10. So far as one is merely "rich" in worldly goods, "he shall pass away"; in so far as his predominant character is that of a "brother," he "abideth for ever" (1Jo 2:17). This view meets all ALFORD'S objections to regarding "the rich" here as a "brother" at all. To avoid making the rich a brother, he translates, "But the rich glories in his humiliation," namely, in that which is really his debasement (his rich state, Php 3:19), just as the low is told to rejoice in what is really his exaltation (his lowly state).

      
 11. Taken from
 Isa 40:6-8.
 
      
 heat--rather, "the hot wind" from the (east or) south, which 
 scorches vegetation
 (Lu 12:55).
 The "burning heat" of the sun is not at its rising, but rather 
 at noon; whereas the scorching Kadim wind is often at sunrise
 (Jon 4:8)
 [MIDDLETON, The Doctrine of the Greek 
 Article].
 Mt 20:12
 
 uses the Greek word for "heat."
 Isa 40:7,
 "bloweth upon it," seems to answer to "the hot wind" 
 here.
 
      
 grace of the fashion--that is of the external appearance.
 
      
 in his ways--referring to the burdensome extent of the rich 
 man's devices [BENGEL]. Compare "his ways," that 
 is, his course of life,
 Jas 1:8.

      
 12. Blessed--Compare the beatitudes in the Sermon on the Mount
 (Mt 5:4, 10, 11).
 
      
 endureth temptation--not the "falling into divers temptations"
 (Jas 1:2)
 is the matter for "joy," but the enduring of temptation "unto 
 the end." Compare
 Job 5:17.
 
      
 when he is tried--literally, "when he has become tested" or 
 "approved," when he has passed through the "trying"
 (Jas 1:3),
 his "faith" having finally gained the victory.
 
      
 the crown--not in allusion to the crown or garland given to 
 winners in the games; for this, though a natural allusion for Paul in 
 writing to the heathen, among whom such games existed, would be less 
 appropriate for James in addressing the Jewish Christians, who regarded 
 Gentile usages with aversion.
 
      
 of life--"life" constitutes the crown, literally, the 
 life, the only true life, the highest and eternal life. The crown 
 implies a kingdom
 (Ps 21:3).
 
      
 the Lord--not found in the best manuscripts and versions. The
 believer's heart fills up the omission, without the name needing to be
 mentioned. The "faithful One who promised" 
 (Heb 10:23).
 
      
 to them that love him--In
 2Ti 4:8,
 "the crown of righteousness to them that love His appearing." Love 
 produces patient endurance: none attest their love more than 
 they who suffer for Him.

      
 13. when . . . tempted--tried by solicitation to 
 evil. Heretofore the "temptation" meant was that of probation by 
 afflictions. Let no one fancy that God lays upon him an inevitable 
 necessity of sinning. God does not send trials on you in order to make 
 you worse, but to make you better
 (Jas 1:16, 17).
 Therefore do not sink under the pressure of evils
 (1Co 10:13).
 
      
 of God--by agency proceeding from God. The Greek 
 is not "tempted by," but, "from," implying indirect agency.
 
      
 cannot be tempted with evil, &c.--"Neither do any of our sins 
 tempt God to entice us to worse things, nor does He tempt any of His 
 own accord" (literally, "of Himself"; compare the antithesis,
 Jas 1:18,
 "Of His own will He begat us" to holiness, so far is He from 
 tempting us of His own will) [BENGEL]. God 
 is said in
 Ge 22:1
 to have "tempted Abraham"; but there the tempting meant is that 
 of trying or proving, not that of seducement.  
 ALFORD translates according to the ordinary sense
 of the Greek, "God is unversed in evil." But as this 
 gives a less likely sense, English Version probably gives the 
 true sense; for ecclesiastical Greek often uses words in new 
 senses, as the exigencies of the new truths to be taught required.

      
 14. Every man, when tempted, is so through being drawn away of 
 (again here, as in
 Jas 1:13,
 the Greek for "of" expresses the actual source, rather 
 than the agent of temptation) his own lust. The cause of sin is in 
 ourselves. Even Satan's suggestions do not endanger us before they are 
 made our own. Each one has his own peculiar (so the 
 Greek) lust, arising from his own temperament and habit.  Lust 
 flows from the original birth-sin in man, inherited from Adam.
 
      
 drawn away--the beginning step in temptation: drawn away 
 from truth and virtue.
 
      
 enticed--literally, "taken with a bait," as fish are. The
 further progress: the man allowing himself (as the
 Greek middle voice implies) to be enticed to evil 
 [BENGEL]. "Lust" is here personified as the harlot
 that allures the man.

15. The guilty union is committed by the will embracing the temptress. "Lust," the harlot, then, "brings forth sin," namely, of that kind to which the temptation inclines. Then the particular sin (so the Greek implies), "when it is completed, brings forth death," with which it was all along pregnant [ALFORD]. This "death" stands in striking contrast to the "crown of life" (Jas 1:12) which "patience" or endurance ends in, when it has its "perfect work" (Jas 1:4). He who will fight Satan with Satan's own weapons, must not wonder if he finds himself overmatched. Nip sin in the bud of lust.

16. Do not err in attributing to God temptation to evil; nay (as he proceeds to show), "every good," all that is good on earth, comes from God.

      
 17. gift . . . gift--not the same words in 
 Greek: the first, the act of giving, or the gift in its 
 initiatory stage; the second, the thing given, the boon, when 
 perfected. As the "good gift" stands in contrast to "sin" in its 
 initiatory stage
 (Jas 1:15),
 so the "perfect boon" is in contrast to "sin when it is finished," 
 bringing forth death
 (2Pe 1:3).
 
      
 from above--(Compare
 Jas 3:15).
 
      
 Father of lights--Creator of the lights in heaven 
 (compare
 Job 38:28
 
 [ALFORD];
 Ge 4:20, 21;
 Heb 12:9). 
 This accords with the reference to the changes in the light of the
 heavenly bodies alluded to in the end of the verse. Also, Father of the
 spiritual lights in the kingdom of grace and glory 
 [BENGEL]. These were typified by the supernatural
 lights on the breastplate of the high priest, the Urim. As "God is 
 light, and in Him is no darkness at all"
 (1Jo 1:5),
 He cannot in any way be the Author of sin
 (Jas 1:13),
 which is darkness
 (Joh 3:19).
 
      
 no variableness . . . shadow of turning--
 (Mal 3:6).
 None of the alternations of light and shadow which the physical 
 "lights" undergo, and which even the spiritual lights are liable to, as 
 compared with God.  "Shadow of turning," literally, the dark 
 "shadow-mark" cast from one of the heavenly bodies, arising from 
 its "turning" or revolution, for example, when the moon is eclipsed by 
 the shadow of the earth, and the sun by the body of the moon.  BENGEL makes a climax, "no variation--not even the shadow 
 of a turning"; the former denoting a change in the 
 understanding; the latter, in the will.

      
 18.
 (Joh 1:13).
 The believer's regeneration is the highest example of nothing but good 
 proceeding from God.
 
      
 Of his own will--Of his own good pleasure (which shows that it
 is God's essential nature to do good, not evil), not induced by any 
 external cause.
 
      
 begat he us--spiritually: a once-for-all accomplished act
 (1Pe 1:3, 23).
 In contrast to "lust when it hath conceived, bringeth forth sin, 
 and sin . . . death"
 (Jas 1:15).
 
 Life follows naturally in connection with light
 (Jas 1:17).
 
      
 word of truth--the Gospel. The objective mean, as faith 
 is the appropriating mean of regeneration by the Holy Spirit as the 
 efficient agent.
 
      
 a kind of first-fruits--Christ is, in respect to the 
 resurrection, "the first-fruits"
 (1Co 15:20, 23):
 believers, in respect to regeneration, are, as it were, 
 first-fruits (image from the consecration of the first-born of man, 
 cattle, and fruits to God; familiar to the Jews addressed), that is, 
 they are the first of God's regenerated creatures, and the pledge of 
 the ultimate regeneration of the creation,
 Ro 8:19, 23,
 where also the Spirit, the divine agent of the believer's regeneration, 
 is termed "the first-fruits," that is, the earnest that the 
 regeneration now begun in the soul, shall at last extend to the body 
 too, and to the lower parts of creation. Of all God's visible 
 creatures, believers are the noblest part, and like the legal 
 "first-fruits," sanctify the rest; for this reason they are much tried 
 now.

      
 19. Wherefore--as your evil is of yourselves, but your good from
 God. However, the oldest manuscripts and versions read thus: 
 "YE KNOW IT (so
 Eph 5:5;
 Heb 12:17), 
 my beloved brethren; BUT (consequently) let every 
 man be swift to hear," that is, docile in receiving "the word of truth"
 (Jas 1:18, 21).
 
 The true method of hearing is treated in
 Jas 1:21-27,
 and Jas 2:1-26.
 
      
 slow to speak--
 (Pr 10:19; 17:27, 28;
 Ec 5:2). 
 A good way of escaping one kind of temptation arising from ourselves
 (Jas 1:13).
 Slow to speak authoritatively as a master or teacher of others (compare
 Jas 3:1):
 a common Jewish fault: slow also to speak such hasty things of God, as 
 in
 Jas 1:13.
 Two ears are given to us, the rabbis observe, but only one tongue: the 
 ears are open and exposed, whereas the tongue is walled in behind the 
 teeth.
 
      
 slow to wrath--
 (Jas 3:13, 14; 4:5).
 Slow in becoming heated by debate: another Jewish fault
 (Ro 2:8),
 to which much speaking tends.  TITTMANN 
 thinks not so much "wrath" is meant, as an indignant feeling of 
 fretfulness under the calamities to which the whole of human 
 life is exposed; this accords with the "divers temptations" in
 Jas 1:2.
 
 Hastiness of temper hinders hearing God's word; so Naaman,
 2Ki 5:11;
 Lu 4:28.

20. Man's angry zeal in debating, as if jealous for the honor of God's righteousness, is far from working that which is really righteousness in God's sight. True "righteousness is sown in peace," not in wrath (Jas 3:18). The oldest and best reading means "worketh," that is, practiceth not: the received reading is "worketh," produceth not.

      
 21. lay apart--"once for all" (so the Greek): as a filthy 
 garment.  Compare Joshua's filthy garments,
 Zec 3:3, 5;
 Re 7:14. 
 "Filthiness" is cleansed away by hearing the word
 (Joh 15:3).
 
      
 superfluity of naughtiness--excess (for instance, the
 intemperate spirit implied in "wrath,"
 Jas 1:19, 20),
 which arises from malice (our natural, evil disposition 
 towards one another).
 1Pe 2:1
 has the very same words in the Greek. So "malice" is the 
 translation,
 Eph 4:31;
 Col 3:8. 
 "Faulty excess" [BENGEL] is not strong
 enough. Superfluous excess in speaking is also reprobated as 
 "coming of evil" (the Greek is akin to the word for 
 "naughtiness" here) in the Sermon on the Mount
 (Mt 5:37),
 
 with which James' Epistle is so connected.
 
      
 with meekness--in mildness towards one another
 [ALFORD], the opposite to "wrath"
 (Jas 1:20):
 
 answering to "as new-born babes"
 (1Pe 2:2).
 Meekness, I think, includes also a childlike, docile, 
 humble, as well as an uncontentious, spirit
 (Ps 25:9; 45:4;
 Isa 66:2; 
 Mt 5:5; 11:28-30; 18:3, 4;
 
 contrast
 Ro 2:8).
 
 On "receive," applied to ground receiving seed, compare
 Mr 4:20.
 Contrast
 Ac 17:11;
 1Th 1:6
 with 2Th 2:10.
 
      
 engrafted word--the Gospel word, whose proper attribute 
 is to be engrafted by the Holy Spirit, so as to be livingly 
 incorporated with the believer, as the fruitful shoot is with the wild 
 natural stock on which it is engrafted. The law came to man only from 
 without, and admonished him of his duty. The Gospel is engrafted 
 inwardly, and so fulfils the ultimate design of the law
 (De 6:6; 11:18;
 Ps 119:11).
 ALFORD translates, "The implanted word,"
 referring to the parable of the sower
 (Mt 13:1-23).
 
 I prefer English Version.
 
      
 able to save--a strong incentive to correct our dulness in 
 hearing the word: that word which we hear so carelessly, is able 
 (instrumentally) to save us [CALVIN].
 
      
 souls--your true selves, for the "body" is now liable to 
 sickness and death: but the soul being now saved, both soul and body at 
 last shall be so
 (Jas 5:15, 20).

      
 22. Qualification of the precept, "Be swift to hear": "Be
 ye doers . . . not hearers only"; not merely "Do the
 word," but "Be doers" systematically and continually, as if this
 was your regular business. James here again refers to the Sermon on the
 Mount 
 (Mt 7:21-29).
 
      
 deceiving your own selves--by the logical fallacy (the
 Greek implies this) that the mere hearing is all that is
 needed.

      
 23. For--the logical self-deceit 
 (Jas 1:22)
 
 illustrated.
 
      
 not a doer--more literally, "a notdoer"
 [ALFORD]. The true disciple, say the rabbis,
 learns in order that he may do, not in order that he may merely know or 
 teach.
 
      
 his natural face--literally, "the countenance of his birth": the 
 face he was born with. As a man may behold his natural face in a 
 mirror, so the hearer may perceive his moral visage in God's 
 Word. This faithful portraiture of man's soul in Scripture, is the 
 strongest proof of the truth of the latter. In it, too, we see mirrored 
 God's glory, as well as our natural vileness.

      
 24. beholdeth--more literally, "he contemplated himself 
 and hath gone his way," that is, no sooner has he contemplated 
 his image than he is gone his way
 (Jas 1:11).
 "Contemplate" answers to hearing the word: "goeth his way," to relaxing 
 the attention after hearing--letting the mind go elsewhere, and the 
 interest of the thing heard pass away: then forgetfulness 
 follows [ALFORD] (Compare
 Eze 33:31).
 
 "Contemplate" here, and in
 Jas 1:23,
 implies that, though cursory, yet some knowledge of one's self, at 
 least for the time, is imparted in hearing the word
 (1Co 14:24).
 
      
 and . . . and--The repetition expresses hastiness
 joined with levity [BENGEL].
 
      
 forgetteth what manner of man he was--in the mirror. 
 Forgetfulness is no excuse
 (Jas 1:25;
 2Pe 1:9).

      
 25. looketh into--literally, "stoopeth down to take a close look
 into." Peers into: stronger than "beholdeth," or "contemplated,"
 Jas 1:24.
 A blessed curiosity if it be efficacious in bearing fruit 
 [BENGEL].
 
      
 perfect law of liberty--the Gospel rule of life, perfect and 
 perfecting (as shown in the Sermon on the Mount,
 Mt 5:48),
 and making us truly walk at liberty
 (Ps 119:32,
 Church of England Prayer Book Version). Christians are to aim at 
 a higher standard of holiness than was generally understood under the 
 law. The principle of love takes the place of the letter of the 
 law, so that by the Spirit they are free from the yoke of sin, and free 
 to obey by spontaneous instinct
 (Jas 2:8, 10, 12;
 Joh 8:31-36; 15:14, 15;
 compare
 1Co 7:22;
 Ga 5:1, 13; 
 1Pe 2:16). 
 The law is thus not made void, but fulfilled.
 
      
 continueth therein--contrasted with "goeth his way,"
 Jas 1:24,
 continues both looking into the mirror of God's word, and doing 
 its precepts.
 
      
 doer of the work--rather, "a doer of work"
 [ALFORD], an actual worker.
 
      
 blessed in his deed--rather, "in his doing"; in the very 
 doing there is blessedness
 (Ps 19:11).

      
 26, 27. An example of doing work.
 
      
 religious . . . religion--The Greek expresses 
 the external service or exercise of religion, "godliness" 
 being the internal soul of it. "If any man think himself to be 
 (so the Greek) religious, that is, observant of the offices 
 of religion, let him know these consist not so much in outward 
 observances, as in such acts of mercy and humble piety
 (Mic 6:7, 8)
 as visiting the fatherless, &c., and keeping one's self 
 unspotted from the world"
 (Mt 23:23).
 James does not mean that these offices are the great essentials, 
 or sum total of religion; but that, whereas the law service was merely 
 ceremonial, the very services of the Gospel consist in acts of 
 mercy and holiness, and it has light for its garment, its very 
 robe being righteousness [TRENCH]. The 
 Greek word is only found in
 Ac 26:5,
 "after the straitest sect of our religion I lived a Pharisee."
 Col 2:18,
 
 "worshipping of angels."
 
      
 bridleth not . . . tongue--Discretion in speech is 
 better than fluency of speech (compare
 Jas 3:2, 3).
 
 Compare 
 
 Ps 39:1.
 God alone can enable us to do so. James, in treating of the law, 
 naturally notices this sin. For they who are free from grosser sins, 
 and even bear the outward show of sanctity, will often exalt themselves 
 by detracting others under the pretense of zeal, while their real 
 motive is love of evil-speaking [CALVIN].
 
      
 heart--It and the tongue act and react on one another.

      
 27. Pure . . . and undefiled--"Pure" is that love
 which has in it no foreign admixture, as self-deceit and
 hypocrisy. "Undefiled" is the means of its being "pure" 
 [TITTMANN]. "Pure" expresses the positive,
 "undefiled" the negative side of religious service; just as 
 visiting the fatherless and widow is the active, keeping 
 himself unspotted from the world, the passive side of religious 
 duty. This is the nobler shape that our religious exercises take, 
 instead of the ceremonial offices of the law.
 
      
 before God and the Father--literally, "before Him who is (our)
 God and Father." God is so called to imply that if we would be like our
 Father, it is not by fasting, &c., for He does none of these things,
 but in being "merciful as our Father is merciful" 
 [CHRYSOSTOM].
 
      
 visit--in sympathy and kind offices to alleviate their 
 distresses.
 
      
 the fatherless--whose "Father" is God 
 (Ps 68:5);
 peculiarly helpless.
 
      
 and--not in the Greek; so close is the connection between 
 active works of mercy to others, and the maintenance of personal 
 unworldliness of spirit, word, and deed; no copula therefore is needed. 
 Religion in its rise interests us about ourselves in its 
 progress, about our fellow creatures: in its highest stage, 
 about the honor of God.
 
      
 keep himself--with jealous watchfulness, at the same time 
 praying and depending on God as alone able to keep us
 (Joh 17:15;
 Jude 24).


Living As a Christian
Jas 1:1-27. INSCRIPTION: EXHORTATION ON HEARING, SPEAKING, AND WRATH.
The last subject is discussed in Jas 3:13-4:17.
1. James--an apostle of the circumcision, with Peter and John, James in Jerusalem, Palestine, and Syria; Peter in Babylon and the East; John in Ephesus and Asia Minor. Peter addresses the dispersed Jews of Pontus, Galatia, and Cappadocia; James, the Israelites of the twelve tribes scattered abroad.
servant of God--not that he was not an apostle; for Paul, an apostle, also calls himself so; but as addressing the Israelites generally, including even indirectly the unbelieving, he in humility omits the title "apostle"; so Paul in writing to the Hebrews; similarly Jude, an apostle, in his General Epistle.
Jesus Christ--not mentioned again save in Jas 2:1; not at all in his speeches (Ac 15:14, 15; 21:20, 21), lest his introducing the name of Jesus oftener should seem to arise from vanity, as being "the Lord's brother" [BENGEL]. His teaching being practical, rather than doctrinal, required less frequent mention of Christ's name.
scattered abroad--literally "which are in the dispersion." The dispersion of the Israelites, and their connection with Jerusalem as a center of religion, was a divinely ordered means of propagating Christianity. The pilgrim troops of the law became caravans of the Gospel [WORDSWORTH].
greeting--found in no other Christian letter, but in James and the Jerusalem Synod's Epistle to the Gentile churches; an undesigned coincidence and mark or genuineness. In the original Greek (chairein) for "greeting," there is a connection with the "joy" to which they are exhorted amidst their existing distresses from poverty and consequent oppression. Compare Ro 15:26, which alludes to their poverty.