Go now rich men, &c. In the first six verses, he gives admonitions to
those among the Christians who were rich, not to rely on riches, nor
value themselves on this account. You must look upon your riches and
treasures as if they were already putrefied and corrupted, your gold
and silver eaten and co... [ Continue Reading ]
[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Temporaneum et Serotinum. In most Greek manuscripts _Greek: ueton
proimon kai opsimon, pluviam priorem et posteriorem._... [ Continue Reading ]
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... [ Continue Reading ]
[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._... [ Continue Reading ]
_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 una... [ Continue Reading ]
Is any man sick among you? [3] or in danger of death by sickness, let
him call, or bring in the priests of the Church, &c. The apostle here
enjoins the constant use of the sacrament, called extreme unction, or
the last anointing with oil, instituted, (as were all the sacraments
of the Church) by our... [ Continue Reading ]
Confess, therefore, your sins, &c. Divers interpreters expound this of
sacramental confession, though, as the authors of the annotations on
the Rheims Testament observe, this is not certain. The words one to
another, may signify that it is not enough to confess to God, but that
we must also confess... [ Continue Reading ]
He who causeth a sinner to be converted, &c. St. James concludes his
epistle with a work of charity, one of the most acceptable to Almighty
God, and most beneficial to our neighbour, when any one becomes
instrumental in converting others from their errors, or from a wicked
life; for it is only God t... [ Continue Reading ]