JAMES CHAPTER 3 JAMES 3:1 We must not rashly take upon ourselves to
reprove others. JAMES 3:2 The importance, difficulty, and duty of
governing the tongue. JAMES 3:13 True wisdom will show itself in
meekness, peaceableness, and charity, in opposition to strife and
envying. BE NOT MANY MASTERS; let n... [ Continue Reading ]
FOR IN MANY THINGS WE OFFEND ALL: there is no man absolutely free from
sin, 1 KINGS 8:46 JOB 14:4 PROVERBS 20:9 ECCLESIASTES 7:20 1 JOHN
1:8,10; and therefore we must not be too critical in other men's
actions, having so many failings ourselves, GALATIANS 6:1. IF ANY MAN
OFFEND NOT IN WORD; know how... [ Continue Reading ]
He illustrates the former proposition, that he that can rule his
tongue may rule his whole body, by two similitudes: the first, of an
unruly horse, which yet, as wanton as he is, being curbed in with a
bit, may be easily managed; intimating, that even so, if a man's
tongue be well governed, the rest... [ Continue Reading ]
The other similitude, in which a man is compared to a ship, the tongue
to the rudder, the governing the whole body to the turning about the
ship. As the rudder is but a small thing, in comparison of the much
greater bulk of a ship, and yet, being itself turned, turns the whole
ship (_ though so grea... [ Continue Reading ]
The accommodation of the former similitudes. THE TONGUE IS A LITTLE
MEMBER, i.e. one of the lesser, in comparison of the body. AND
BOASTETH GREAT THINGS; the Greek word signifies, according to its
derivation, the lifting up of the neck (as horses, mentioned JAMES
3:3, are wont to do in their pride)... [ Continue Reading ]
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... [ Continue Reading ]
EVERY KIND; some of every kind. OF BEASTS; wild beasts, such as are
most fierce and untractable. AND OF BIRDS; though so movable and
wandering, the very vagabonds of nature. AND OF SERPENTS; which are
such enemies to mankind. AND OF THINGS IN THE SEA; the inhabitants, as
it were, of another world, r... [ Continue Reading ]
BUT THE TONGUE; not only other men's tonges, but his own. CAN NO MAN
TAME; no man of himself, and without the assistance of Divine grace,
can bring his tongue into subjection, and keep it in order; nor can
any man, by the assistance of any grace promised in this life, so keep
it, as that it shall ne... [ Continue Reading ]
THEREWITH BLESS WE GOD; pray, and speak well of God. EVEN THE FATHER;
of Christ, and in him of all true believers. AND THEREWITH CURSE WE
MEN; rail on, revile, speak evil of, as well as wish evil to. WHICH
ARE MADE AFTER THE SIMILITUDE OF GOD; either:
1. Saints in whom God's image is anew restored;... [ Continue Reading ]
He repeats here, by way of exaggeration, what he had said JAMES 3:9,
to show how exceedingly absurd it is that two such contrary actions
should proceed from the same agent. THESE THINGS OUGHT NOT SO TO BE;
there is a meiosis in the words; he means, things should be quite
contrary. See the like expre... [ Continue Reading ]
Ordinarily and naturally; if any such be, it is looked upon as uncouth
and prodigious.... [ Continue Reading ]
CAN THE TREE, MY BRETHREN, BEAR OLIVE BERRIES? EITHER A VINE, FIGS?
The same tree cannot ordinarily bring forth fruit of different kinds,
(on the same branch, whatever it may on different, by ingrafting),
much less contrary natures: see MATTHEW 7:16. SO CAN NO FOUNTAIN BOTH
YIELD SALT WATER AND FRES... [ Continue Reading ]
WHO IS A WISE MAN AND ENDUED WITH KNOWLEDGE AMONG YOU? i.e. if there
be a wise man, &c. See PSALMS 25:12, and 1 PETER 3:10, where what
David speaks by way of interrogation, Peter explains by way of
assertion. The apostle having shown the disease of the tongue, comes
now to remove the cause, viz. men... [ Continue Reading ]
BITTER ENVYING; Greek, zeal, which he calls bitter, partly to
distinguish it from that zeal which is good, whereas this he speaks of
is evil, and though it pretends to be zeal, yet is really no other
than envy; and partly because it commonly proceeds from an imbittered
spirit. and tends to the imbit... [ Continue Reading ]
THIS WISDOM, which they pretended so much to, who so criticized on
other men's actions, and inveighed against them, and which was
accompanied with strife and envy. DESCENDETH NOT FROM ABOVE; i.e. from
God the author of wisdom, from whom, though every good and perfect
gift descends, JAMES 1:17, and e... [ Continue Reading ]
FOR WHERE ENVYING AND STRIFE IS; the usual companions of this devilish
wisdom. THERE IS CONFUSION; or, inconsistency, viz. both with man's
self and others; envy makes him unqniet in himself, and troublesome to
others, by causing contentions and seditions among them, and breaking
their peace, as well... [ Continue Reading ]
BUT THE WISDOM THAT IS FROM ABOVE; true wisdom, which is of God,
opposed to that which _descendeth not from above,_ JAMES 3:15. IS
FIRST PURE; either excluding mixture, and then it is opposed to
hypocritical; or rather excluding filthiness, and then it is opposed
to _sensual,_ JAMES 3:15, and implie... [ Continue Reading ]
AND THE FRUIT OF RIGHTEOUSNESS; either the fruit we bring forth, which
is righteousness itself, LUKE 3:8,9 RO 6:22 PHILIPPIANS 1:11; or the
fruit we reap, which is the reward of righteousness, viz. eternal
life. RIGHTEOUSNESS; metonymically here put for the heavenly wisdom
before described, whereof... [ Continue Reading ]