Chapter 5:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 Hebrews 1 Peter
James 5
Verse 1. Come now, ye rich - The apostle does not speak this so much
for the sake of the rich themselves, as of the poor children of God,
who were then groaning under their cruel oppression. Weep and
howl for your miseries which are coming upon you - Quickly and
unexpectedly. This was written not long before the siege of
Jerusalem; during which, as well as after it, huge calamities came
on the Jewish nation, not only in Judea, but through distant
countries. And as these were an awful prelude of that wrath which
was to fall upon them in the world to come, so this may likewise
refer to the final vengeance which will then be executed on the
impenitent.
Verse
2. The riches of the ancients consisted much in large stores of
corn, and of costly apparel.
Verse
3. The canker of them - Your perishing stores and motheaten
garments. Will be a testimony against you - Of your having buried
those talents in the earth, instead of improving them according to
your Lord's will. And will eat your flesh as fire - Will occasion
you as great torment as if fire were consuming your flesh. Ye
have laid up treasure in the last days - When it is too late; when
you have no time to enjoy them.
Verse
4. The hire of your labourers crieth - Those sins chiefly cry to
God concerning which human laws are silent. Such are luxury,
unchastity, and various kinds of injustice. The labourers
themselves also cry to God, who is just coming to avenge their
cause. Of sabaoth - Of hosts, or armies.
Verse
5. Ye have cherished your hearts - Have indulged yourselves to
the uttermost. As in a day of sacrifice - Which were solemn feast-
days among the Jews.
Verse
6. Ye have killed the just - Many just men; in particular, "that Just
One," Acts iii, 14. They afterwards killed James, surnamed the
Just, the writer of this epistle. He doth not resist you - And
therefore you are secure. But the Lord cometh quickly, ver. 8.
Verse
7. The husbandman waiteth for the precious fruit - Which will
recompense his labour and patience. Till he receives the former
rain - Immediately after sowing. And the latter - Before the
harvest.
Verse
8. Stablish your hearts - In faith and patience. For the coming of
the Lord - To destroy Jerusalem. Is nigh - And so is his last
coming to the eye of a believer.
Verse
9. Murmur not one against another - Have patience also with each
other. The judge standeth before the door - Hearing every word,
marking every thought.
Verse
10. Take the prophets for an example - Once persecuted like you,
even for speaking in the name of the Lord. The very men that
gloried in having prophets yet could not bear their message: nor
did either their holiness or their high commission screen them
from suffering.
Verse
11. We count them happy that endured - That suffered patiently.
The more they once suffered, the greater is their present
happiness. Ye have seen the end of the Lord - The end which the
Lord gave him.
Verse
12. Swear not - However provoked. The Jews were notoriously
guilty of common swearing, though not so much by God himself
as by some of his creatures. The apostle here particularly forbids
these oaths, as well as all swearing in common conversation. It is
very observable, how solemnly the apostle introduces this
command: above all things, swear not - As if he had said,
Whatever you forget, do not forget this. This abundantly
demonstrates the horrible iniquity of the crime. But he does not
forbid the taking a solemn oath before a magistrate. Let your yea
be yea; and your nay, nay - Use no higher asseverations in
common discourse; and let your word stand firm. Whatever ye
say, take care to make it good.
Verse
14. Having anointed him with oil - This single conspicuous gift,
which Christ committed to his apostles, Mark vi, 13, remained in
the church long after the other miraculous gifts were withdrawn.
Indeed, it seems to have been designed to remain always; and St.
James directs the elders, who were the most, if not the only, gifted
men, to administer at. This was the whole process of physic in the
Christian church, till it was lost through unbelief. That novel
invention among the Romanists, extreme unction, practiced not
for cure, but where life is despaired of, bears no manner of
resemblance to this.
Verse
15. And the prayer offered in faith shall save the sick - From his
sickness; and if any sin be the occasion of his sickness, it shall be
forgiven him.
Verse
16. Confess your faults - Whether ye are sick or in health. To one
another - He does not say, to the elders: this may, or may not, be
done; for it is nowhere commanded. We may confess them to any
who can pray in faith: he will then know how to pray for us, and
be more stirred up so to do. And pray one for another, that ye may
be healed - Of all your spiritual diseases.
Verse
17. Elijah was a man of like passions - Naturally as weak and
sinful as we are. And he prayed - When idolatry covered the land.
Verse
18. He prayed again - When idolatry was abolished.
Verse
19. As if he had said, I have now warned you of those sins to
which you are most liable; and, in all these respects, watch not
only over yourselves, but every one over his brother also. labour,
in particular, to recover those that are fallen. If any one err from
the truth - Practically, by sin.
Verse
20. He shall save a soul - Of how much more value than the body!
ver. 14. And hide a multitude of sins - Which shall no more, how
many soever they are, be remembered to his condemnation.
Chapter 5:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 Hebrews 1 Peter
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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