Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - James 1:1 - 1:1

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Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - James 1:1 - 1:1


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

Jam 1:1-27. Inscription: Exhortation on hearing, speaking, and wrath.

The last subject is discussed in James 3:13-4:17.

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 Jam 2:1; not at all in his speeches (Act 15:14, Act 15:15; Act 21:20, Act 21:21), 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 Rom 15:26, which alludes to their poverty.