James
Completed by S. Wright.
AN
EXPOSITION,
W I T H P R A C T I C A L O B S E
R V A T I O N S,
OF THE GENERAL EPISTLE OF
J A M E S.
The writer
of this epistle was not James the son of Zebedee; for he was put to
death by Herod (Acts xii.)
before Christianity had gained so much ground among the Jews of the
dispersion as is here implied. But it was the other James, the son
of Alpheus, who was cousin-german to Christ, and one of the twelve
apostles, Matt. x. 3. He is
called a pillar (Gal. ii.
9), and this epistle of his cannot be disputed, without
loosening a foundation-stone. It is called a general epistle,
because (as some think) not directed to any particular person or
church, but such a one as we call a circular letter. Others think
it is called general, or catholic, to distinguish it from the
epistles of Ignatius, Barnabas, Polycarp, and others who were noted
in the primitive times, but not generally received in the church,
and on that account not canonical, as this is. Eusebius tells us
that this epistle was "generally read in the churches with the
other catholic epistles." His. Eccles. page 53. Ed. Val. Anno 1678.
James, our author, was called the just, for his great piety. He was
an eminent example of those graces which he presses upon others. He
was so exceedingly revered for his justice, temperance, and
devotion, that Josephus the Jewish historian records it as one of
the causes of the destruction of Jerusalem, "That St. James was
martyred in it." This is mentioned in hopes of procuring the
greater regard to what is penned by so holy and excellent a man.
The time when this epistle was written is uncertain. The design of
it is to reprove Christians for their great degeneracy both in
faith and manners, and to prevent the spreading of those libertine
doctrines which threatened the destruction of all practical
godliness. It was also a special intention of the author of this
epistle to awaken the Jewish nation to a sense of the greatness and
nearness of those judgments which were coming upon them; and to
support all true Christians in the way of their duty, under the
calamities and persecutions they might meet with. The truths laid
down are very momentous, and necessary to be maintained; and the
rules for practice, as here stated, are such as ought to be
observed in our times as well as in preceding ages.