Bible Commentary

James 1:9-11

The Pulpit Commentary on James 1:9-11

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

A very difficult passage, three interpretations of which are given, none of them entirely satisfactory or free from difficulties.

(a) that the "rich" are never elsewhere spoken of as "brothers" in this Epistle. See ; , and cf. the way in which they are spoken of in other parts of the New Testament (e.g. ; ; ); and in Ecclesiasticus 13:3;

(b) that in verse 11 the thought is, not of riches which make to themselves wings and fly away, but of the rich man himself, who fades away;

(c) that ταπείνωσις is elsewhere always used for external lowness of condition, not for the Christian virtue of humility (see ; ; ). On the whole, therefore, it is best to adopt (2) and to supply the indicative: "but the rich man [not ' brother'] glories in his humiliation;" i.e. he glories in what is really lowering. Because as the flower, etc. A clear reference to , which is also quoted in .

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