返回Chapter 4

Chapter 4

Chapter Four

Jas. 4:1. Where do wars and fights come from among you? Do they not come from your desires for pleasure that war in your members?
The apostle shows that although the aforementioned people claim for themselves the title of teachers, they are entirely carnal. They do much that is exceedingly contrary, devising pleasures for themselves: some seek a lavish table, which Paul also condemns, saying that "such people do not serve our Lord Jesus Christ, but their own belly" (Rom. 16:18); others desire to acquire estates; still others, wealthy houses; and another, something else that the evil one suggests to them, striving to deprive them of salvation.

Jas. 4:2. You desire and do not have. You murder and envy and cannot obtain. You fight and war. Yet you do not have because you do not ask.
Here he persuades through affirmation and negation. However, the affirmation is passed over in silence as being indecent. The indecency lies in the fact that what is implied in the affirmation constitutes the kindling of desire, for desire ends in the fulfillment of sensual pleasure. Murder and envy, strife and enmity are not good deeds, which is why those who pursue them do not attain what they strive for. One should, however, know that here he speaks not of bodily murder and enmity, for this is hard to hear even concerning robbers, much less concerning believers (though some) who come to the Lord. But it seems to me that he calls murderers those who kill their own souls by such undertakings, on account of which enmity against piety also arises in them. So too further on (Jas. 4:4) he called them adulterers and adulteresses — not, of course, those who are such in reality, but those who sin against the Divine commandments by mixing in their own inventions, for no one would tolerate a teacher who is a fornicator, even if the person himself were filthier than a swine. So too he speaks of murders and wars not as bodily, but as spiritual.

Jas. 4:3. You ask and do not receive, because you ask wrongly, that you may spend it on your pleasures.
So it was with the Pharisee mentioned in the Gospel (Luke 18:10–14). The more he enumerated his virtues, the more he blocked the Divine hearing, and his lofty speech was idle on his lips and turned to foam like a raging wave. But someone will say: if the promise of the Lord Jesus, that truthful Teacher, is true — "everyone who asks receives" (Matt. 7:8) — then how does the present apostle say this? We answer: for one who approaches prayer in the proper way, the aforementioned promise is true; he will not be disappointed in anything he asks for. But whoever, having departed from the purpose of devout prayer, asks in appearance only but does not ask as he ought, in reality does not even ask, and therefore will not receive. Imagine, for example, that a grammar teacher promises to teach grammatical knowledge to everyone who comes to him, but the one desiring to learn comes not as he should and does not exert himself to master what is taught, so that in practice the result does not correspond to the promise. Would anyone justly ascribe the falsehood in this case to the teacher himself? Such a person would act unreasonably, for the one who wished to learn did not come as the teacher required. How then and for what should one ask, someone will say. Listen to the One Who gave the aforementioned promise: "But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness" (Matt. 6:33). Evidently, whoever asks in this way and chiefly for this will not be disappointed in other things either, the receiving of which will not tear him away from salvation. But to the one who asks for what is harmful and destructive, He from Whom comes "every good gift" (Jas. 1:17) will not give. Even the one who asks for knowledge of the Divine or some other spiritual gift, but asks for the sake of his own desires, will not receive, because he asks badly and to his own destruction, and God does not give what is bad.

Jas. 4:4. Adulterers and adulteresses! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Whoever therefore wants to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.
Above, the apostle only slightly rebuked certain false wise men who distort the Divine Scriptures and of their own will use them in a perverted manner, so as to have a pretext for their sensual life — and this is nothing other than a form of pride. But now he comes against them more sternly and, as if contrary to his usual mildness, employs words of reproach, calling such people adulterers and adulteresses, and makes rebuke somewhat like this: "Tell me, thoughtless one, you wish to present yourself as a wise man? But whence come the quarrels and constant enmity in your life? Whence comes the constant attachment to the present? Whence the unceasing pursuit of the pleasures of this present life? This is characteristic not of wise men, but of ordinary people inclined to friendship with the world, which also shows that you are adulterers, for you prefer common, shameful, and base beauty to the Divine and chaste beauty hidden within, and by your striving for the present you raise up enmity against God. Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God, alienating us from the love of God and showing us to be His enemies?"

By "world" he here means the entire material life as the mother of corruption, and whoever partakes of it immediately becomes an enemy of God, for in his zeal for what is useless he negligently and contemptuously relates to Divine matters — the kind of attitude we have toward people who are hateful and hostile to us. Since there are two objects with which people occupy themselves — God and the world — and toward each of these two objects one turns with either love or hatred, as soon as we strongly attach ourselves to one, we obviously appear negligent of the other, for attention produces love, and negligence produces hatred. Therefore, whoever cleaves to Divine matters is and is called a friend of God, while whoever has grown negligent of God and has loved the world is numbered among the enemies of God. And since all this proceeds from the arrogance and pride of the false wise men, the apostle employs yet another rebuke, wishing to sober such people from their drunkenness and rouse them from their slumber. He says:

Jas. 4:5. Or do you think that the Scripture says in vain, "The Spirit who dwells in us yearns jealously"?

Jas. 4:6. But He gives more grace. Therefore He says: "God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble."
Here the figure of omission is employed — a customary form of abbreviated speech. The apostle speaks as if to say: "I have with my own words been persuading you to use your wisdom rightly and without condemnation, so that you would not abuse it through pride, would not counterfeit and distort true teaching. But if you desire instruction from Scripture as well, then listen: 'God resists the proud.' If He 'resists the proud' (and we usually resist enemies), then without doubt the proud must be numbered among His enemies, for Scripture does not in vain, without foundation, or out of envy command us to do the impossible, but earnestly desires that through its exhortations grace may dwell in us. Therefore, if you are obedient to Scripture, humble yourselves before God and you will receive grace through exaltation from Him. Pride is arrogance taken to the extreme of malice, but it differs from self-conceit. Pride exalts itself over those subject to it, while self-conceit exalts itself over what does not even exist. Modesty also differs from humility. Modesty, or humility, being directly opposed to pride, is a great good. And since both arise in us by our own free will, everyone who exalts himself through pride is already condemned and is humbled by the Lord, while the one who has humbled himself through modesty He exalts in due time, for the very practice of humility raises the one who has acquired it to spiritual heights."

Saint Cyril explains it differently. If death entered the world through the envy of the devil (Wis. 2:24), and if Christ, according to Scripture, has dwelt in our inner man (Eph. 3:16–17), then He dwelt there in order to abolish the death that came through envy. But He not only gives this, but also greater grace. "I have come," He says, "that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly" (John 10:10). And that God dwelt in us out of His great love for us, the prophet clearly expressed when he said that neither an angel nor a mediator, but "the Lord Himself will save us" (Isa. 33:22), out of love for us and care for us. How then did the Savior grant even greater grace? By casting down our adversary Satan, which is why it is added: "God resists the proud." For how is he not proud who proclaims: "and my hand has seized the whole world like a nest" ("and my hand has found like a nest the riches of the peoples") (Isa. 10:14)?

Jas. 4:7. Therefore submit to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.

Jas. 4:8. Draw near to God, and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners; purify your hearts, you double-minded.

Jas. 4:9. Lament and mourn and weep! Let your laughter be turned to mourning, and your joy to gloom.

Jas. 4:10. Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and He will lift you up.
The apostle calls double-minded those who do not wish to live uniformly, but are constantly led and carried away by the pressure of people, and do not dwell in the house of the Lord with one mind, for God settles "those of one mind in a home" ("the solitary in a home") (Ps. 68:6). And that life is also called "soul" is evident from the words of the prophet: "skin for skin, and all that a man has he will give for his soul" ("skin for skin, and a man will give everything he has for his life") — that is, for his life (Job 2:4).

Jas. 4:11. Do not speak evil of one another, brethren. He who speaks evil of a brother and judges his brother, speaks evil of the law and judges the law. But if you judge the law, you are not a doer of the law but a judge.

Jas. 4:12. There is one Lawgiver and Judge, who is able to save and to destroy.
The apostle knows that pride, beginning with contempt and slander, brings those who trample on the meek to utter humiliation. Drawing them away from this, he wishes by the present statement to bring them to their senses.

"Judges the law" means despises it, for the one who judges does so out of contempt. What law does he judge? First, the one that commands: "Judge not, and you shall not be judged" (Luke 6:37). Second, the one expressed in the psalm: "Whoever secretly slanders his neighbor, him I will destroy" (Ps. 101:5). And since this proceeds from contempt, he adds that if you judge the law, you are not a doer of the law, for would anyone wish to live under the authority of one whom he despises? Therefore, do not presume, he says, to degrade and, as it were, to counter-legislate, for this will not be forgiven you, since there is only one Lawgiver — God, who is able "to save and to destroy" transgressors of His law, for to punish the transgressors of the law belongs to the law and the Lawgiver, while you have nothing more than idle talk and yourself bring upon yourself the sentence of condemnation, for doing the same thing as the one you condemn, you condemn yourself to the same degree that you condemn him.

Jas. 4:12. But who are you to judge another?
He speaks dismissively. When you yourself are such, how dare you judge one of like nature?

Jas. 4:13. Come now, you who say, "Today or tomorrow we will go to such and such a city, spend a year there, and buy and sell and make a profit";
He does not destroy free will, but shows that not everything depends on man himself — the grace from above is also needed, for one may run about, and trade, and do everything necessary for life, but one must ascribe this not to one's own labors, but solely to the lovingkindness of God. Jeremiah also says: "O Lord, I know the way of man is not in himself" (Jer. 10:23), and the author of Proverbs: "Do not boast about tomorrow, for you do not know what a day may bring forth" (Prov. 27:1).

Jas. 4:14. whereas you do not know what will happen tomorrow.
He shows the vanity of our life and puts us to shame for spending our entire life in vanity, for all our labor is exhausted on temporal evil. David says the same: "Surely every man walks about like a shadow; surely he busies himself in vain" ("Truly, man walks about like a phantom; in vain he bustles") (Ps. 39:6) — that is, he busies himself over what does not exist but appears as if in a shadow, or over what has no independent existence but constitutes merely a likeness and image of a truly flourishing life.

Jas. 4:14. For what is your life? It is even a vapor that appears for a little time and then vanishes away.

Jas. 4:15. Instead you ought to say, "If the Lord wills, we shall live and do this or that."
Vapor is a dark compound arising from intense heat and moisture and having the briefest existence, for on account of its extreme fineness it quickly "vanishes" from contact with its surroundings, entering into them and dissolving, just as a small portion of moisture dissolves in water. This is what the apostle likened our "life" to, and most fittingly. Having interrupted the discourse midway with this comparison, he returns to it again and continues. Here is the connection: "Come now, you who say, 'Today or tomorrow we will go to such and such a city, spend a year there, and buy and sell and make a profit'" (Jas. 4:13)... "Instead you ought to say, 'If the Lord wills, we shall live and do this or that'" (Jas. 4:15).

Having interrupted the connection of the discourse with the example by which the apostle wished to show more strikingly the vanity of worldly cares proceeding from pride, he then adds what was omitted. The course of the speech is this: "You, in your arrogance, boast." Who? "You who do not know what will happen tomorrow, for what is your life..." and so forth. With the words "what is your life?" he prepared for himself the way to this subtle precept; then he adds the instruction itself, doing so most appropriately.

Jas. 4:16. But now you boast in your arrogance.
The proud person and pride occupy themselves with unreal things, which is why the proud one is so called — meaning "one living in delusion or deception."

Jas. 4:16. All such boasting is evil.
"All such boasting is evil."

Jas. 4:17. Therefore, to him who knows to do good and does not do it, to him it is sin.
He again takes up the subject of vain arrogance, which usually arises from pride, and as if concluding the discourse, says that boasting is evil. If it is evil, then it proceeds without doubt from the evil one. But those who through holy baptism have given themselves over to the Lord should not accept what is sown by the evil one. He adds also this: "to him who knows to do good and does not do it, to him it is sin" (Jas. 4:17). Again he admonishes the false teachers not to dare to teach what they themselves have not first practiced, for blessed, it is said, is not the one who teaches, but the one "who does and teaches" (Matt. 5:19), since deeds must precede words, by which the righteous man also proclaims the faith he manifests. For whoever, says the Lord, breaks one of these least commandments and teaches men so — that is, teaches that which he himself has not labored at — shall be called least... "but whoever does and teaches them, he shall be called great" (Matt. 5:19). Therefore the God-man Himself first began to do and then to teach (Acts 1:1). Such, in my opinion, is the thought also in these words: "He who glories, let him glory in the Lord" (1 Cor. 1:31) — that is, as one like the Lord, having in Him a teacher and example. Similarly, David says: "In the Lord shall my soul boast" ("My soul shall make its boast in the Lord") (Ps. 34:2) — saying nothing other than this: I would wish to boast in that I walk according to the commandments of the Lord.