Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of James 1:17
Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.
17. Every good gift and every perfect gift ] The two nouns are different in the Greek, the first expressing the abstract act of giving, the second the gift as actually bestowed. The perfection of the one flows from the goodness of the other. The “perfect gift” carries our thoughts beyond all temporal blessings which, though good, have yet an element of incompleteness, to the greater gifts of righteousness and peace and joy; the gift, i. e. of the Holy Spirit, which is the crowning gift of all. Singularly enough, the axiom, if we may so call it, falls into the cadence of a Greek hexameter, and it is conceivable that it may have been a quotation from a poem, or possibly from an early Christian hymn. Like instances of metre are found, besides the direct quotations in 1Co 15:33, Tit 1:12, in the Greek of Heb 12:13 and Rev 19:12. The whole passage reminds us once more of the Sermon on the Mount (Mat 7:11) and of the parallel promise in Luk 11:13.
is from above ] The perfect gifts come then, as the new birth of the soul comes, from Heaven, not from Earth (comp. Joh 3:3, as in the margin), as does the true wisdom (chap. Jas 3:15; Jas 3:17). The prominence of the word and the thought in the Epistle is one of the links that connect it with the Gospel of St John, in which a like prominence is traceable (Joh 3:7; Joh 3:31; Joh 19:11).
from the Father of lights ] The plural is used to express the thought, that light in all its forms, natural (as in the “great lights” of Psa 135:7), intellectual, spiritual, is an efflux from Him “who is light, and in whom is no darkness at all” (1Jn 1:5). This axiom as to the Divine Nature was also common to the two great teachers of the Church of the Circumcision, as it was to the teaching of the Apostle of the Gentiles, when he describes the children of God as being also “children of light” (Eph 5:8). There may possibly be a reference to the Urim and Thummim, the “lights” and “perfections” which symbolised God’s gifts of wisdom in its highest forms (Exo 28:30; Lev 8:8; Deu 33:8). Comp. also Psa 48:3.
with whom is no variableness ] The noun is primarily a scientific term (our English parallax presents a cognate word) as expressing the change of position, real or apparent, of the stars. Here it is apparently suggested by the word “lights,” which primarily conveyed the thought of the heavenly bodies as the light-givers of the world. They, St James seems to say, have their changes, but not so their Creator and their Father.
shadow of turning ] i.e. shadow caused by turning. The latter word, from which we get our “ trope,” and “ tropic,” is applied, as in the LXX. of Job 38:33; Deu 33:14, to the apparent motion of the lights of heaven, and so to any changes. The former is also a quasi-scientific term, applied to the effect produced on the sun’s disc by the moon in an eclipse. St James does not appear to use the terms with any very strict accuracy, but the fact that he employs them at all, and that they occur nowhere else in the New Testament, is in itself interesting as connecting him with the form of wisdom described in Wis 7:17-20 , which deals with “the alterations of the turning of the sun” (the two terms are nearly identical with those which St James uses) and “the change of seasons.” Science, he seems to say, deals with the mutability of phnomena. Faith, and therefore Wisdom, rest on the immutability of God.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Every good gift and every perfect gift – The difference between good and perfect here, it is not easy to mark accurately. It may be that the former means that which is benevolent in its character and tendency; the latter that which is entire, where there is nothing even apparently wanting to complete it; where it can be regarded as good as a whole and in all its parts. The general sense is, that God is the author of all good. Every thing that is good on the earth we are to trace to him; evil has another origin. Compare Mat 13:28.
Is from above – From God, who is often represented as dwelling above – in heaven.
And cometh down from the Father of lights – From God, the source and fountain of all light. Light, in the Scriptures, is the emblem ot knowledge, purity, happiness; and God is often represented as light. Compare 1Jo 1:5. Notes, 1Ti 6:16. There is, doubtless, an allusion here to the heavenly bodies, among which the sun is the most brilliant. It appears to us to be the great original fountain of light, diffusing its radiance overall worlds. No cloud, no darkness seems to come from the sun, but it pours its rich effulgence on the farthest part of the universe. So it is with God. There is no darkness in him 1Jo 1:5; and all the moral light and purity which there is in the universe is to be traced to him. The word Father here is used in a sense which is common in Hebrew (Compare the notes at Mat 1:1) as denoting that which is the source of anything, or that from which anything proceeds. Compare the notes at Isa 9:6.
With whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning – The design here is clearly to contrast God with the sun in a certain respect. As the source of light, there is a strong resemblance. But in the sun there are certain changes. It does not shine on all parts of the earth at the same time, nor in the same manner all the year. It rises and sets; it crosses the line, and seems to go far to the south, and sends its rays obliquely on the earth; then it ascends to the north, recrosses the line, and sends its rays obliquely on southern regions. By its revolutions it produces the changes of the seasons, and makes a constant variety on the earth in the productions of different climes. In this respect God is not indeed like the sun. With him there is no variableness, not even the appearance of turning. He is always the same, at all seasons of the year, and in all ages; there is no change in his character, his mode of being, his purposes and plans. What he was millions of ages before the worlds were made, he is now; what he is now, he will be countless millions of ages hence. We may be sure that whatever changes there may be in human affairs; whatever reverses we may undergo; whatever oceans we may cross, or whatever mountains we may climb, or in whatever worlds we may hereafter take up our abode, God is the same. The word which is here rendered variableness ( parallage) occurs nowhere else in the New Testament. It means change, alteration, vicissitude, and would properly be applied to the changes observed in astronomy. See the examples quoted in Wetstein. The phrase rendered shadow of turning would properly refer to the different shade or shadow cast by the sun from an object, in its various revolutions, in rising and setting, and in its changes at the different seasons of the year. God, on the other hand, is as if the sun stood in the meridian at noon-day, and never cast any shadow.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Jam 1:17-18
Every good gift is from above
Gifts front, above
It is not from the lowest but from the highest points that the best things in the world always come.
We get from the sky, and not from the earth, all those gracious influences without which our world would be only a gigantic lifeless cinder roiling through space. Light and heat come down to us from above; and so do the sunshine that warms and quickens and beautifies everything, and the rain and the dew that refresh the face of nature. The ground is to the plant mainly the soil in which its roots are fixed; it obtains its food chiefly from above, from the air and the sunshine and the showers of heaven. Then, too, it is from the highest parts of the earths surface, not from the lowest, that all the good things come which make the earth such a beautiful and comfortable home for man. The mountains, not the plains, are the sources of our greatest and most precious gifts. Were it not for the mountains there would be no streams to quench our thirst and water our fields–no winds to purify the air–no clouds to overshadow the earth in the heat of the day, and to keep in the warmth from being diffused in space at night. And is it not a very beautiful, as well as a very striking, thought, that all our flowers come to us originally from the mountains–from the highest and not from the lowest parts of the earth? They bloomed on the heights; and when the foul atmosphere of the plains and valleys vanished gradually, and the air and sunshine became so clear and bright that flowers could breathe in them, they descended as Gods good and perfect gifts from above to beautify the lowlands with their lovely presence. Thus you see that even in the natural world every good and perfect gift literally is from above. The things that make this world most beautiful and best fitted to be our abode come from the heights. And is there not a wise lesson for your souls from this fact? If your ordinary natural life is supported and enriched by the good things which come from the sky and the highest parts of the earth, how much more should your true life–the immortal life of your souls–be nourished and enriched by the good things that come to you from the highest of all sources, from the Author of every good and perfect gift–the Father of Lights? The best and most perfect of all gifts has come from above, the unspeakable gift of Gods dear Son; and with the gift of His own Son He gives you the gift of the Holy Spirit, that you may know and appreciate fully all the goodness and perfection of Jesus Christ, and make Him your own; that He may work in you the faith which is the gift of God, by which you may believe in Christ to the saving of your soul, and enjoy all the blessings of salvation. In Christ the blessings of this life itself come to you from above, strained and filtered of all their evil, and made truly satisfying without any sorrow being added. And you will get every good and perfect gift from above–from the Father of Lights, by that wonderful ladder set up between earth and heaven along which the angels are ascending and descending–the new and living way of Christs finished work–in answer to that real earnest prayer of yours which brings your heart and mind into closest contact with the mind and heart of God. (H. Macmillan, D. D.)
The best things are from shore
It is not the things that come to you from the earth that will fill the void of your nature, but the things that come to you from heaven. You cannot call any gift that comes to you from below a good gift, for it is mixed with the evil of the earth, like the pure snow when it is soiled by the mud of the ground; or a perfect gift, because it is passing and perishing, and even when at its best it ear, not satisfy your nature. There is ever some drawback to the goodness of the gift that you get from below; some imperfection that, like the worm in the apple, spoils the beauty and the sweetness of it. It is about the things that come from below that people always quarrel; about their lands and wealth and houses and properties–all of the earth, earthy. These are the causes of the frequent strifes and jealousies and greeds that make life often so unhappy. People do not quarrel about the things that come from above–the sunshine and the rain and the sweet influences of the starry Pleiades; and the things of Divine grace from a higher source still–the love and the beauty of heaven. The things that come from above sweeten and ennoble life, reconcile and unite men to one another, and make one family, one loving brotherhood of the human race. (H. Macmillan, D. D.)
The Divine bounty
To the bounteous hand of God we owe all that we have, more than we deserve, and all that we hope for. The breath of life was given us by Him, and is dependent upon His pleasure. The stores from which we draw our subsistence are only ours by His permission. It is in His power to withdraw them from us, or us from them, at any moment. We have cause to be thankful that He has so long allowed us the benefit of His mercies. By the good and perfect gift which is from above, he means more especially the Divine grace b which all other spiritual blessings are rendered attainable. Aptly, indeed, may the preventing and assisting influence of Gods Holy Spirit be denominated a good and perfect gift, since without it we could not make a beginning, much less any progress, in Christian goodness and perfection. (James Aspinall, M. A.)
Divine goodness in human history
I. ALL THE GOODNESS IN HUMAN HISTORY COMES FROM GOD. This principle applies in a specially direct manner to the spiritual forms of human good. Divine influences on the soul come directly from God. Strength, consolation, hope, holiness, are the results of the souls fellowship with God. Christian virtues are fruits of the Divine Spirit, coming down and operating on the individual character.
II. THE DIVINE GOODNESS IN HUMAN HISTORY COMES IN SEPARATE GIFTS AND DIFFERS IN DEGREE.
1. It comes in separate gifts as mans demands arise (1Ki 13:10).
2. It comes in different forms: physical; intellectual; spiritual. These forms differ in their intrinsic worth: Good–physical and intellectual; perfect spiritual. This subject–
(1) Sheds new light on the good of human life, and reveals its sacredness.
(2) Fixed as a habit is favourable to the culture of religious sentiment: humility; gratitude; devotedness.
(3) Reveals the stewardship of humanity.
(4) Discloses the wickedness of a selfish life. (Homilist.)
God not the Author of evil, but of good
The origin of evil is a problem which, in all probability, will never be solved until we reach the world in which there is no evil. And I think we should do well to approach this problem from its brighter rather than from its darker side. I see more hope of our learning what evil is, and even whence it came, if we first ask ourselves what goodness is and whence that came. Now by goodness we mean moral goodness; goodness as it exists, or may exist, in man. And by human or moral goodness we mean, not a mechanical and involuntary conformity to law, but a free and willing choice of the righteousness which the law ordains. Moral goodness implies free choice, and how can there be a free choice of that which is good if there be no possibility of choosing evil rather than good? The will of man must have this solemn alternative before it–good or evil–if it is ever to become a good will. God does not make us good, therefore, but He has so made us that we may become good; and in order that we may become good we must be free to choose evil. He is good, perfectly and absolutely good, because His will is fixed in its choice of goodness; and only as our wills rise to that steadfast attitude can we become good. Now if we start from this conception of goodness we shall define its moral opposite, evil, as the wrong choice of the will; we shall say that, just as men become good by freely choosing and doing that which is right, so they become evil by freely choosing and doing that which is wrong. And we shall not blame God for their bad choice, nor for leaving them free to make it; we shall admit that He must leave their will free if they are to be really good, and that, if the will is to be left free, it must be possible for them to choose evil rather than good. Thus we shall reach the conclusion that evil is from man, not from God; that it is not fatal necessity imposed upon them from above, but a wrong choice which they have made when a right choice was open to them. That evil springs from human lust, not from the will of God, St. James has shown us in the verses which precede these; and he now goes on to show how impossible it is that evil should come from God by considerations drawn from what God is in Himself, and from what He has done for us. Even his opening phrase, Do not err, my beloved brethren, indicates that he is about to resume and carry further the argument with which he has already dealt. Now on this question of the origin of evil men do perpetually err. They ascribe it to a Divine origin. St. James will have no part in such opinions as these. Evil only too certainly is, but he is sure that it is not from God. And he tries to make us sure by giving us the facts and arguments which had most impressed his own mind. His first argument is drawn from the conception he had formed of the nature of God. God cannot be the Author of evil, he argues, because He is the Author of good, because He is light, and in Him there is no darkness at all. Every good gift and every perfect boon is from Him; or, as the Greek implies, all that comes to us from God is good, and every good gift of His bestowal is perfect as well as good, perfect in kind and degree. But if all He gives is good, and even perfect, how can evil and imperfection spring from Him. As Bishop Sanderson has it, We are unthankful if we impute any good but to God, and we are unjust if we impute to Him anything but good. St. James, however, is not content with the argument from the acknowledged and absolute goodness of God. With the ease and simplicity which we so much admire in the proverbs and parables of our Lord, he rises into a fine illustration of his argument. The illustration comes to this: You might as well, and much more reasonably, attribute darkness to the sun as impute evil to God. But mark for a moment with what a natural and unforced ease he passes to his illustration. He had said, Every good gift and every perfect boon is from above, from yonder fair, pure world on high. And as, in thought, he glances upward to that world, he sees the sun which God has set to rule the day, the moon and the stars which He has set to rule the night. Of these lights God is the Father, and of all lights. But can the Source and Fountain of all light be the source and fountain of all darkness? Impossible. The sun gives light, and only light. If we are in darkness, that is only because the world has turned away from the sun, of our hemisphere of the world. And, in like manner, God gives good gifts, and only good. Thus, and so naturally, does St. James bring in his illustrative thought. But even yet he is not content with it. The thought grows as he considers it, grows somewhat thus. The Father of the lights must be more perfect than the lights He has called into being. They vary; even the sun for ever shifts its place, and its relation to the earth. But whatever inconstancy there may be in them, there is none in Him who made them. He is good, and doeth good only and continually. And now he advances another step. He argues that evil cannot be of God, because, of His own free will, God sets Himself to counterwork the death which evil works in us, by quickening us to a new and holy life: Of His own will begat He us, by a word of truth. If we, when we were sinners, were redeemed and made anew by the free action of Divine will, can we for a moment suppose that evil sprang from the will which delivered us from evil? We acknowledge with joyful certainty and gratitude that He who begat us to a new and holy life, when we were dead in trespasses and sins, must hate the evil from which He delivered us, that He cannot have been the Author of that which He sent His Son to destroy. It may be said, You who are redeemed and born anew by the grace of God, at the word of His truth, may have reason to believe in His goodness: but what reason has the world at large, the world which is not saved as yet? Perhaps, in logic, it would be a sufficient answer to this objection were we to say: The world may be saved if it will; God is always trying to save it; but, as we have seen, good as He is, He cannot make men good against their will. Logically, the answer is fair enough; but our hearts are not to be satisfied by mere logic, and they crave a more tender and hopeful answer than this. Happily, St. James supplies the very answer they crave. God, he says, has begotten us, by some word of truth which met our inward needs, into a new and better life; and therefore we are sure that He hates evil and death. But He has begotten us, not simply that we ourselves may be saved from evil, but also that we should be a kind of first-fruit of His creatures. Now the consecration of the first-fruits of the earth wan a recognition of Gods claim to the whole harvest, and pledge that it should be devoted, in various ways, to His service. This was the great lesson of the first-fruit offering. It was not a tax on payment of which the harvest was to be exempted; it was a confession that it was all the gift of God, and was all due to Him. When, therefore St. James says that the regenerate are kind of first-fruit of the creation, so far from implying that they alone are to be saved, he implies that all flesh shall see the salvation of God, and that the whole creation shall have a part in their redemption. (S. Cox, D. D.)
Every good and perfect gift
A gift is something that expresses the mind and betokens the love of the giver, and at the same time brings happiness to the receiver. What, then, is a good gift? That which fulfils these two requisitions. And what is a perfect gift? That which entirely fulfils these two ends. Now everything we have in the world–from the blade of grass, or the ray of sunshine–up to eternal glory; from the slenderest thought that darts through the mind to the highest flights of philosophy; from the earthly songs to the triumphant anthems of heaven–everything we touch, or feel, or see, or hear, everything is a gift. A gift! We did not make it; we did not buy it; we did not deserve it. It is God who gives it, and He gives it lovingly of His own free will, and He gaves it to make whoever receives it happier and better. That is a gift. But you may say, Is everything God gives us good? Does not He give us trials, sorrows, separations, sickness, bereavement, death? Are these good gifts? Yes, as they came from Him they were good. St. Paul was caught up to the third heaven, and heard unutterable things. It was a gift. Presently there was given him–it is his own expression–a thorn in the flesh. It was a gift, and a second gift. It was necessary to balance and make safe the first gift. Each alone was a good gift, but the two in combination make a perfect gift. Is there any difference between a good gift and a perfect gift, or are we to take it only as a repetition of the same thought, expressing the same meaning, rising to the same climax? I think there is a difference. A perfect gift is one which exactly fits the minds and the taste of the receiver; expresses the whole heart of the giver, and can never be taken away. A gift which has in it perfect adaptation and eternity. Now we might say that all light–the light of the world–was but one light; but we see it broken up into its prismatic colours. There is the light of nature; there is the light of reading; there is the light of grace; there is the light of knowledge; there is the light of love; there is the light of heaven. But it all comes from the same spring, and in every case it is the light which is on it which makes the value of the gift. Some of us have many gifts. They are all from above, from the same:Father; but from the want of the light which should reign in that gift, the gift is valueless. Nay, more, it is an unfulfilled possibility; it is the handle of temptation; it turns to self, to pride, to sin. The gift is abused; and in proportion as the gift is good and perfect, it becomes evil, and it incurs the heavier gift of condemnation. (James Vaughan, M. A.)
The work of Gods Spirit
This text, I believe more and more every day, is one of the most important ones in the whole Bible; and just at this time it is more important for us than ever, because the devil is particularly busy in trying to make people forget God, to make us acknowledge God in none of our ways, to make us look at ourselves and not to God, so that we may become earthly. He puts into our hearts such thoughts as these: Ay, all good gifts may come from God; but that only means all spiritual gifts. We are straightforward, simple people, who cannot feel fine fancies; if we can be honest, and industrious, and good-natured, and sober, and strong, and healthy, that is enough for us–and all that has nothing to do with religion. Those are not gifts which come from God. A man is strong and healthy by birth, and honest and good-natured by nature. Have you not all had such thoughts? But have you not all had very different thoughts; have you not, every one of you, at times, felt in the bottom of your hearts, after all, This strength and industry, this courage, and honesty, and good-nature of mine, must come from God; I did not get them myself. If I was born honest, and strong, and gentle, and brave, some one must have made me so when I was born, or before. The devil certainly did not make me so, therefore God must. These, too, are His gifts! Let us go through now a few of these good gifts which we call natural, and see what the Bible says of them, and from whom they come. First, now, that common gift of strength and courage. Who gives you that?–who gave it to David? For He that gives it to one is most likely to be He that gives it to another. David says to God, Thou teachest my hands to war, and my fingers to fight; by the help of God I can leap over a wall: He makes me strong that my arms can break even a bow of steel. That is plain-spoken enough, I think. God is working among us always, but we do not see Him; and the Bible just lifts up, once and for all, the veil which hides Him from us, and lets us see, in one instance, who it is that does all the wonderful things which go on round us to this day, that when we see anything like it happen we may know whom to thank for it. So, again, with skill and farming in agriculture. From whom does that come? The very heathens can tell us that; for it is curious, that among the heathen, in all ages and countries, those men who have found out great improvements in tilling the ground have been honoured and often worshipped as divine men–as gods; thereby showing that the heathen, among all their idolatries, had a true and just notion about mans practical skill and knowledge–that it could only come from heaven; that it was by the inspiration and guidance of God above that skill in agriculture arose. Again, wisdom and prudence, and a clear, powerful mind–are not they parts of Gods likeness? How is Gods Spirit described in Scripture? It is called the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of prudence and might. Or, again, good-nature and affection, love, generosity, pity–whose likeness are they? What is Gods name but love? Has not He revealed Himself as the God of mercy, full of long-suffering, compassion, and free forgiveness; and must not, then, all love and affection, all compassion and generosity, be His gift? Yes. As the rays come from the sun, and yet are not the sun, even so our love and pity, though they are not God, but merely a poor, weak image and reflection of Him, yet from Him alone they come. Or honesty, again, and justice–whose image are they but Gods? Is He not The Just One–the righteous God? Are not the laws of justice and honesty, by which man deals fairly with man, His laws–the laws by which God deals with us? Now here, again, I ask: If justice and honesty be Gods likeness, who made us like God in this who put into us this sense of justice which all have, though so few obey it? Can man make himself like God? Can a worm ape his Master? No. From Gods Spirit, the Spirit of Right, came this inborn feeling of justice, this knowledge of right and wrong, to us–part of the image of God in which He created man–part of the breath or spirit of life which He breathed into Adam. From whom else, I ask, can they come? Can they come from our bodies? What are they?–Flesh and bones, made up of air and water and earth–out of the dead bodies of the animals, the dead roots and fruits of plants which we eat. They are earth–matter. Can matter be courageous? Did you ever hear of a good-natured plant, or aa honest stone? Then this good-nature, and honesty, and courage of ours must belong to our souls–our spirits. Who put them there? Did we? Does a child makes its own character? Does its body make its character first? Can its father and mother makes its character? No. Our characters must come from some spirit above us–either from God or from the devil. And is the devil likely to make us honest, or brave, or kindly? I leave you to answer that. God–God alone is the Author of good–the help that is done on earth, He doeth it all Himself: every good gift and every perfect gift cometh from Him. (Canon Kingsley.)
All good gifts from above
I. THE GENERAL TRUTH THAT GOD IS THE GIVER OF EVERYTHING GOOD. Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above. The words rendered gift are not the same in the original. They are closely related, but not identical. The one signifies properly the act of giving, the other the thing given, a little before God is represented as He who giveth liberally and upbraideth not. He stands pre-eminent alone, in His mood of giving. In His case, act and object entirely harmonise. All giving which is really, absolutely good–good in its origin and exercise–good without any mixture of evil, is from the hand of the infinitely, only good God. And every perfect gift. Here He speaks of what is bestowed, of the benefaction itself. By perfect we are to understand complete of its kind, without radical defect, what is adequate, entire, fitted to serve the end, to accomplish the purpose intended. Every gift of this description, be it natural or spiritual, providential or gracious, ranging from common weekday mercies up to the highest crowning blessings of salvation, is of Divine origin and communication. Through whatever channel they reach us, in whatever quarter they present themselves to view, they are all from above–primarily and properly from above. And they are so, not merely as being originally from a celestial region, but as coming from a Divine bestower. They are from God Himself–from God alone. Now mark how He, the great Giver, is here described. He is called the Father of lights–literally of the lights. The primary, direct reference, apparently, is to the grand luminaries of the firmament–the sun, moon, and stars of heaven. These majestic orbs, before which so many nations in all ages have bowed down to worship, are preeminently the lights of the natural world, and they were at first created, as they are still sustained, by Jehovah. As their Maker, Originator, He may be appropriately termed their Father. Light is the brightest, purest, most gladsome of all material elements; and hence it is very often used in Scripture as an emblem of knowledge, holiness, and joy–of all excellence, intellectual, moral, and spiritual–of whatever is most precious and perfect. All the glory of heaven is often represented by the same symbol. Everything which resembles this element, of which it is a tilting figure, is here pointed at in the remarkable designation. The bright orbs above shadow forth a higher, nobler splendour than their own, that which adorns the world of spirits, the kingdom of grace and glory. The whole of this light, shine where it may, proceeds from Him, has Him as its great source and centre. But men are not uniform, undeviating in their spirit and actings. They change, at one time they go in opposition to what they have done at another. The most regular and constant of them are subject to disturbing influences. And is it not so even with the material symbols here introduced by the apostle? But God is not only infinitely clearer and purer, He is also steadier, more constant than the great orbs of heaven. Hence, it is added, With whom is no vaiableness, neither shadow of turning. He has no variableness about Him, no change, alternation, no fluctuation or uncertainty; no, not the least degree of it, not the most distant approach to anything of the kind, for He is without even the shadow of turning. In these terms there may be, as is generally supposed, an implied contrast between the Father of lights and the lights themselves. All good, then, comes from Him, all kinds and degrees of it, natural and spiritual. Every blessing, great and small, whether for the body or the soul, is of His bestowal. And so nothing but good comes from Him–no evil whatever. He sends trials, troubles, no doubt, but these are often blessings in disguise, and the very best blessings. Night and storm have their beneficial influence in the natural world, and so have frowning providences in the spiritual.
II. THE MORE SPECIAL TRUTH THAT GOD IS THE QUICKENER OF ALL THE SAVED. James speak of regeneration. It is evident that begat here is to be understood, not in the natural sense, but the spiritual; for he adds that it was effected by the word of truth. There is no admission to His favour and family, no possibility of being one of His sons and daughters, but by being born again.
1. The origin of this regeneration. It is here attributed to God as its Author. It is effected by Him, and Him alone. We pass in it from the carnal to the spiritual, from the earthly to the heavenly. We are thenceforth actuated by wholly different views, feelings, desires, and motives. But more is here stated. James says, Of His own will begat He us. When He regenerates, God acts according to His own free, sovereign purpose. It is always a most spontaneous, gracious proceeding. It is wholly self-moved. The new birth is never necessitated or merited by the creature. There is nothing about us to deserve it, to draw down the Divine power and mercy for its accomplishment (Eph 2:8-9; Tit 3:5; 1Pe 1:3).
2. The instrument of this regeneration. The word of truth, the word which is truth–truth without mixture of error, truth the purest and highest, truth absolute, Divine. Jesus prayed, Sanctify them through Thy truth; Thy Word is truth. It is the Spirit who is the efficient agent in working this change. It was thus that peace first entered the dark, troubled bosom of Augustine. It was from the old Bible found in the library at Erfurt that Luther learned the way of life, and began not only to walk in it himself, but to guide into it the feet of multitudes. It was as his eyes rested on the precious words, the blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanseth us from all sin, that one of those noble soldiers of the Cross whom the army of our Queen has furnished, Captain Vicars, was led to that resolution, and entered on that course, which was followed by a career of eminent consistency and devotedness. This word is all pure, and is proved to be so by the influence it exerts, the holiness it produces in all who comes under its power.
3. The design or object of this regeneration. That we should be a kind of first-fruits of His creatures. He speaks of the creatures, and this term, perhaps, goes beyond the redeemed. It points probably to the wider deliverance–that emancipation extending to nature itself, which is associated with the manifestation of the sons of God hereafter (Rom 8:21-22).
(1) We may learn here a lesson of gratitude. Think of our providential bounties, think of our religious privileges–think, above all, of our spiritual and saving mercies, and of what acknowledgments are due to Him from whom they all issue!
(2) We may learn also a lesson of humility. We have not the slightest claim to any of these benefits. We have nothing to boast of, no worth, no merit, for our righteousness is no better than filthy rags, and our proper place is the dust of self-abasement.
(3) And, finally, we may learn a lesson of holiness. Is God the Giver only of good? Is His begetting us the greatest, best proof that evil cannot proceed from Him, that He stands essentially opposed to all sin at the utmost possible distance from everything of the kind? Then, clearly, if we would act in accordance with the nature and design of our new birth, if we would show ourselves the children of this Father of lights, we must cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, we must ever sock to be sanctified wholly in heart and life, in soul and body. (John Adam.)
Divine gifts
I. THE CHARACTER OF THE GIVER.
1. The designation employed by the apostle is fitted to elevate our conception of Deity. God is the Father of lights, the Creator and Governor of sun, moon, and stars. God is Light. Not only has He kindled the luminaries of space, He is the Lord of all light, both physical, and also intellectual and moral.
2. The description of one of the Divine attributes exhibits the character of God still more clearly and delightfully. With Him there can be no variation, neither shadow that is cast by turning. There is no fickleness or caprice in the heart, in the action of the beneficent Almighty.
II. THE QUALITY OF HIS GIFTS.
1. They partake of the nature of their origin. From above. What have we that we did not receive? Yet too many men are like the swine that feast upon the acorns, but look not up to the tree whence the fruit falls.
There is a Divine flavour, a Divine fragrance, a Divine beauty, in all the gifts of God.
2. They are good. They have all of them a natural goodness, and they are all a means, if used aright, to moral and spiritual goodness, and thus lead to something better than themselves.
3. They are perfect.
(1) Commensurate with the character and resources of the Giver.
(2) Adapted to the recipient.
(3) Complete, being finished as they are begun.
III. THE SPECIAL ILLUSTRATION OF DIVINE GOODNESS. Instead of charging God with tempting us to sin, we are directed to observe, and gratefully to acknowledge, the provision He in His wisdom and love has made for our highest welfare.
1. What it is–the new life. He begat us, or brought us forth,–as it is differently translated. Our thoughts are thus led to the supreme blessing of Gods covenant of grace. Has God given us His Son? He has done so that we might have life, eternal life. Has God given us His Spirit? He has done so that by that Spirit we might be born anew. The new, the higher, the spiritual life of humanity is the great fact of revelation, the great fact of the worlds history.
2. Its origin in the Divine purpose. This gift came from God-of His own will. Christians are born not of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.
3. Its means and instrumentality. A moral end must be effected by moral means.
4. Its end. That we should be a kind of first-fruits of His creatures, is His aim in all He has done for our salvation. The early Christians were the first-fruits of a spiritual harvest, comprising the Church of Christ in all lands and through every age. Application:
1. Here we have an incentive to gratitude.
2. An inducement to confidence.
3. An encouragement to prayer.
4. An inspiration to hope. (J. R. Thomson, M. A.)
Natural and spiritual good
Whatever is excellent in the creature, is freely imparted to it by the bounty of the Creator; who is high in glory above all, perfect and unchangeable.
I. THE GOOD WHICH WE RECEIVE FROM GOD MAY BE DIVIDED INTO TWO SORTS, NATURAL GOOD AND SPIRITUAL GOOD.
1. Under natural good is comprehended the animal life of our bodies, its health, and all things that contribute to support and render it comfortable. The reason and understanding of man, his power of memory, and faculty of speech, with the knowledge he is enabled to gain by them, and the arts and improvements of life which arise from them, are to be ranked under the same notion.
2. Spiritual good is whatever contributes to purify the soul, to raise it towards heaven, and to prepare it for the presence of God. It bears its blossoms of hope and peace here on earth; but produces a fruit which is to be gathered in eternity.
II. LET US NEXT CONSIDER THE RIGHT USE AND IMPROVEMENT OF THIS DOCTRINE.
1. It should leach us gratitude and thanks for the blessings of life.
2. It should teach us a constant and humble dependence on the providence of God, under a sense of our own insufficiency to our welfare.
3. It teaches us submission to Gods blessed will in all things.
III. Hitherto we have been describing our duty to God, as lie is the Giver of all natural good; let us next consider it, AS HE IS THE AUTHOR OF ALL SPIRITUAL GOOD.
1. And, first, it is a duty which we owe to God and ourselves, when He sets such different objects before us, to weigh and examine their different value, and prefer the best. If what is temporal and worldly is oftentimes permitted to the unthankful and evil, let us desire some other blessing which is a surer token of the favour and loving-kindness of the Giver.
2. And to this we have the greatest encouragement, because He who is the Giver of this heavenly wisdom, hath graciously promised to bestow it on those who ask and seek it of Him.
3. The way, therefore, of asking and seeking so as to obtain, is by prayer, accompanied with a suitable practice. (T. Townson, D. D.)
Good things from God
1. That all good things are from above; they come to us from God. Mere evil is not from above: the same fountain doth not yield sweet and bitter waters. God is good, and immutably good, and therefore it cannot be from Him, which was Platos argument. But for good that floweth clearly from the upper spring, there are indeed some pipes and conveyances, as the Word, and prayer, and the seals; and for ordinary blessings, your industry and care. But your fresh springs are in God; and in all these things we must, as chickens, sip and look upwards.
2. Whatever we have from above, we have it in the way of a gift. There is nothing in us that could oblige God to bestow it; the favours of heaven are not set to sale.
3. Among all the gifts of God, spiritual blessings are the best: these are called here good and perfect, because these make us good and perfect.
4. That God is the Father of lights. Light being a simple and defecate quality, and, of all those which are bodily, most pure and spiritual, is often put to decipher the essence and glory of God, and also the essences and perfections of creatures as they are from God. The essence of God (1Jn 1:5). There light, being a creature simple and unmixed, is put to note the simplicity of the Divine essence. So also the glory of God (1Ti 6:16). So Jesus Christ, in regard as He received His personality and subsistence from the Father, is called in the Nicene Creed, Light of light, and very God of very God. So also the creatures, as they derive their perfections from God, are also called lights; as the angels
(2Co 11:10); the saints (Luk 16:8). Yea, reasonable creatures, as they have wisdom and understanding, are said to be lights; so Joh 1:9. Well, then, if God be the Father of lights–
(1) It presseth you to apply yourselves to God. If you want the light of grace, or knowledge, or comfort, you must shine in His beam and be kindled at His flame. We are dark bodies till the Lord fill us with His own glory.
(2) It shows the reason why wicked men hate God (Joh 3:19-21). He is the Father of lights; He hath a discerning eye, and a discovering beam.
(3) It presses the children of God to walk in all purity and innocency Eph 5:8).
5. The Lord is unchangeable in holiness and glory; He is a Sun that shineth always with a like brightness. This is an attribute that, like a silken string through a chain of pearl, runneth through all the rest: His mercy is unchangeable, His mercy endureth for ever (Psa 100:5). So His strength, and therefore He is called The Rock of Ages (Isa 26:4). So His counsel; He may change His sentence, the outward threatening or promise, but not His inward decree; He may will a change, but not change His will. So His love is immutable; His heart is the same to us in the diversity of outward conditions: we are changed in estate and opinion, but God He is not changed; therefore when Job saith (Job 30:21), Thouart turned to be cruel, he speaketh only according to his own feeling and apprehension. Well, then–
(1) The more mutable you are, the less you are like God. Oh! how should yon loathe yourselves when you are so fickle in your purposes, so changeable in your resolutions!
(2) Go to Him to establish and settle your spirits.
(3) Carry yourselves to Him as unto an immutable good; in the greatest change of things see Him always the same: when there is little in the creature, there is as much in God as ever (Psa 102:26-27). (T. Manton.)
Gods gifts to man, and mans responsibility as inferred therefrom
The word gift is one of the loveliest in the language. It is a flower-like word, and full of fragrance. It is a most significant and expansive term. Like the firmament, it is inclusive of all bright things visible to man in the doings of God. You might enumerate every act of the Father, from the creation of man to the gift of the Holy Ghost, and all the operations of His mercy since, and group them all together; you may call the roll of all His deeds of love to man, and all His gracious acts to us individually: and above them all, or upon the face of each separately, one might, with the accuracy of entire truthfulness, write Gift. They have all come to the race, and to each of us, fresh from His hand. There is not a hope I have in which I do not see my Fathers face; and the reflection of the face reveals the mirrors use, and makes it lovely. There is not a love known to your life, to which is any depth or purity, from which come not Divine reflections. Nor is there any sympathy in your heart or mine, friend, or any sweet impulse or prompting, no high aim or noble motive, no, nor any consolation which makes our sorrows like wounds which heal themselves in bleeding, not of God. I bring all these together, and string them like pearls upon one necklace, and lay them in the palm of His benevolence–a kind of tribute; my little gift to the All-giving. You may begin with the very lowest of His gifts to you–those that come through the ordinary channels of nature, and hence seem least connected with supernatural bestowment–even your bodily powers–and you can but see at a glance how perfectly you are equipped for usefulness and happiness upon the earth. In your own body find proof of your Creators love. What grace, what beauty, what sensitiveness, and subtlety of feeling, has been given to the body! How responsive it is to the mind I how willing its subjection I how free and generous its service! I know that it shall fail, and be not; I know that by-and-by we shall have a better; but for the time being, for the present state of soul-development, how adapted the instrument is to the wishes and wants of the player! But it is not until you contemplate man in respect to his mental and moral faculties; it is not until you look within yourself, and behold the powers of your mind, and the more subtle but incomparably superior attributes of the soul–that you fairly see what God has done for you. What costly, what magnificent furniture is this with which the almighty Architect has fitted up and adorned the temple of the Spirit! Here is Reason–that pale but lovely reflection of God–which draws the line between beast and man: on one side of which is mastery, the powers and pleasures of intelligence and eternal life; on the other, inbred subjection, absence of thought, and existence that hurries to extinction. This is ours–our birthright; given, not bought: bestowed, not acquired–the sign and proof of our sonship, and a bond that binds us as with ties of blood to His eternal Fatherhood. Here, too, is Memory–lifes great thesaurus, where we bestow all our jewels; that gallery in which are hung the faces of the loved as no limner could depict them; that chamber swathed thick with tapestry, on which the days, like flying fingers, have wrought grave and bright forms, and retained the otherwise transient joys. Who would give up his memory? who surrender this shield against forgetfulness? No one. And yet memory is one of Gods gifts to you. Here, too, is Imagination, the divinest faculty of them all, winged like an eagle, tuneful as a lark. Of all faculties, of all powers given of God, I count this the greatest, the most subtle, the most ethereal, and the most Divine. Are you not rich in gifts? Are you not blessed? What more could He have done for you than He has done? Has He not given as a father who as a God should give–generously, munificently? What, now, let me ask, have you done for Him? Where are your days of labour? where the long account of service? How and when have you cancelled the bond and obligation you are under? When your Father called, have you answered? when He directed, have you gone? when He commanded, have you obeyed? To what use have you put these faculties? Or again: to what use do you put your memories? Its lessons are many. Do you allow them to teach you wisdom? Do you not know that the highest of all attainments is to so live that recollection shall not be painful? Half of heaven will consist of remembrance: the endless song will derive half its pathos and power from retrospection. The day hasteth on, yea, is even nigh unto us, when we must own all these children of the mind, be they white or black; when they will swarm about us, and say to Him who shall then be sitting in judgment, This is our father and our mother! And, lastly, imagination–what have you been doing with that? What are you doing with it day by day? Do you fill its hand with tare-seeds, and send it forth over all the field of your future life, compelling its unwilling palms to sow for a dire harvest? or have you even debauched it until its former Divine repugnance to such service is lost, and it delights itself in wickedness? Christ alone can forgive your abuse of reason; He alone can take remorse from recollection, even by washing out the record of the transgression which feeds it; He alone can restore your imagination to its original purity, and make it as familiar with spiritual sights and uses as you have made it with sensual. And so you see that the bestowments of grace are even greater than the bestowments of nature; and that, in this offer to rectify the misadjustment of your faculties, God does more for you than He did even in their endowment. The mercy which forgives and reforms is greater than the goodness that created. (W. H. Murray, D. D.)
Different temperaments given by God
I. Apart from the religious view of the subject, no thoughtful person can fail to admire the wisdom and the goodness of Almighty God IN GRANTING TO US HIS CREATURES CONSTITUTIONS AND CHARACTERS SO DIVERSIFIED. By means of that wonderful variety human intercourse has received an interest which could not otherwise have attached to it; human thought has been deepened and diversified, so as to include manifold views of every subject which it contemplates, and the work of the world generally is done in a far more perfect manner.
II. We pass from the kingdom of nature to THE KINGDOM OF GRACE. These various temperaments with which God has endowed us, His rational creatures, were given for much higher ends than those which are merely natural.
1. Are you of the choleric temperament? God has need of you and of those gifts which He has bestowed upon you. He requires the earnestness of nature to be consecrated to the service of His grace, and He can raise the lofty aims of this temperament to a height to which nature never could aspire.
2. If we turn to the sanguine, we shall perceive that this has, no less, its own proper work for God. St. Peter was no unimportant element in the body of the apostles. Are not the great mass of men far too slow in receiving impressions of heavenly things?
3. So also the phlegmatic serves an important purpose in the Church of Christ. If we are called upon to a ready obedience to Gods holy will, there is another attribute of a faithful service which He no less requires and approves, a steady consistency and stability.
4. And assuredly if all these temperaments are intended by God to be sanctified in the individual and made thereby serviceable also to the Christian community, the same may be said of that which still remains–the melancholic. The temperament of tenderness and of depth could not be removed from the body of Christ without serious loss to every member of it.
III. I want you to believe that THERE IS FULL PROVISION IN THE GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST, AND IN THE DISPENSATION OF THE GRACE OF GOD, FOR THE SANCTIFICATION OF ALL THESE VARIOUS TEMPERAMENTS AND DISPOSITIONS.
1. We have referred to the example of our Lord as a means of sanctification and a proof of the possibility of every temperament being made holy and acceptable for the work of God. And this first view of the subject is not devoid of importance. Jesus Christ is the model man. He is much more; but He is this as well. He shows us in His life what man should be. Now in that life we behold all the four temperaments of which we have been speaking, and we behold them all perfectly sanctified.
(1) In Jesus we behold the melancholic temperament–He was a Man of sorrow and acquainted with grief; but we behold it sanctified and free from every stain of sin, calm and uncomplaining in the peace and the love of God.
(2) If we pass to the phlegmatic, we shall perceive that this was not lacking in the human constitution or in the earthly life of Christ. He had all its calmness, its peace, its silence.
(3) In Him, too, we see the excellences of the sanguine temperament; specially we may note its readiness and its trustfulness.
(4) And so, moreover, in Him we see the choleric temperament present and sanctified. The hypocritical misleaders of the people are called whited sepulchres. He calls the scribes and Pharisees hypocrites, &c. His life displays all the firmness, energy, and decision of this temper.
2. But, again, there is provision for the sanctification of this temperament in the redeeming work of Jesus. On the Cross He offered a fall, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice, oblation, and satisfaction for the sins of the whole world. He there tasted death not for one temperament, for one class, for one nation; but for every man. And as He died for all, so He ever liveth to make intercession for all who come unto Him.
3. There is all provision for the daily sanctification of the life of nature in the words of Jesus. To the choleric He prescribes, by His example and in His words, the spirit of love. To the sanguine He says, that if it would build a tower, it must sit down first and count the cost, etc. To the phlegmatic He says, If any man will come after Me, let him deny himself, &c. To the melancholy, longing for sympathy, He says, Lo, I am with you always; dreading the difficulties and dangers of an earthly life, He says, In the world ye shall have tribulation. But be of good cheer, dec.
4. Nor would it be right to overlook another important means which God has provided for correcting our natural faults, and disciplining our powers and faculties; I mean His providential dealings with us. They are far more; they are instruments of a Divine discipline, parts of that training which the good providence of God affords, in conjunction with those other means which are set forth in the gospel, and provided in the ministry and ordinances of the Church.
5. But once more let it be observed that the great agent in the sanctification of the human temperaments and of the human heart is the Holy Spirit of God. It is He who makes every other means efficacious–flowing in every channel as a stream of life. (W. R. Clark, M. A.)
All good gifts are from God
God is the fountain of all goodness, the giver of all good gifts, the author of all good things in men, He worketh whatsoever is good in the whole world. Here, hence St. Peter calleth Him the God of all grace (1Pe 5:10), because all grace and all go, d gifts come only from Him, as from a well-head and fountain. All the effects of Gods will are only good, and whatsoever virtue, grace, Food gifts, it is from God. In this place Almighty God is adorned with three ornaments, wherein His excellent goodness more appeareth.
1. First, He is called the Father of Lights, the Fountain and Well-spring, the Author and Cause from whence all good gifts flow and spring unto men.
2. Secondly, and moreover, it is attributed unto God that He is not variable, mutable, changeable, with whom there is, saith St. James, no variableness. This is added to prevent that which otherwise might have been objected, they might say, God, indeed, is sometimes the cause of good things among men, it followeth not therefore but that He may be sometimes in like manner the cause of evil. God is not variable, there is no changing with Him, He is constant, always alike, ever cause of good, never author of evil: whereof even Balaam the covetous prophet truly prophesied Num 23:19). When God altereth things at His own pleasure, saith Gregory, the things alter, but He remaineth the same, and changeth not. Therefore by His prophet Malachi He crieth, I am the Lord, I change not; and you sons of Jacob are not consumed.
3. Thirdly, as God changeth not, so there is no shadower turning with Him. He is not like the sun, the moon, the stars, which appear and shine sometimes, but at other times are covered with darkness, which have their changes and their courses, the day now, within ten, eleven, or twelve hours the night; the sun glorious now in beauty, but anon in an eclipse; the moon now in the fall, now in the wan, now new, now a quarter old, and so forth. The planets now in this place of heaven, now in that shining. There is no such turning with God. He is not now good, and now turned to the contrary, for He is always light, and with Him is no darkness at all. For His goodness is always clear, bright, and continually shining. (R. Turnbull.)
Every good gift is from God
There is no such thing as spontaneous goodness among men. If there be anything good in the universe, enjoyed by men or beasts, or any other thing living in heaven or on earth, visible or invisible, it is the gift of God. If it be a transient good, enjoyed and then gone, so that nothing but the memory of the enjoyment is left, it is the gift of God. If it be the fountain of a stream rolling out pleasure or power to irrigate the world, it is the gift of God. The universe may be searched. If anywhere anything can be found which any intellect can perceive, and any heart can feel to be good, it has come from God. If it be good for any mans body, good for any mans soul, good for any mans spirit, if it be good for any other animal, if it be good for the present or future inhabitants of the earth–find a good thing, and you find a Godsend. (C. F. Deems, D. D.)
Gods good gifts
First, perhaps, to strike the eye amongst the clusters of our Canaan is home–the fathers reason made silken by affection; the mothers voice sweeter than any music; the kindly strength of the brother; tire fondness of the sister; the comeliness and sparkle of little children. Friendship is a kindred cluster engolbing rich wine. Another fruition is philanthropy, delicious as a fruit of paradise plucked from some branch running over the wall. Then the eye longs to drink as well as the lip, and the ear to drink as well as the eye, so art displays creations refreshing as the vineyards purple wealth; the artist with marble and canvas unsealing fountains of beauty, the musician with pipe and string pouring streams of melody. Science shows the earth a great emerald cup, whose fulness flashes over the jewelled lip. Literature is a polished staff bearing grapes beyond those of Eshcol. Commerce is a whole vine in itself, and we gaze at its embarrassing lavishness with amazed delight. Patriotism is a first rate grape whose generous blood gives to the spirit that unselfish glow which surpasses all sensual pleasure; and the best wine runs last in that sentiment of humanity which gives the crowning joy to the festival of life. (W. L.Watkinson.)
Again, again, and again!
Iterum, iterum, iterumque–Again, again, and again. Such was the motto wittily adopted by the English dramatist, Samuel Foote, after he happily became the possessor of a third fortune, when two previous fortunes had been entirely squandered away. Again, again, and again be had been favoured; and placed each time in an increasingly responsible position. With each new endowment he had the experience of the past to guide him, and had less excuse to furnish for any misuse of his possessions. Samuel Footes motto may be adopted by every reader in relation to the mercies he has received. Not once, not twice only, has God blessed us, but again, again, and again. It would be an interesting calculation if the reader could survey his past life and tabulate the number of mercies, in the form of meals, he has received; the number in the shape of suits of apparel, and the number in the persons of friends to cheer lifes pilgrimage. Suppose you are twenty years of age, then God has placed upon your breakfast-table 7,300 refreshing repasts to fit you for the days duties. And if you have partaken of four meals a day, then in twenty years the bountiful Giver of every good and perfect gift has provided for you no fewer than 29,200 meals. This is irrespective of the delicious fruits which tie has oftentimes showered into your lap between the stated meals. Are all these mercies to be received and employed by us without acknowledgment? (J. H. Hitchens, D. D.)
God the Source of gifts
In 1808 a grand performance of the Creation took place at Vienna. Haydn himself was there, but so old and feeble that he had to be wheeled into the theatre in a chair. His presence roused intense enthusiasm among the audience, which could no longer be suppressed as the chorus and orchestra burst in full power upon the passages, And there was light. Amid the tumult of the enraptured audience the old composer was seen striving to raise himself. Once on his feet, he mustered up all his strength, and in reply to the applause of the audience, he cried out as loud as he was able, No, no! not from me, but, pointing to heaven, from thence–from heaven above–comes all! saying which he fell back in his chair, faint and exhausted, and had to be carried out of the room.
The Father of lights
The Father of lights
Among the good things, the best is light, the physical light which makes the things of the outer world visible, the intellectual light which enables any man to see truths and their relations, the spiritual light which enables a man to walk as seeing Him that is invisible and the invisible world by which He is surrounded. God is the Father of lights, the source of all conceivable modes of illumination, and Ha pours down upon men all the good things they have. It is not a shower, an occasional gift of things desirable, but it is an unceasing rain of blessings. It is incessant sunshine. As at all hours rays of light are going off in all directions from the sun, and covering all the space of the solar system, so are Gods gifts going from Him, descending from Him, ceaselessly, in an unbroken stream of blessing, and an uninterrupted radiation of light. He is the Father of lights, the Producer of the heavenly bodies, the Source of all the light of knowledge, all the light of wisdom, all the light of faith, all the light of hope, all the light of love, all the light of joy. If any man arise in his generation to shine as a star in the hemisphere of human society, God kindled the splendour of his intellect and the benign radiance of his high spiritual character, if any woman arise to brighten a home, or send the kindly light of her sweetness over any cheerless portion of our race, it was God who dwelt in her heart, and smiled through her life. If on the coast of our humanity we, mariners on lifes uncertain sea, behold lighthouses so placed along the shore as to enable us to take bearings or shape courses that bring us to our havens of safety, it is God who has erected each such lighthouse and kindled each such pharos. (C. F. Deems, D. D.)
The Father of lights
God, as the Author of all our spiritual light, receives a faint illustration from the sun, as the source of natural light. The rays from the sun are of three kinds, differing from one another probably only as to the lengths of the waves of which they are composed.
1. Light rays. Nearly all the light we receive comes from the sun. Even the moonlight is but reflected sunlight. Even when we are in the shade, or in the house where we cannot see the sun, the light we receive is sunlight, dispersed from the particles in the air, reflected from all things around us; even the light of our lamps and gas-burners is but sunlight which has been stored up in the earth. So it is that all our spiritual light, from whatever sources it seems to come, is really from God. Our white sunlight is really composed of thousands of colours, shades, and tints, which fill the world with beauty. Such variety is in the pure light from God, reflected from our manifold natures, needs, and circumstances.
2. Heat rays. Nearly all the heat in the world comes directly or indirectly from the sun. The fires that warm us and that are the source of power are from the wood or coal in which the heat of the sun has been stored. Such is Gods love to us.
3. Chemical rays, which act upon plants and cause the movements of life. These rays are in a sense the source of life, the instrumentality of life. So God is the Source of our spiritual life. Light, love, and life all come from the Father of lights. (Christian Age.)
Prayer for light
I suggest to you all the prayer of a Puritan who, during a debate, was observed to be absorbed in writing. His friends thought he was taking notes of his opponents speech, but when they got hold of his paper, they found nothing but these words, More light, Lord! More light, Lord! Oh, for more light from the great Father of lights! (C. H.Spurgeon.)
The Father of lights
The sun does not shine for a few trees and flowers, but for the wide worlds joy. The lonely pine on the mountain-top waves its sombre boughs and cries, Thou art my sun; and the little meadow violet lifts its cup of blue, and whispers with its perfumed breath, Thou art my sun. And the grain in a thousand fields rustles in the wind and makes answer, Thou art my sun. So God sits, effulgent in heaven, not for a favoured few, but for the universe of life; and there is no creature so poor or so low that he may not look up with childlike confidence and say, My Father, Thou art mine. (H. W. Beecher.)
With whom is no variableness
The unchangeableness of God
I. CONSIDER GOD, AS HE IS UNCHANGEABLE IN HIS OWN NATURE AND PERFECTIONS. This Author of all must be unchangeable. He cannot change for the better, because He hath in Himself all excellences. He cannot change for the worse, because neither can He have a will or a power to hurt Himself, nor can other beings be able to diminish His perfections, since they have no other strength than He gave them, and receive their nature and qualities from Him. Thus reason teacheth us to conclude that God is unchangeable. The Holy Scriptures also teach us the same.
II. CONSIDER GOD IN HIS DEALINGS WITH US, AS HE IS OUR RULER, AND SHOW THAT HE IS UNCHANGEABLE IN HIS WILL, HIS PURPOSES, AND DECREES. This is a manifest consequence of what has been said; for, if God is unchangeable in His nature and perfections, whatsoever He decrees and resolves concerning mankind in general, or any of us in particular, He must and infallibly will accomplish. To resolve and not to perform is a certain mark of imperfection,
III. CONSIDER THOSE ACTIONS AND THAT PART OF GODS CONDUCT TOWARDS MANKIND, WHICH SEEM TO ARGUE IN HIM INCONSTANCY AND CHANGE OF MIND.
1. When God is said to repent, and to be grieved, it is manifest that such popular expressions are to be understood as spoken in condescension to the weakness of our apprehensions.
2. We learn from the Scriptures that God gave the Jews ritual laws, which in themselves and of their own nature were not good, and which He afterwards repealed by His Son. The gospel is the natural and the moral law in full perfection; but, as we are imperfect, and cannot live up to it, it was suitable to perfect goodness and mercy to use some abatement and condescension. Therefore God, in compassion to our infirmities, to exact unsinning obedience, substitutes repentance, which is accepted through the propitiation and mediation of Christ.
3. We find in the Scriptures some promises and threatenings, which are so expressed that they seem to be absolute and irreversible; which yet, as the event showed, were not accomplished; and this seems not to agree with the unchangeable nature of God. The following observations may serve to explain this matter, and to set it in a true light.
(1) All the promises and threatenings contained in the New Testament are conditional, and the condition is plainly expressed. Thus our happiness or misery is made to depend upon our own choice and behaviour. In the Old Testament likewise, the far greater part of Gods promises and threatenings are of the same kind: they are conditional, and the condition is named expressly.
(2) Some of Gods decrees concerning societies or particular persons have no dependence upon the moral behaviour of men; and these consequently are absolute and irreversible.
(3) These decrees excepted which are prophetic and providential, all other declarations, though they may seem absolute and unchangeable, yet are not so; for God reserves to Himself a power of altering them, or suspending their execution.
Application–
1. The consideration of Gods unchangeable nature compared with our changeable condition, may teach us to entertain humble thoughts, and to know ourselves to be most imperfect creatures in all respects.
2. Since God is set forth in the Scriptures as the bright and perfect original which in all things we should resemble, His unchangeable nature reminds us that we must endeavour, like Him, to be constant in all that is good, in our love of virtue, and in our lawful promises to one another.
3. The unchangeable nature of God suggests very powerful dissuasions from vice. There is a law which declares that impenitent vice shall end in destruction. This law is eternal and unchangeable. (J. Jortin, D. D.)
The unchangeableness of God
I. EXPLAIN WHAT IS MEANT. By the immutability of God we mean that He always is, and was, and will be, the same; that He undergoes no changes either of His essence and Being, or of His properties and perfections.
II. SHOW THAT THIS IS ESSENTIAL TO GOD.
1. From the dictates of natural reason; which tells us that nothing argues greater weakness and imperfection than inconstancy and change. Now if the Divine nature were subject to change, this would cast an universal cloud upon all the Divine perfections, and obscure all other excellences. And, as mutability in God would darken all His other perfections, so would it take away the foundation and comfort of all religion; the ground of our faith, and hope, and fear; of our love and esteem of God, would be quite taken away.
2. This will yet more clearly appear from the Divine revelation of the Holy Scriptures, which tell us that God is unchangeable in His nature and in His perfections, in all His decrees, and purposes, and promises, in tits essence and Being. I am that I am (Exo 3:14); this is His name, whereby He made known Himself to the comfort of His people, and to the terror of the Egyptians, their oppressors. From everlasting to everlasting Thou art Psa 90:2). Thou art the same, and Thy years fail not Psa 102:27). I am the Lord, and change not (Mal 3:6). Hence it is that the title of the living God is so frequently attributed to Him; and He swears by this, as denoting not only His eternity, but His unchangeableness–As I live, saith the Lord. Hither, likewise, we may refer those texts where He is called the incorruptible God (Rom 1:23). The immortal King (1Ti 1:17), and is said only to have immortality (1Ti 6:16). And He is immutable, likewise, in His perfections; hence it is so often said in the Psalms that His goodness and His mercy endure for ever; His righteousness is likewise said to endure for ever (Psa 111:3), and to be like the great mountains (Psa 36:6); not only visible and conspicuous, but firm and immovable; and the same, likewise, is said of His truth and faithfulness, His truth endureth for Psa 117:2), and of His power, In the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength (Isa 26:4). And so likewise in His decrees, andpurposes, and promises (Psa 33:11; Isa 14:24; Nu Psa 89:33). APPLICATION–
1. In regard to sinners and wicked men.
(1) The unchangeableness of God is matter of great terror to wicked men. Let but the sinner consider what God is, and the consideration of His unchangeable nature must needs terrify him (Hab 1:13; Psa 5:4-5; Exo 34:7; Psa 90:11; Psa 76:7; Rev 18:8).
(2) This should be a powerful argument to urge sinners to repentance.
2. In reference to good men, the consideration of Gods unchangeableness is matter of great consolation to them; in all the changes and vicissitudes of the world, their main comfort and hope is built upon a rock, it relies upon the unchangeable goodness and faithfulness of God, all whose promises are yea and amen, truth and certainty. (Abp. Tillotson.)
The unchanging God
There are two facts for us to look at here; the first fact, that this world and all that is in it are full of change; the second fact, that God who made us, and from whom comes every good gift, is unchanging. The face of the earth and the history of its people are always changing. If we turn from the world of nature and look at ourselves, we shall see change everywhere. Have you ever known what it is to revisit your home after an absence of many years? All changed. The place, once so familiar, looks strange and unnatural now. Yes, the tree lives yet, but the hand that planted it is gone. Seeing these constant changes in the world, in ourselves, in our friends, it becomes a tremendous thought that God is just the same as ever. The same as the God of the new-made universe, the same as the God of Abraham, of Moses; the same who took our flesh and was made man; the same who rose again and ascended into heaven, the Christ of the Gospels, ever the same. One great reason why our lives are so fall of change is that we may learn that this is not our rest. That we may look up from changing earth, to a changeless God, and on eternity, where a thousand years are but as yesterday. The gift of faith in believing, the gift of hope, and of life eternal–these things change not; the gifts of the world, the greatness of the world, pass away, God and His gifts alone remain unchanging.
1. First of all, Gods justice is unchanging.
2. Again, the lovingkindness of God is unchanging.
3. Again, the tender care of God for us is unchangeable.
4. Lastly, the forgiveness of God is unchangeable. God will forgive us our sins on the same conditions as of old, and on no other. (H. J.Wilmot Buxton, M. A.)
No variableness in God
Apart from revelation, men in general would not have supposed that God, the Creator of a changeful world, is Himself unchangeable. The heathen nations appear for the most part to have regarded their gods as beings subject to like passions, to the same fickleness of mind and purpose with themselves. Such was the common belief, though here and there one might be found gifted with a deeper insight (Num 23:19). The laws by which he governs as are as fixed and immutable, though to us as unsearchable, as those by which He directs the vicissitudes of the seasons and the succession of storm and calm, of sunshine and rain. The great event in the worlds history, the Incarnation of Christ, took place so as to seem an after-thought–an interruption in the course of things, occasioned by the sin of man; but what says the Scripture 1Pe 1:20; Rom 16:25; Eph 3:11) And this being true of the most wonderful work of His providence and love, we may be sure it holds good of all His dealings with us. His gracious purposes towards us do not vary, they are Yea and Amen. Though His favour may seem to be withdrawn, and His face turned away from us, it is not so even for a moment. God is said here to be the Father of lights. He is the Source of all illumination. The light of day, the light of earthly happiness, the light of reason, the light of conscience, the light of revelation, all are from Him, and whether they are continued to us or withdrawn, His purpose is the same–to prepare us for a still more marvellous light into which tie is bringing us, even the light of His presence. But while He is so constant, so immutable, what are we? How fickle, how moody, how unstable! We build castles in the air, and hovels on the ground; promising much, performing little; doing a thing to-day, wishing it undone tomorrow; full of bravery as to the future, and cowards for the present, changing our opinions at the bidding of our interests; making Our way through life, not like the bird of passage, intent upon an unseen home, but like the butterfly, in ancient times chosen as the emblem of the human soul, flitting this way and that, without any certain course in view. Above all, as to the most important concerns of our souls, often we keep not the same resolution for two days, or even two hours together–strongly impressed one hour with their overwhelming importance, aroused, distressed, anxious about them; the next, how glad to get rid of them, to be willingly, wilfully forgetful of them! But the changeableness of our nature has its good as well as its evil side. If you have given yourself up to some bad way, you are not to look upon it as a thing from which there is no escape, a prison from which you cannot get forth. If, indeed, you will not make the effort, you must be as you are; if you will, you may be made free. But in no case is it more true than in yours, that who would be free themselves must strike the blow. You will be aided, indeed, by Gods good Spirit. But you must strive as if all depended on yourself, and then the most inveterate propensity to evil may be overcome, and you may be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so as to know by your own experience what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God. (W. G. Humphry, B. D.)
The changeless Father
It is not necessary to press the astronomical figures which St. James employs. It is clear that he means to assert most emphatically two things about God, namely, that with Him there is no alienation of goodness and no obscuration of goodness. As one says, God is always in the meridian. (C. F. Deems, D. D.)
Gods inflexibility
He cannot change. He cannot call that no sin which is sin; nor that a small sin which is a great sin; nor that a private sin which is a public sin. His purpose is not the easy, pliable, changeable thing which thine is. He is the God only wise, only righteous, only mighty, and is, therefore, above all such vacillations. O saint, remember that thou hast to do with a holy and unchangeable God! O sinner, think that thou hast also to do with Him, and that this inflexibility is as yet all against thee! He will not alter either His law or His gospel to suit you. You must take them as they are, or perish for ever!
Gods unchangeableness
An old writer says, A man travelling upon the road espies some great castle; sometimes it seems to be nigh, another time afar off; now on this hand, anon on that; now before, by and by behind; when all the while it standeth still unmoved. Thus it is with God; sometimes He seemeth to be angry with the sons of men, another time to be well pleased; now to be at hand, anon at a distance; now showing the light of His countenance, by and by hiding His face in displeasure: yet He is not changed at all. It is we, not He, that is changed.
God cannot change to become a tempter
There is never a time at which one could say that through momentary diminution in holiness it had become possible for Him to become a tempter. (A. Plummer, D. D.)
God unchangeable
There are many Christians, like young sailors, who think the shore and the whole land do move, when the ship and they themselves are moved; just so, not a few imagine that God moveth, and faileth, and changeth places, because their souls are subject to alteration; but the foundation of the Lord abideth sure.
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 17. Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above] Whatever is good is from God; whatever is evil is from man himself. As from the sun, which is the father or fountain of light, all light comes; so from GOD, who is the infinite Fountain, Father, and Source of good, all good comes. And whatever can be called good, or pure, or light, or excellence of any kind, must necessarily spring from him, as he is the only source of all goodness and perfection.
With whom is no variableness] The sun, the fountain of light to the whole of our system, may be obscured by clouds; or the different bodies which revolve round him, and particularly the earth, may from time to time suffer a diminution of his light by the intervention of other bodies eclipsing his splendour; and his apparent tropical variation, shadow of turning; when, for instance, in our winter, he has declined to the southern tropic, the tropic of Capricorn, so that our days are greatly shortened, and we suffer in consequence a great diminution both of light and heat. But there is nothing of this kind with God; he is never affected by the changes and chances to which mortal things are exposed. He occupies no one place in the universe; he fills the heavens and the earth, is everywhere present, sees all, pervades all, and shines upon all; dispenses his blessings equally to the universe; hates nothing that he has made; is loving to every man; and his tender mercies are over all his works: therefore he is not affected with evil, nor does he tempt, or influence to sin, any man. The sun, the source of light, rises and sets with a continual variety as to the times of both, and the length of the time in which, in the course of three hundred and sixty-five days, five hours, forty-eight minutes, and forty-eight seconds, it has its revolution through the ecliptic, or rather the earth has its revolution round the sun; and by which its light and heat are, to the inhabitants of the earth, either constantly increasing or decreasing: but God, the Creator and Preserver of all things, is eternally the same, dispensing his good and perfect gifts-his earthly and heavenly blessings, to all his creatures, ever unclouded in himself, and ever nilling EVIL and willing GOOD. Men may hide themselves from his light by the works of darkness, as owls and bats hide themselves in dens and caves of the earth during the prevalency of the solar light: but his good will to his creatures is permanent; he wills not the death of a sinner, but rather that he may come unto him and live; and no man walks in wretchedness or misery but he who will not come unto God that he may have life. See diagram and notes at the end of this chapter. See Clarke on Jas 1:27.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Every good gift; Greek, giving; and so it may be distinct from gift in the next clause; to show, that whereas men sometimes give good gifts in all evil way, and with an evil mind, Gods giving, as well as gift, is always good; and therefore when we receive any thing of him, we should look not only to the thing itself, but to his bounty and goodness in giving it. Or, it may be rendered as our translators do, gift, and so the word is sometimes used by profane writers themselves; and then, though it may be implied, that all good gifts, and of all kinds, of nature and of grace, are from God, yet the apostles design in this place being to prove that God is not the author of sin, good gifts may most fairly be understood the best gifts, those of grace, (spiritual blessings, Eph 1:3), such being contrary to sin, and destructive of it, in one of which he instanceth, viz. regeneration, Jam 1:18.
And every perfect gift; the highest degree of good gifts, those that perfect us most; to intimate, that all the parts and steps of spiritual life, from the first beginning of grace in regeneration to the consummation of it in glory, are of God.
Is from above; i.e. from heaven, Joh 3:27,31; and heaven is put for God that dwells there, Luk 15:21.
And cometh down from the Father; the Creator, Author, or First Cause, as Heb 12:9; it is spoken after the manner of the Hebrews: see Gen 4:20,21.
Of lights; God is the author of all perfection, and so of corporeal light; but here we are to understand spiritual light, the light of knowledge, faith, holiness, as opposed to the darkness of ignorance, unbelief, sin; of which he cannot be the author.
With whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning: he here sets forth God as essentially and immutably good, and the Father of lights, by allusion to the sun, the fountain of corporeal light, and makes use of terms borrowed from astronomy. The sun, though it scattereth its beams every where, yet is not without its changes, parallaxes, and diversities of aspects, not only sometimes clear and sometimes eclipsed, but one while in the east, another in the south, then in the west; nor without its turnings in its annual course from tropic to tropic, (to which the Greek word here used seems to allude), its various accesses and recesses, by reason of which it casts different shadows: but God is always the same, like himself, constant in the emanations of his goodness, without casting any dark shadow of evil, which might infer a change in him.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
17. gift . . . giftnot thesame words in Greek: the first, the act of giving, orthe gift in its initiatory stage; the second, the thinggiven, the boon, when perfected. As the “good gift”stands in contrast to “sin” in its initiatory stage (Jas1:15), so the “perfect boon” is in contrast to “sinwhen it is finished,” bringing forth death (2Pe1:3).
from above(Compare Jas3:15).
Father of lightsCreatorof the lights in heaven (compare Job38:28 [ALFORD];Gen 4:20; Gen 4:21;Heb 12:9). This accords with thereference to the changes in the light of the heavenly bodies alludedto in the end of the verse. Also, Father of the spiritual lights inthe kingdom of grace and glory [BENGEL].These were typified by the supernatural lights on the breastplate ofthe high priest, the Urim. As “God is light, and in Him is nodarkness at all” (1Jo 1:5),He cannot in any way be the Author of sin (Jas1:13), which is darkness (Joh3:19).
no variableness . . . shadowof turning (Mal 3:6).None of the alternations of light and shadow which the physical”lights” undergo, and which even the spiritual lights areliable to, as compared with God. “Shadow of turning,”literally, the dark “shadow-mark” cast from one ofthe heavenly bodies, arising from its “turning” orrevolution, for example, when the moon is eclipsed by the shadow ofthe earth, and the sun by the body of the moon. BENGELmakes a climax, “no variationnot even the shadow of aturning”; the former denoting a change in the understanding;the latter, in the will.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Every good gift and every perfect gift,…. Whether of nature, providence, or grace, and especially the latter; spiritual gifts given along with Christ, or spiritual blessings in him; every such gift is; as the Vulgate Latin version reads, the “best” gift; better than those which only relate to the present life: and is “perfect” such as the gifts of righteousness, remission of sins, adoption, regeneration, and eternal life. The Jews say k, that the good things of this world are not truly good, in comparison of the good things of the world to come, and are not , “a perfect good.” And every such an one is from above; is not from a man’s self, from the creature, or from below, but from heaven, and from God who dwells there:
and cometh down from the Father of lights; or author of lights; of all corporeal light; as the sun, moon, and stars; of all natural, rational, and moral light, in angels and men; of all spiritual light, or the light of grace in regenerate persons; and of eternal light, the light of glory in the spirits of just then made perfect:
with whom is no variableness, nor shadow of turning: as there is in that great luminary, the sun in the firmament, which has its parallaxes, eclipses, and turnings, and casts its shadow; it rises and sets, appears and disappears every day; and it comes out of one tropic, and enters into another at certain seasons of the year: but with God, who is light itself, and in him is no darkness at all, there is no change, nor anything like it; he is changeable in his nature, perfections, purposes, promises, and gifts; wherefore he being holy, cannot turn to that which is evil; nor can he, who is the fountain of light, be the cause of darkness, or admit of any in him; and since every good and perfect gift comes from him, evil cannot proceed from him, nor can he tempt any to it.
k Tzeror Hammor, fol. 23. 2, 3.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Gift ()
–boon (). Both old substantives from the same original verb (), to give. is the act of giving (ending –), but sometimes by metonymy for the thing given like for (Col 1:15). But (from , from a gift) only means a gift, a benefaction (Ro 5:16). The contrast here argues for “giving” as the idea in . Curiously enough there is a perfect hexameter line here: / / / / / . Such accidental rhythm occurs occasionally in many writers. Ropes (like Ewald and Mayor) argues for a quotation from an unknown source because of the poetical word , but that is not conclusive.
From above (). That is, from heaven. Cf. John 3:31; John 19:11.
Coming down (). Present active neuter singular participle of agreeing with , expanding and explaining (from above).
From the Father of lights ( ). “Of the lights” (the heavenly bodies). For this use of see Job 38:28 (Father of rain); 2Cor 1:3; Eph 1:17. God is the Author of light and lights.
With whom (‘ ). For (beside) with locative sense for standpoint of God see (Mark 10:27; Rom 2:11; Rom 9:14; Eph 6:9.
Can be no ( ). This old idiom (also in Gal 3:28; Col 3:11) may be merely the original form of with recessive accent (Winer, Mayor) or a shortened form of . The use of in 1Co 6:5 argues for this view, as does the use of () in Modern Greek (Robertson, Grammar, p. 313).
Variation (). Old word from , to make things alternate, here only in N.T. In Aristeas in sense of alternate stones in pavements. Dio Cassius has without reference to the modern astronomical parallax, though James here is comparing God (Father of the lights) to the sun (Mal 4:2), which does have periodic variations.
Shadow that is cast by turning ( ). is an old word for “turning” (from to turn), here only in N.T. is a late and rare word ( in Plutarch) from (, ) a shade cast by one object on another. It is not clear what the precise metaphor is, whether the shadow thrown on the dial ( in Plato) or the borrowed light of the moon lost to us as it goes behind the earth. In fact, the text is by no means certain, for Aleph B papyrus of fourth century actually read (the variation of the turning of the shadow). Ropes argues strongly for this reading, and rather convincingly. At any rate there is no such periodic variation in God like that we see in the heavenly bodies.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
The first words of this verse form a hexameter line, thus Pasa dosiv ajgaqh kaipan dwrhma teleion Such verses, or parts of verses, occur occasionally in the New Testament. Sometimes they are quotations from the Greek poets; sometimes the writer’s words unconsciously fall into metrical form. Poetical quotations are confined to Paul, Act 17:28; 1Co 14:33; Tit 1:12. Every good gift and every perfect gift (see Greek above). The statement that these gifts are from God is in pursuance of the idea that God does not tempt men to evil. The gifts of God are contrasted with the evil springing from man’s lust. Two words are used for gift. Dosiv occurs only here and Phi 4:15; there in an active sense; but here passive, as in Pro 21:14 (Sept.). Dwrhma is found Rom 5:16. It enlarges slightly upon the other word in emphasizing the gift as free, large, full; an idea which is further developed in ver. 18, of his own will. The Rev., rather awkwardly, endeavors to bring out the distinction by the word boon, for which the American Revisers insist on retaining gift. Boon originally means a petition; favor being a secondary and later sense, as of something given in response to a petition. The word is of Scandinavian origin, and the meaning favor seems to indicate a confusion with the Latin bonus, good; French, bon. Perfect. Enlarges upon good, bringing out more distinctly the moral quality of the gift.
And cometh down [] . A present participle, to be construed with anwqen ejstin, is from above. Lit., is coming down from above. As usual, this union of the participle with the finite verb denotes something habitual. Render, descendeth from above. Compare ch. 3 15.
Father of lights [ ] . Lit., the lights, by which are meant the heavenly bodies. Compare Psa 135:7 (Sept.); and Jer 4:23 (Sept.). God is called “the Father of the lights,” as being their creator and maintainer. Compare Job 38:28; Ps. viii. 3; Amo 5:8.
Is no variableness [] . Abbreviated from enesti is in. Stronger than the simple is, and denoting inherence or indwelling. Rev., can be.
Variableness [] . Better, Rev., variation. The word is not used, as some suppose, in a technical, astronomical sense, which James’ readers would not have understood, but in the simple sense of change in the degree or intensity of light, such as is manifested by the heavenly bodies. Compare Plato, “Republic,” 7, 530 : “Will he (the astronomer) not think that the heaven and the things in heaven are framed by the Creator in the most perfect manner? But when he reflects that the proportions of night and day, or of both, to the month, or of the month to the year, or of the other stars to these and to one another, are of the visible and material, he will never fall into the error of supposing that they are eternal and liable to no deviation [ ] – that would be monstrous.”
Shadow of turning [ ] . This is popularly understood to mean that there is in God not the faintest hint or shade of change, like the phrase, a shadow of suspicion. But the Greek has no such idiom, and that is not James’ meaning. Rev., rightly, renders, shadow that is cast by turning; referring still to the heavenly orbs, which cast shadows in their revolution, as when the moon turns her dark side to us, or the sun is eclipsed by the body of the moon.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) James asserts that every giving act, (Gr. dosis) that is genuine and good, and every gift given, comes from Almighty God the Creator and Sustainer of life and light (Gr. photon). Perfect gifts come from this Perfect Giver and Sustainer of life.
2) No perfect (Gr. teleion) gift can come from Satan because he owns nothing to give. Let faith in God, as the Owner of all things and Sustainer of all life, be reaffirmed in the heart and mind of every believer.
3) He changes (Gr. paralloge) not, Mal 3:6.
NEVER FAILING GOD
There is an Eye that never sleeps
Beneath the wing of night; There is an Ear that never shuts
When sink the beams of light; There is an Arm that never tires
When human strength gives way; There is a Love that never fails,
When earthly-loves decay.
– Selected
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
This reasoning is far different from that of Plato, who maintained that no calamities are sent on men by God, because he is good; for though it is just that the crimes of men should be punished by God, yet it is not right, with regard to him, to regard among evils that punishment which he justly inflicts. Plato, indeed, was ignorant; but James, leaving to God his right and office of punishing, only removes blame from him. This passage teaches us, that we ought to be so affected by God’s innumerable blessings, which we daily receive from his hand, as to think of nothing but of his glory; and that we should abhor whatever comes to our mind, or is suggested by others, which is not compatible with his praise.
God is called the Father of lights, as possessing all excellency and the highest dignity. And when he immediately adds, that there is in him no shadow of turning, he continues the metaphor; so that we may not measure the brightness of God by the irradiation of the sun which appears to us. (107)
(107) This verse must be taken in connection with what as gone before. When he mentions “every good gift,” it is in opposition to the evil of which he says God is not the author. See Mat 7:11. And “every perfect free-gift,” as δώρημα means, has a reference to the correction of the evil which arises from man himself. And he calls free-gift perfect, because it has no mixture of evil, what he throughout denies that God is the author of. Then the latter part of the verse bears a correspondence with the first. He calls God “the Father of Lights.” Light in the language of scripture means especially two things, the light of truth, divine knowledge and holiness. God is the father, the parent, the origin, the source of these lights. Hence from him descends every good, useful, necessary gift, to deliver men from evil, from ignorance and delusion, and every perfect free-gift to free men from their evil lusts, and to render them holy and happy. And to shew that God is ever the same, he adds, “with whom there is no variableness or the shadow (or shade, of the slightest appearance) of a change;” that is, who never varies in his dealings with men, and shews no symptom of any change, being the author and giver of all good, and the author of no evil, that is, of no sin.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(17) Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above.This beautiful sentence, more musical still in the Greek, is thought to be the fragment of some Christian hymn. Two words are translated by our one gift; the first is rather the act of giving, the second the gift itself, and the effect of both together is a climax to the statement of Gods benevolence. The difference between the two is observed in the Genevan version of 1557. There are diversities of gifts (1Co. 12:4), even as one star differeth from another star in glory (1Co. 15:41), but the same Spirit is the giver of all. Where in St. Johns Gospel (Joh. 3:1) we read, Except a man be born again, the most probable meaning is from above, expressed exactly as in the present case; and thus we know whence is the true birth of the soul.
Cometh down from the Father of lights.Great difference of opinion is found concerning these lights, whether the term be figurative, as of goodness or wisdom; or a reference to the mysterious Urim (Exo. 28:30, et seq.) which flamed on the breast of Aaron; or spiritual, as of grace and glory; or material, viz., the lights set in the firmament of heaven (Gen. 1:14-15) when the morning stars sang together (Job. 38:7). It were not amiss to take the whole of these interpretations, for they, and perhaps others, the purport of which we as yet can barely guess, are included in this Scripture. God, remarks Bishop Wordsworth, is the Father of all lightsthe light of the natural world, the sun, the moon, and stars, shining in the heavens; the light of reason and conscience; the light of His Law; the light of prophecy, shining in a dark place; the light of the gospel shining throughout the world; the light of apostles, confessors, martyrs, bishops, and priests, preaching that gospel to all nations; the light of the Holy Ghost shining in our hearts; the light of the heavenly city; God is the Father of them all. He is the everlasting Father of the everlasting Son, who is the Light of the world. But that the mind of the sacred writer was mainly on the lights of the material universe may be seen from his next thought.
With whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.The phraseology is almost scientific. There are changes, literally parallaxes, of the heavenly bodies themselves, and eclipses one of another by shadows projected through space, but no such variableness with God, nor changing of faintest shade. And even further, the greatest and most marvellous of His works on high must be dissolved (2Pe. 3:11), the sun darkened, the moon not give her light, the stars fall from heaven (Mat. 24:29), and the heavens themselves be rolled together as a scroll (Isa. 34:4). But if the things which are seen are temporal, the things which are not seen are eternal (2Co. 4:18). I am the Lord, is the burden of His latest prophet; I change not (Mal. 3:6).
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
17. Literally, every good giving and every perfect gift. Both the act of giving and the gift are named, one as good and the other as perfect.
Father of lights Physically, he is Father of the material luminaries which beam upon us from above; spiritually, he is Father of all the heavenly and blessed lights which make the world of our soul luminous, and guide us to the land of lights. Of these spiritual lights the heavenly luminaries are a symbol.
No variableness So that he truly gives us good alone.
Shadow of turning He has no change, no, not even the shadow of a change. The revolving shadow on the dial-face reveals to us the truth that the firmamental lights are ever revolving; but of God there is no shadow of turning.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘All good (beneficial) giving and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom can be no variation, neither shadow that is cast by turning.’
For the source of all truly beneficial giving is God, and the source of every gift which is perfect in its entirety, is God. And these are gifts that come ‘from above’. (Compare Jas 1:18 that follows with Joh 3:3, ‘You must be born from above’). They are heavenly in origin, and therefore outweigh all else. And the Giver of all such good and perfect gifts is no unreliable and ever changing man, but is the Creator, the Father of lights, the One Who created the great and the lesser lights and created the stars also (Gen 1:14-16), the One Who is so unchanging that unlike sun and moon He does not vary in form and shape, nor does He cast an everchanging shadow as a result of His movement, but rather He remains constant and ever the same (compare Mal 3:6). He is totally dependable and His spiritual provision ever sure. The sun and the rain produce the harvests and bring life to the earth (Mat 5:45), but far, far better are the giving and gifts from above which are totally reliable, and this especially includes the word of truth which produces a spiritual harvest in the hearts of men (Jas 1:18, see Isa 55:10-13), for this is to truly to receive the true wisdom of God (Jas 1:5), that will result in their endowment with the crown of life (Jas 1:12). Thus the gift that he is about to describe must be seen as the gift beyond all gifts.
We must not undervalue the phrase ‘the Father of lights’. The sun was the most glorious and splendid thing known to man, and the moon brought light to earth at times of darkness such that men rejoiced at the new moon (compare Job 31:26). And thus the Father of lights was to be seen as both glorious in splendour and a bringer of light in the darkness. He is the One Who is better than sun and moon and Whose light outshines them both (compare Isa 60:19-20). He is the One Who ‘alone has immortality and dwells in unapproachable light, Whom no man has ever seen or can see’ (1Ti 6:16). And nothing was more splendid and more enlightening than His word of truth brought by the Sun of Righteousness Who has come from above with His healing and restoring power (Mal 4:2).
(With regard to the heavenly lights, men regularly saw the moon change its shape, and experienced the loss of its light through the days, before it began to grow brighter again, seemingly waxing and waning, while the shadows cast by the sun regularly moved, even if according to a pattern. Nor was the sun always there, for it deserted them at night, and could be hidden behind the clouds. So while both were glorious they were subject to constant change and not fully reliable).
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
God is a Good God with Good Plans for Us Jas 1:17-18 gives us an exhortation to seek God in the midst of trials. These verses simply expound upon the previous statement in Jas 1:5 about asking God for wisdom, who gives to all generously and does not upbraid us for it.
Why does James make these statements in Jas 1:17-18 about only good things coming from God (Jas 1:17) and how He begat us with the Word of Truth (Jas 1:18)? It is because he wants his readers to understand that the trials they are facing are not from God. It is not and never has been His nature to bring trials into people’s lives that lure them into sin. He has just stated this in Jas 1:13, “Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God: for God cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth he any man.” Rather, God’s will for our lives is to partake of His eternal nature and kingdom, which is proven by the very fact that we have been born again as new creatures in Christ, longing for our complete redemption in glory, which James calls the “crown of life” in Jas 1:12.
Jas 1:17 Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.
Jas 1:17
Comments – Oral Roberts teaches that God is a good God. He says, “Something good is going to happen to you.” [101] In other words, He has good plans for our lives and wants to give us good things. We see this stated by our Lord Jesus Christ in Joh 10:10 when He told His disciples that He came that we might have life, and that we might have it more abundantly
[101] Oral Roberts, A Daily Guide to Miracles and Successful Living Through SEED-FAITH (Tulsa, Oklahoma: Pinoak Publications, c1975, 1976), 48-9.
Joh 10:10, “The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.”
Bill Wiese contrasts God’s gifts to mankind to the conditions in Hell, where there are no gifts from Heaven. [102] Wiese was taken to Hell in 1998, and recalls his experiences in his book 23 Minutes in Hell Wiese. [103] He explains that God is light, and in Hell there is no light, because God is not present in Hell (1Jn 1:5). The darkness is so thick that nothing is visible except the flames of Hell. Darkness penetrates every part of Hell. He also explains that God is love (1Jn 4:7; 1Jn 4:16), and in Hell there is absolutely no love for one another. Every demonic creature in Hell is full of intense hatred towards mankind. God’s mercy is upon the earth, and is extended towards mankind. His mercy is in the heavens (Psa 36:5). In Hell the demons show no mercy and compassion towards the people that they torment for eternity. They work tirelessly to put as much pain and suffering upon their human victims as possible. On earth mankind experiences grace and truth through the redemptive work of Christ Jesus on Calvary (Joh 1:17). In Hell no human is given grace or mercy for eternity, but torment and terror. On earth men quench their thirst with life-giving water (Deu 11:11). In Hell there is no water, so that tormented souls thirst eternally (Zec 9:11). In Hell there is no blood, because there is no life in Hell (Lev 17:11). On earth God gives every person physical strength to serve Him (Psa 18:32). In Hell there is no strength, so that the tormented soul is desperate for sleep and rest, but finds none; neither does he have the strength to resist those tormenting him. Each day mankind is daily loaded with divine blessings (Psa 68:19), the gifts of love, mercy, health, peace, enjoyment, and rest. We have learned to live with so many blessings each day that we have become unmindful of them. As long as a person is alive upon earth, he has hope that even the worst situations can improve. However, in Hell there is no longer any hope. Hell is absent of God’s goodness. In this place of eternal torment, man is left without God’s gifts for eternity. In contrast, mankind is continually experiencing God’s goodness and gifts as long as he has breath on earth.
[102] Bill Wiese, interviewed by Rod Parsley, Breakthrough (Columbus, Ohio: Rod Parsley Ministries), on Trinity Broadcasting Network (Santa Ana, California, November 2008), television program.
[103] Bill Wiese, 23 Minutes in Hell (Lake Mary, Florida: Charis House, c2006).
1Jn 1:5, “This then is the message which we have heard of him, and declare unto you, that God is light, and in him is no darkness at all.”
1Jn 4:7, “Beloved, let us love one another: for love is of God; and every one that loveth is born of God, and knoweth God.”
Psa 36:5, “Thy mercy, O LORD, is in the heavens; and thy faithfulness reacheth unto the clouds.”
Joh 1:17, “For the law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ.”
Deu 11:11, “But the land, whither ye go to possess it, is a land of hills and valleys, and drinketh water of the rain of heaven:”
Zec 9:11, “As for thee also, by the blood of thy covenant I have sent forth thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water.”
Lev 17:11, “For the life of the flesh is in the blood: and I have given it to you upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls: for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul.”
Psa 18:32, “It is God that girdeth me with strength, and maketh my way perfect.”
Psa 68:19, “Blessed be the Lord, who daily loadeth us with benefits, even the God of our salvation. Selah.”
Jas 1:17 “and cometh down from the Father of lights” Comments – The phrase, “and cometh down from the Father of lights” tells us that God is the Creator of all things, who provides good things to mankind through His divine providence and omnipotent power.
Jas 1:17 “with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning” – Comments Nothing in God’s creation is more stable and unchanging than God Himself. In Jas 1:17, James uses an illustration out of nature that is most subject to change. These are the shadows from the sun. This shadow will be ever changing it position during the process of the sun moving across the sky during the day. At no time during the day is the shadow stationary. In addition, each new day brings the sun’s rays into a different angle upon the earth, so that each day of the year, a shadow finds itself changing its position. A shadow is the most illustrative example of change that can be found in nature.
In Jas 1:17 the divine attribute of unchangableness is referring to the Father, although this is also an attribute of the Trinity:
God:
Psa 90:2, “Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, thou art God.”
YHWH:
Mal 3:6, “For I am the LORD, I change not; therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed.”
The Lord:
Psa 93:2, “Thy throne is established of old: thou art from everlasting.”
The Word:
Psa 119:89, “For ever, O LORD, thy word is settled in heaven.”
Jesus Christ:
Heb 13:8, “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever.”
The Holy Spirit always speaks what He hears:
Joh 16:13, “Howbeit when he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you into all truth: for he shall not speak of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, that shall he speak: and he will shew you things to come.”
Jas 1:17 Comments – When we are tossed about with the trials of life (Jas 1:2), we need to know that we can turn to a God who changes not. It is not the severity of the storm that determines the outcome, but rather the stability of the Savior, who is the anchor of our soul.
Jas 1:18 Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth, that we should be a kind of firstfruits of his creatures.
Jas 1:18
Comments – In contrast to sin giving birth to death, God’s word brings forth life.
Comments – If we were born again by the “Word of Truth,” then we are sustained by the same Word. Thus, the next passage will teach us to follow this Word by becoming doers of it and not hearers only:
Receive the Word of truth Jas 1:19-21
Be swift to hear this Word of truth Jas 1:19
Be doers of this Word of truth Jas 1:22-25
Fuente: Everett’s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures
Jam 1:17. Every good gift, &c. The first part of this verse is in the Greek an hexameter, and possibly was quoted by St. James from some of the Greek poets. See Act 17:28. 1Co 15:33. Tit 1:12. Father in this verse signifies author, or cause. Com. Gen 4:20. Heb 12:9. The Father of Lights is here used agreeably to the astronomical metaphor which follows;with whom there is no deviation, or tropical shadowLight invariable, without any interposing shade, which is lengthened or shortened by the different distance of the sun, according to the common mode of expression. There is in these worlds, says Amory, an allusion to the heavenly bodies, and the benefits which we derive from them. The sun, moon, and stars, are greatly beneficial by their light, warmth, and influences, but not always beneficial: they rise and set to us; are sometimes nearer, at other times more distant; sometimes eclipsed, and often clouded. But the divine benignity is not subject to any such variations; it is always equally near, and equally communicative of its influences to proper objects; nor can any thing interpose between it and them: it is not the flush of good humour, which may be spent: it is not a great but limited treasury, which may be exhausted bylarge and continued communications. As God is ever unerringly wise, and unchangeably happy; as his power is infinite, and he is raised above the possibility of want or suffering; he will certainly always choose to do, what his wisdom determines best to be done; and as he ever deems the happiness of his creatures, who will accept of his mercy, to be the worthiest end, he will certainly be always disposed and delighted to promote that best end. The infinite communications of good, which he hath made already, instead of causing us to fear that his goodness may be exhausted, serve to prove it infinite, and therefore inexhaustible: they give, and they will give his faithful saints, to eternity, the most substantial reasons to expect from their Creator and Redeemer, all that can be expected from a Being infinitely wise, powerful, and benevolent.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Jas 1:17 . The sentiment in this verse, introduced by Jas 1:16 , is designed for the complete rejection of ; the good comes from God, therefore cannot come from God. The idea of the good is indicated by two synonymous expressions: and . By , which has here not an active, as in Phi 4:5 (Bouman, Lange), but a passive signification (as frequently in classical Greek and in the Apocrypha), and by , the same thing is indicated in contrast to , Jas 1:14 as something given and presented, which thus proceeds not from man himself. By the idea already contained in is heightened, more definitely indicating the gift ( ) as a free present (which Gunkel incorrectly denies; see Rom 5:16 , where is parallel with ), and the idea of the good ( ) as morally perfect [75] It is arbitrary to refer the two expressions to different gifts, and by to understand the gifts of the kingdom of nature or of the present life, and by those of the kingdom of grace or of the future life. Also is not, with Didymus, to be restricted to the idea of the useful. Several interpreters (Raphelius, Stolz, Rosenmller, Bengel, Augusti, Pott, Hottinger, and others) put an exclusive force on , as if it were = non nisi , “nothing but;” but the thought is weakened thereby. James designs to say not only in contrast to the derivation of from God that only good (thus not evil) gifts come from Him, but likewise that good gifts all come only from God (thus from none else) (Stier); is accordingly to be taken in its usual meaning; but and are to be emphasized. Schneckenburger arbitrarily explains it as if James had written: . [76]
] = (Act 14:17 ; Act 26:13 ; , Joh 6:32-33 ), is put first for the sake of emphasis.
] are not, with Wolf, Bengel, Kern, Bouman, and others, to be separated, so that is to be joined to , and is added as an epexegesis; but to be united, and are put instead of , only that by the participle the quality of the verbal idea is more brought out; see chap. Jas 3:15 ; so also Wiesinger and A. Buttmann, p. 266 [E. T. 310]; Winer, p. 311 [E. T. 438], and Schirlitz, p. 317, on the other hand, regard the expression as entirely equivalent to .
The expression is explained from . The explanation of Laurentius: non cadens, sed descendens, quia ordinarie bona sua dona dat, is far-fetched.
] an epexegesis to the preceding. By is to be understood neither spiritual light, whether knowledge (Hornejus), or joy (Michaelis), or goodness, wisdom (Wolf: omnis perfectio, bonitas, sapientia et prosperitas), or something similar, nor the spirits of light ( Schol. ap. Matt. : ; Lange: “the whole series of organs of revelation from Abraham to Christ, as the representatives of all good spirits”). Nor is there here any allusion to the Urim and Thummim of the high priest (Heisen); but by it are meant, as almost all modern expositors recognise, the heavenly bodies (see LXX. Psalms 135 :(136)7; Jer 4:23 ) = , LXX. Gen 1:14 . God is designated as the of these, because He is their Creator and Preserver. This designation, for which Job 38:28 cannot be appealed to, is surprising, as it is without analogy either in the O. or N. T. (otherwise with profane writers and Philo). It has, however, its ground in this, that James considers the light of the heavenly bodies as a reflection of the essential light of God. Since God is the Father of light, the symbol of the holy ones (Wiesinger), so He Himself must be light, and thus nothing dark (consequently not ), but rather only all that is light, can proceed from Him. As the Father of lights, God, however, outshines these: their light is changing; His, on the contrary, is without change. The following words: with whom there is no variation nor shadow (in consequence) of change , express this idea; i.e. , whilst with the stars a or occurs, there is nothing similar to this with God. [77] According to Grotius, with whom various expositors agree, these expressions are termini technici of astronomy. But, in opposition to this, it is to be observed that never occurs as an astronomical term (see Gebser in loco ), and the astronomical signification of = solstitium, solstice ( and ; comp. Wis 7:18 : ), is not here suitable, as the sun is not mentioned specially, nor is an effected by the solstice. James here uses not the language of astronomy, but that of ordinary life (Wiesinger).
is to be understood quite generally, variation. James adds to this general idea, in order to bring prominently forward that the essential light of God is not, as is the case with the stars, obscured by anything, the more definite idea . has not an active (de Wette: “casting a shadow”), but a passive signification, being shaded (so Brckner); and assigns the reason ( quae oritur e , Schneckenburger): thus the shadowing of the stars, which is effected by their changeable position: [78] for that James has founded his idea in a change in the stars themselves is not probable. [79] Luther’s translation: “the change of light and darkness” (similarly Stolz: “changing obscuration”), is only justified if it were said . Deviating entirely from the above explanation, the Greek interpreters take = ; Oecumenius: ; Suidas: ; and following them several recent writers; Morus: ne tantillum mutationes; Rosenmller: no shadow of change; so Hensler and others. But in this signification never elsewhere occurs; also the here essential idea of obscuration (Bengel: , opponitur luminibus ) would be lost.
The form (besides here in the N. T. in 1Co 6:5 ; Gal 3:28 ; Col 3:11 ) is not, with Buttmann, II. 375; Winer, p. 74 [E. T. 96]; Schirlitz, 171, and others, to be taken as a peculiar form of , but is the abbreviation of (A. Buttmann, p. 64 [E. T. 72]); comp. 1Co 6:5 : (see Meyer in loco ). , however, is not, with Pott, to be explained as precisely equivalent with , yet the meaning of the preposition is so weakened, as the verb could be construed with any other preposition, as here with the preposition , which here, as frequently in the N. T., stands for “what spiritually belongs to another, is in another’s possession;” Demosthenes, de cor. p. 318, 13: .
[75] Whilst de Wette finds the emphasis only in the adjectives, Theile correctly remarks: Et substantiva et adjectiva differunt ita, ut posterius priore sit definitius ideoque majus. So also Wiesinger and Brckner. Lange by . . understands “the gift of God completed in Christianity;” and by . . “everything which served to prepare this completed gift, especially in the old covenant.”
[76] On the accidental hexameter which the words form, see Winer, p. 564 [E. T. 798].
[77] Flatt ( Spicil. observatt. ad ep. Jacobi ): Auctor siderum nitidorum ipsis etiam nitidior et nitoris, nullis unquam tenebris interrupti, majori constantia fulgens. Similarly it is said of Wisdom: , , , Wis 7:29 .
[78] Incorrectly Lange explains the expression: “of the obscuration of the earth effected by the diurnal phenomenal revolution of the sun, moon, and stars.” And the proper idea which James has in view is, according to Lange, that God “makes no revolution with the Old Testament which would cast a night-shadow on the New, nor does He suffer the New Testament to cast a night-shadow on the Old!!”
[79] Without reason, Baumgarten, Schneckenburger, and others assume that James here alludes to the astrological superstitions of the Jews.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
17 Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.
Ver. 17. Every good gift, &c. ] A hexameter verse in the Greek; as little intended perhaps by the apostle as the first line in Tacitus, which yet may be scanned a long verse.
And perfect giving ] Not temporals only (which are good gifts), but spirituals also, those perfect givings. The greatest excellencies in us do as much depend upon God as the effigies in the glass doth upon the face that causeth it; or as the light doth upon the sun, that father of all the light in the lower world.
With whom is no variableness ] , no parallax, as there is with the sun, when he declines and leaves us darkling. This word notes the sun’s motion from east to west, as the following word , turning, notes his motion every year from north to south. That which the apostle would here assert is, that God tempts no man to evil, because he is unchangeably good, and can be no other.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
17 .] every good gift ( , properly the act of giving : but the ideas of the giving and the gift are so convertible, that it as often has the passive meaning: as , and other similar words. So in ref. Prov., , ) and every perfect gift (we cannot express and by two words in English. There is a slight climax in , as there is in compared with : it brings out the gratuitous and ‘proprio motu’ element in the gift, as is done again by below. and are taken by Raphel, Bengel, al. in an exclusive sense, “nothing but good gifts and perfect gifts” &c. This is perhaps allowable, but it weakens the force of the sentence and spoils the context, the object of which is to shew, not that God’s gifts are all good, but that all good gifts come from Him. So that and are better kept in their ordinary senses, and the stress laid, in each case, on the adjectives, and ) descendeth from above ( belong together, not as E. V., Grot., Wolf, al., , . This is shewn by , ch. Jas 3:15 . serves to bring out the essential quality of the gift; is, by its nature, sent down from above. Wies. quotes from Bereschith Rabba, 51. 1, “Dixit R. Chanina, Non est res mala descendens desuper”), from the Father of the lights ( of heaven ) (it seems now generally agreed that by here is meant the heavenly bodies , and by the creator, originator, as in Job 38:28 , ; Being this, being the Father of those glorious fountains of light, and thus (see below) purer and clearer than they all, it cannot be that He should tempt to evil. Our very life, as renewed in Christ, is of His begetting, and we are a firstfruit of His new world.
Various meanings have been given to spiritual light, Grot.: illumination, with reference to the Urim, Heisen: “luminum spiritualium in regno grati et glori,” Bengel: “omnis perfectionis, bonitatis, sapienti et prosperitatis,” Wolf, Benson, al.: “omnis et prstanti et bene compositi ordinis,” Calv. As regards the word , we have, Psa 135:7 ff., . . .: Jer 4:23 , , , , . In Gen 1:14 ; Gen 1:16 they are ), with (‘chez,’ ‘apud,’ bei: see reff.) whom there is ( , abbreviation of : see reff. Not = , but carrying the meaning ‘inest,’ ‘there is in Him’) no change ( , says Arrian on Epict. i. 14, p. 62, , , . This sentence confirms what Gebser (in Huther, al.) has observed, that never occurs as an astronomical term: seeing it is used in its common sense, even where the heavenly bodies are being spoken of. Besides which, it is not at all probable that St. James should write to the dispersed Jewish Christians in the technical language of astronomy. I take then the word in its ordinary sense, ‘change:’ that uncertainty of degree of light which we see in the material heavenly bodies, but which is not in God their Creator. So in Wetst., we have Theophrastus speaking of a : Plato, Rep. vii., of the absurdity of one who looks on the order and symmetry of the heavenly bodies, and , . : Plotinus, Enn. vi. 6. 3, of a : Diogenes Laert. vii. 145 Zen [5] , of the moon eclipsing the sun, ) or shadow ( , the dark mark of shadow, , the result of , cast , from, any object) of turning (arising from turning. Here again we must look for a common-sense, not for an astronomical meaning of the word. are, it is true, the solstices: but they have nothing to do with any darkening of the sun. So that I would take in the general sense of turning , or revolution , in which the heavens are ever found: by means of which the moon turns her dark side to us, in a constant state of and : by means of which the moon is eclipsed by the shadow of the earth, and the sun by the body of the moon, or, if you will, though this is hardly so likely to have been in view, is hidden from us during the night. From all these God, the Father of lights, is free; as 1Jn 1:5 , , . It only remains to repudiate altogether, as inadmissible, the meaning given by c., the metaphorical acceptation of , , not a shadow of any change. So Hesych. ( ), Wolf, Lsner, Morus, Rosenm., al.).
[5] Zeno, Bp. of Verona , 362 380
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Jas 1:17 . The following saying of R. Chaninah (first century, A.D.) is preserved: (“R. Chaninah said, ‘No evil thing cometh down from above’ ”.). On the possible connection between this verse and the preceding section, see Introduction IV., 1. : Mayor remarks on this: “It will be observed that the words make a hexameter line, with a short syllable lengthened by the metrical stress. I think Ewald is right in considering it to be a quotation from some Hellenistic poem. The authority of a familiar line would add persuasion to the writer’s words, and account for the somewhat subtle distinction between . . and . .”. In Theodotion’s version of Dan 2:6 , occur the words: , which represent and in the corresponding Aramaic (the Septuagint has another reading); the distinction between these two is perhaps that the former refers to gifts in the ordinary sense, while the latter is a gift given in return for something done, i.e. , a reward; but it cannot be said that the Greek reflects this distinction, though it is worthy of note that Philo makes a special distinction between them, “inasmuch as the latter noun is much stronger than the former, and contains the idea of greatness and perfection which is lacking in the former; Philo, De Cherub. , 25; and so De Leg. Alleg. , iii. 70, where he applies to the latter noun the same epithet ‘perfect’ as in the Greek of the verse before us” (Knowling). : it is a question whether one should read: “Every good gift from above comes down from ,” so the Peshit; or “Every good gift is from above, coming down from ”; Mayor thinks that on the whole “the rhythm and balance of the sentence is better preserved by separating from ”. : Cf. on the one hand, Sir 43:9 , , , , ; and, on the other 1Jn 1:5 , . There can be no doubt that in the passage before us this double meaning of light, literal and spiritual, is meant. : only here in the N.T., and in 4 Kings 9:28 (Septuagint); it is rendered in the Peshit, a word which is used variously of “change,” “caprice,” and even “apostasy” (see Brockelmann, Lex. Syr. , s.v.). In Greek, according to Mayor, the word may be taken “to express the contrast between the natural sun, which varies its position in the sky from hour to hour and month to month, and the eternal source of all light”. : neither of these words is found elsewhere in the N.T., and the latter does not occur in the Septuagint either; the former is used in the Septuagint of the movements of the heavenly bodies, Deu 33:14 : ; cf. Job 38:33 . The meaning of the latter part of the verse before us is well brought out by Luther: “Bei welchem ist keine Vernderung noch Wechsel des Lichts und Finsterniss”. If, as hinted above, there is a connection between this verse and the section Jas 1:5-8 , the meaning may perhaps be expressed thus: When, in answer to prayer, God promises the gift of wisdom, it is certain to be given, for He does not change; cf. for the thought, Rom 11:29 , .
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
gift. Greek. dosis. Only here and Php 1:4, Php 1:15.
gift. Greek. dorema. Only here and Rom 5:16.
from above. Greek. anothen. See Joh 3:3.
and cometh = coming.
Father. App-98.
lights. App-130.
with. App-104.
is no. Literally there is not (App-105) present (Greek. eneimi).
variableness. Greek. parallage. Only here.
neither = or.
shadow. Greek. aposkiasma. Only here.
of. i.e. cast by, or due to.
turning. Greek. trope. Only here.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
17.] every good gift (, properly the act of giving: but the ideas of the giving and the gift are so convertible, that it as often has the passive meaning: as , and other similar words. So in ref. Prov., , ) and every perfect gift (we cannot express and by two words in English. There is a slight climax in , as there is in compared with : it brings out the gratuitous and proprio motu element in the gift, as is done again by below. and are taken by Raphel, Bengel, al. in an exclusive sense, nothing but good gifts and perfect gifts &c. This is perhaps allowable, but it weakens the force of the sentence and spoils the context, the object of which is to shew, not that Gods gifts are all good, but that all good gifts come from Him. So that and are better kept in their ordinary senses, and the stress laid, in each case, on the adjectives, and ) descendeth from above ( belong together, not as E. V., Grot., Wolf, al., , . This is shewn by , ch. Jam 3:15. serves to bring out the essential quality of the gift; is, by its nature, sent down from above. Wies. quotes from Bereschith Rabba, 51. 1, Dixit R. Chanina, Non est res mala descendens desuper), from the Father of the lights (of heaven) (it seems now generally agreed that by here is meant the heavenly bodies, and by the creator, originator, as in Job 38:28, ; Being this, being the Father of those glorious fountains of light, and thus (see below) purer and clearer than they all, it cannot be that He should tempt to evil. Our very life, as renewed in Christ, is of His begetting, and we are a firstfruit of His new world.
Various meanings have been given to -spiritual light, Grot.: illumination, with reference to the Urim, Heisen: luminum spiritualium in regno grati et glori, Bengel: omnis perfectionis, bonitatis, sapienti et prosperitatis, Wolf, Benson, al.: omnis et prstanti et bene compositi ordinis, Calv. As regards the word , we have, Psa 135:7 ff., …: Jer 4:23, , , , . In Gen 1:14; Gen 1:16 they are ), with (chez, apud, bei: see reff.) whom there is (, abbreviation of : see reff. Not = , but carrying the meaning inest, there is in Him) no change ( , says Arrian on Epict. i. 14, p. 62, , , . This sentence confirms what Gebser (in Huther, al.) has observed, that never occurs as an astronomical term: seeing it is used in its common sense, even where the heavenly bodies are being spoken of. Besides which, it is not at all probable that St. James should write to the dispersed Jewish Christians in the technical language of astronomy. I take then the word in its ordinary sense, change: that uncertainty of degree of light which we see in the material heavenly bodies, but which is not in God their Creator. So in Wetst., we have Theophrastus speaking of a : Plato, Rep. vii., of the absurdity of one who looks on the order and symmetry of the heavenly bodies, and , . : Plotinus, Enn. vi. 6. 3, of a : Diogenes Laert. vii. 145 Zen[5], of the moon eclipsing the sun, ) or shadow (, the dark mark of shadow,-, the result of , cast , from, any object) of turning (arising from turning. Here again we must look for a common-sense, not for an astronomical meaning of the word. are, it is true, the solstices: but they have nothing to do with any darkening of the sun. So that I would take in the general sense of turning, or revolution, in which the heavens are ever found: by means of which the moon turns her dark side to us, in a constant state of and : by means of which the moon is eclipsed by the shadow of the earth, and the sun by the body of the moon, or, if you will, though this is hardly so likely to have been in view, is hidden from us during the night. From all these God, the Father of lights, is free; as 1Jn 1:5, , . It only remains to repudiate altogether, as inadmissible, the meaning given by c., the metaphorical acceptation of , , not a shadow of any change. So Hesych. ( ), Wolf, Lsner, Morus, Rosenm., al.).
[5] Zeno, Bp. of Verona, 362-380
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Jam 1:17. , every[11]) The connection of the discourse is evident, when thus resolved: , a gift (a giving), which is altogether good; , a boon, which is altogether perfect. No evil things come from above, but only things good and perfect. The words good and perfect form the predicate of the sentence; gift and boon are the subject.[12] Every, in both clauses, if the meaning is considered, belongs to the subject.[13] Comp. all, Jam 1:2, note.-, a giving, a gift) A good gift, as opposed to sin, denotes those things which, from the beginning and by daily increase, tend to righteousness and piety. A perfect boon, as opposed to when it is finished and death, denotes those things which relate to perfection of character and a happy life: comp. 2Pe 1:3.- ) is that which descends from above. Comp. descending, Jam 3:15.-, from) namely, from the Father of lights. The expression, from above, is hereby explained.- , the Father of lights) The title of Father is here used with great propriety. There follows, in the next verse, , He begat us. He stands in the place of father and mother. He is the Father even of spiritual lights in the kingdom of grace and glory. Much more then is He Himself Light 1Jn 1:5. Immediately on mention of light, there is added, as usual, mention of life, by regeneration, Jam 1:18.- , with whom is no variableness, or shadow of turning) denotes a change in the understanding (see 2Ki 9:20,[14] Septuagint); , a change in the will. In each word there is a metaphor taken from the stars, and used with singular propriety in this passage, where mention is made of lights. and occur in nature (see in Job 38:33), which has a daily vicissitude of day and night, and has at one time a greater length of day, at another time a greater length of night; but there is nothing of this kind in God. He is pure, unsullied [nothing but] Light. and , variation and change, if they take place at all, take place in us, and not in the Father of lights. sometimes has the meaning of , likeness: for so Hesychius explains it; whence Gregory of Nazianzus uses as synonyms, , the appearance and likeness of the truth; and in Cicero, as Budus observes, the outline of an object is opposed to its perfection. But in this passage it is opposed to lights, and is therefore used more correctly; so that is the first casting of a shadow, which is accompanied by a revolution. The same Hebraistic use of the genitive occurs shortly after in Jam 1:21, superfluity of naughtiness, from which we may infer, that there is an opposition between the words variableness and good gift; just as shadow of turning is opposed to the expression, perfect boon. denotes something greater: hence there is a gradation in the negative sentence: not even the shadow of turning. This at length [this, and this only] makes up perfection; the former is good. He is more perfect who has not even the shadow of turning.
[11] seems to be used like the Latin merus, in the sense of nothing but. See Raphelius on the passage.-T.
[12] By , we may understand the gift or act of giving; by , the fulness of the benefit bestowed.-T.
[13] The giving and gift that comes from above is all perfect; not as Engl. Vers.-E.
[14] , is used to denote the violence of Jehus driving.-T.
, the act of giving, the gift in its initiatory act: , the thing given, the boon when perfected.-E.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
gift
Two words are used in the original for “gift,” the first meaning the act of giving; the second, the thing given.
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
The Good Gifts of the Father
Every good gift and every perfect boon is from above, coming down from the Father of lights.Jam 1:17.
The Bible is full of truths which from their very obviousness are never realized: truths which to a religious mind are self-evident, incontrovertible, not susceptible of proof, lying so deep at the root of all our religious convictions that we never think of pausing to examine them; we take them for granted; they are our axioms of religion. But in taking them for granted, we also lose much; when they meet us in our reading or hearing of Scripture, they are apt to fall dead on our ear; we attach but a vague meaning to them; we never perhaps interpret them to ourselves. Our text is just such an axiom of religion. It is the case with this, as with all very comprehensive truths, that it is accepted readily enough as a general principle; but when it steps down from the region of general law to the sphere of particular application, we are startled to find how little we have hitherto understood, and how little we have really believed it.
I
The Gifts
Every good gift and every perfect boon.
1. Every good gift and every perfect boon. Some commentators draw a distinction between gift or giving and boon, as if the former referred to temporal gifts and the latter to spiritual gifts, but this is unnecessary. Such a distinction was probably not in the mind of the writer. He probably did not draw a hard and fast line between a good gift and a perfect boon, but meant the second term to continue and supplement the first. We may consider the gifts of God under the two headings temporal and spiritual gifts, but only because they form convenient divisions, not because we would make an arbitrary distinction between good gifts and perfect boons.
(1) Every temporal blessing, then, comes from God. All the good that comes to us in this life is a gift from above, and we may not consider any of Gods gifts as insignificant, whether our daily bread, or our rest at night, any hour of well-being, or week of blessed work, or enjoyment of all that is beautiful in nature and art, or the joys of home, the love of our family and the faithfulness of friends; in short, anything that is treasured by man as a happiness or a blessing.
(2) No one can read Holy Scripture without being struck by the variety of gifts which are bestowed by God. It was He who breathed into mans nostrils the breath of life, so that man became a living soul. Wherever we see lifelife in the plant, or in the bird that sings to us, or in the little child that is playing in our nurseriesthere we see the handiwork of God. He makes men able to seek out curious inventions, and gives us also what is beautiful and wonderful in art. We are told that it was the direct inspiration of God that wrought in the artisans of tabernacle and temple, and made them cunning architects to build houses for God, fragrant with cedar, and beautiful with colour, and bright with ornaments of gold. And that same Spirit who gives us our treasures of art gives also what is beautiful in action. It was He who inspired in David his courage, and who gave to Samson his strength, and filled Gideon with his spirit of patriotism, and gave to Solomon his understanding heart. There are diversities of gifts. To some men God gives the ability to work miracles of healing; to others He gives the power of great inventiveness; to others skill to discover and interpret the secrets of nature; to others eloquence; to others perhaps the best gift of all, the pure and simple heart. But in all these worketh the self-same Spirit of God, dividing to every man severally as He will.
(3) God does not give us only temporal gifts. Man does not live by bread alone, or by art or science, or the culture of his mind, or the successful use of his talents. He does not live either by the happiness of his home, or by honour in the sight of other men. He lives also by the spiritual graces of God.
There is the gift of His Holy Spirit to those who earnestly desire and ask for it, to illumine our minds, to sanctify our hearts, to purify our sinful nature, to work in us Christian graces of disposition. There is the gift of His Holy Word to be the light to our feet, and the lamp to our paththe engrafted word, which is able to save our souls. There is the gift of regeneration in the waters of Baptism, developed by after gifts of the Spirit into that renewal of our nature by which we become dead unto sin and new creatures in Christ Jesus. Shall we not add the blessing of a changed, converted heart; of an awakened, serious mind; of a tender, sensitive conscience? There is the privilege of access to God through Christ in prayer; the blessing of answered prayer. There is the gift of spiritual strength by which we are enabled to resist temptation; of faith by which we overcome the world; of all those various graces which adorn the soul and are the varied developments of Gods Spirit.
But Gods greatest and most glorious gift is the gift of His beloved and only-begotten Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord and Saviour. It is only in Christ Jesus that all these heavenly gifts and graces are ourssins forgiven, hearts renewed, righteousness and adoption, honour and immortality, an inheritance incorruptible, and an eternal weight of glory.
In the prayer-meeting I am expounding the 103rd Psalm. The psalm is a delightful study. Have you ever made a list of the blessings the psalmist praises God for? Just think of it: Forgiveness, soul-healing, redemption, coronation, satisfaction, perpetual youth, justice, revelation, mercy, tenderness, pity, and so on. No wonder when we think of it we need all that is within us to praise.1 [Note: George H. C. Macgregor, 121.]
2. God sends only good gifts. The words of the text were spoken, as the context shows, to refute and rebuke the notion that God may tempt to evil. And they accomplish their object by describing God as One who not only gives all good, but who gives, and from His very nature can give, only good; whose giving always and necessarily is solely for good; whose boons, seeing that they must be like Himself, can have no faults in them. His gifts may be abused, but the abuse is no part of the gifts; the goods He confers may become the occasion of temptations to evil, but as He cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth He any man; in spite of the light from heaven we may stray, but the light from heaven never leads astray. God gives only good, never evil, as the sun gives only light, never darkness.
Is everything God gives us good? Does He not give us trials, sorrows, separations, sickness, bereavement, death? Are these good gifts? Yes, as they came from Him they were good. If they are bad, it is we who make them bad. They have all a loving intention, and a loving power in them, and they are all to make, if not a present, yet a certain future of greater happiness. I feel sure we shall, one day, place highest among the good gifts, as the very best gifts we have ever had, our heaviest trials, and our severest losses.1 [Note: James Vaughan.]
I asked for bread; God gave a stone instead.
Yet, while I pillowed there my weary head,
The angels made a ladder of my dreams,
Which upward to celestial mountains led.
And, when I woke beneath the mornings beams,
Around my resting place fresh manna lay;
And, praising God, I went upon my way.
For I was fed.
God answers prayer; sometimes, when hearts are weak,
He gives the very gifts believers seek.
But often faith must learn a deeper rest,
And trust Gods silence when He does not speak;
For He whose name is Love will send the best.
Stars may burn out, nor mountain walls endure,
But God is true, His promises are sure
To those who seek.
II
The Giver
Every good gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights.
1. These words plainly state that all good and perfect gifts come from one and the same sourcethat every good gift and every perfect boon has its origin beyond time, beyond earth and man, beyond all secondary and creaturely causes, in the Eternal Uncreated Divine First Causethat all physical beauties, all providential bounties, all gracious influences, all that is true, all that is lovely, all that is pure and righteous and holy, all genuine satisfactions, all real blessings, are from the all-perfect and all-loving Father in whom we and all things live and move and have our being. As all rays of sunlight issue from the sun, so all good gifts are bestowed by the one good Giver. The sun in the heavens ever raying forth light and heat, and so beautifying and nourishing all nature, is an emblem of God and His giving; but bright and glorious although it be, it is only a feeble and inadequate emblem. God is all light, pure light; has no darkness or shadow in Himself; can have no darkness or shadow pass over Him; and His light shines, His good and perfect gifts flow forth from Him, without interruption, without cessation.
The rising sun first illumines the loftiest mountain top, and then the light creeps down from the higher to the lower levels, and at last fills all the valleys with its radiance. In some remote primitive parts of Switzerland a man stands at early dawn on a rising ground near his village, and when he sees the highest snowy peak flushing red with the first rays of the sun, he sounds his alpine horn, and all in the neighbourhood who hear it know that a new day has begun, and they prepare to go forth to their labours.1 [Note: H. Macmillan, The Gate Beautiful, 224.]
2. Every man, says Solomon, is a friend to him that giveth gifts. How then, we may ask, is it that God, the Giver of all good gifts, has not more friends on earth? The reason is that we do not remember Gods mercies and are not sufficiently grateful for them. But God does not cease giving because we forget the Giver. He gives as a father to his children.
(1) The Father of lights is not too high above the earth to remember His children. It is the good pleasure of the Father to give to His children. He does not bargain with themso much blessing for so much service. He gives, and gives freely and liberally, all that we need. He is the all-wise and the all-loving God, and therefore He can give only the perfect thingsthat which is best fitted to make us truly blessed. He does not give capriciously or by partiality, bestowing upon one and withholding from another. He knows the things that we need, and He will give them to us; not a stone but bread for our hunger, not a serpent but an egg for our feast.
Good tidings every day.
Gods messengers ride fast.
We do not hear one half they say,
There is such noise on the highway,
Where we must wait till they ride past.
Their hands throw treasures round
Among the multitude.
No pause, no choice, no count, no bound,
No questioning how men are found,
If they be evil or be good.
And of the multitude,
No man but in his hand
Holds some great gift misunderstood,
Some treasure, for whose use or good
His ignorance sees no demand.
These are the tokens lent
By immortality;
Birth-marks of our divine descent;
Sureties of ultimate intent,
Gods gospel of Eternity.1 [Note: Saxe Holm.]
(2) We receive many of our blessings as a matter of course, blessings from a Fathers hand, which we have received in the weakness of infancy, throughout our manhood and womanhood; strewn along the path of our more mature life, showered down upon us with unchanging constancy in our old age. What delights the Father is our coming and asking. Ye receive not, says St. James, because ye ask not.
Good must be voluntarily accepted. We must make it clear that we want it. There had been ten preparatory days of prayer before the promise of the Pentecost could be fulfilled. And it has invariably been observed that, whenever a great outpouring of spiritual blessing has been experienced, the gift has been preceded by a stirring of strong desire in those who knew the value of prayer.2 [Note: A. W. Robinson, The Voice of Joy and Health, 82.]
When, Sir Walter, said Queen Elizabeth to that gallant knight, Raleigh, who was persistently interceding for offenders, when will you cease to be a beggar? When your Majesty will cease to be a benefactor, was the reply.
3. Everything that is good in the world and humanity, and in the individual soul, everything that is in the truest sense a boon, is a gift of God, and comes down from the perfect source of all goodness, and is a reflection of the Father of lights. Here, surely, is a message of hope concerning ourselves, and concerning others.
(1) First, concerning ourselves.Until we have abandoned everything that is right and good and true, God has not abandoned us; there is something of Hisshall we not indeed say something of Him?in us, and He has a hold upon us by means of it. Most of us are conscious of the evil that is in us; it is not often that we need to be reminded of it, it is our despair. For that reason we need to be reminded that there is something pure and noble left, and that that is Gods gift, the point in our lives at which He touches us; if we would but believe it, that is our assurance that God refuses to let us go. If we realize that God has been constantly at work in us, and is at work in us now, that we are not God-forsaken, we shall be more ready than otherwise we should be to abandon ourselves completely to Gods influence and control in the way that He desires. We are not required to summon to our aid one who is a stranger and afar off, who may or may not come at our call, but rather to suffer God, who holds us now in part, to take charge of the wholeto yield our wills and hearts to the Divine promptings within us, and to permit His power to spread over and possess the whole life.
The power to set the heart right, to renew the springs of action, comes from Christ. The sense of the infinite worth of the single soul, and the recoverableness of a man at his worst, are the gifts of Christ.1 [Note: Henry Drummond, 7.]
So thou alone dost walk before
Thy God with perfect aim,
From Him desiring nothing more
Beside Himself to claim.
For if thou not to Him aspire,
But to His gifts alone,
Not Love, but covetous desire,
Has brought thee to His throne.
While such thy prayer, it mounts above
In vain; the golden key
Of Gods rich treasure-house of love,
Thine own will never be.1 [Note: R. C. Trench, Poems, 280.]
(2) Second, concerning our fellow-men.The gifts received by us from God are received only to be held in trust. It is the mission of us all to bring to souls that are less illumined than our own the light that is in us, and the light that is in them, even though it be but as the faint flicker of a candle, will leap to meet the brighter one which we bring, and by the union of our light and theirs the darkness will be driven away. There is something in each soul to which some messenger from God can appeal, and, appealing, may obtain a response.
The gifts of the good things of this life are given in order that we may have to give to him that needeth, and unless we share them with others they will eat, as this Apostle tells us, into our souls as doth a canker. And the gifts of grace are given that we may diffuse them. Have we gifts of knowledge? It is that we may impart that knowledge to others. Have we the gifts of wisdom? It is in order that we may raise all about us to a higher level. They are assuredly given to us that we may let our light so shine before men, that they may see our good works, and glorify our Father which is in heaven.
Heaven doth with us as we with torches do,
Not light them for themselves; for if our virtues
Did not go forth of us, twere all alike
As if we had them not.
Therefore, if you let me guide you, go in at this south transept door, and put a sou into every beggars box who asks it there,it is none of your business whether they should be there or not, nor whether they deserve to have the sou,be sure only that you yourself deserve to have it to give; and give it prettily, and not as if it burnt your fingers.2 [Note: Ruskin, The Bible of Amiens (Works, xxxiii. 129).]
It is incredible, absolutely incredible, that the handful of men who enjoy the richness of Gods gifts at a University can be given them merely for themselves. Is it possible to contemplate Cambridge apart from East London, South London, Africa, or the Congo? To a believer in God it is impossible. God has no favourites, and there is no way of keeping your belief in an entirely good and loving God, unless He means His reservoirs to overflow, unless He gives to the whole human race, indirectly if not directly, and unless, while He pours His blessings down upon one place, and seems to neglect another, it is only in seeming, because, while He gives to the one, He is really giving, unless we scandalously neglect our duty, also to the other.1 [Note: A. F. W. Ingram, Into the Fighting Line, 229.]
The Good Gifts of the Father
Literature
Archer-Hind (T. H.), Some Scripture Problems, 22.
Carpenter (W. B.), The Wisdom of James the Just, 119.
Darlow (T. H.), The Upward Calling, 182.
Flint (R.), Sermons and Addresses, 28.
Gibbons (J. C.), Discourses and Sermons, 241.
Grimley (H. N.), The Temple of Humanity, 91.
Hickey (F. P.), Short Sermons, ii. 102.
How (W. W.), Plain Words, ii. 128.
Ingram (A. F. W.), Into the Fighting Line, 217.
Kingsley (C.), Village, Town and Country Sermons, 25.
Little (W. J. K.), Labour and Sorrow, 184.
Macmillan (H.), The Gate Beautiful, 222.
Momerie (A. W.), The Origin of Evil, 259.
Peabody (F. G.), Mornings in the College Chapel, i. 217.
Pigou (F.), Faith and Practice, 203.
Sauter (B.), The Sunday Epistles, 261.
Scott (M.), The Harmony of the Collects, Epistles and Gospels, 123.
Trench (R. C.), Sermons New and Old, 163.
Trench (R. C.), Sermons in Ireland, 269.
Vaughan (J.), Sermons (Brighton Pulpit), xxii. (1883) No. 1226.
Wilkinson (G. H.), The Heavenly Vision, 110, 153, 165.
Wilson (S. L.), Helpful Words for Daily Life, 165.
Zahn (T.), Bread and Salt from the Word of God, 167.
Christian World Pulpit, xiii. 337 (Farrar); xli. 164 (Turberville); lx. 372 (Harrison).
Church of England Pulpit, xxx. 148 (Kaye); xxxvii. 77 (Silvester).
Church Pulpit Year Book, ix. (1912) 121.
Church Times, Aug. 16, 1912 (Newbolt).
Churchmans Pulpit: Fourth Sunday after Easter: viii. 182 (Mitchinson), 185 (Farquhar).
Examiner, June 7, 1906, p. 558 (Jowett).
Expositor, 2nd Ser., iii. 221 (Lumby).
Fuente: The Great Texts of the Bible
good: Jam 1:5, Jam 3:15, Jam 3:17, Gen 41:16, Gen 41:38, Gen 41:39, Exo 4:11, Exo 4:12, Exo 31:3-6, Exo 36:1, Exo 36:2, Num 11:17, Num 11:25, 1Ch 22:12, 1Ch 29:19, 2Ch 1:11, 2Ch 1:12, Pro 2:6, Isa 28:26, Dan 2:21, Dan 2:22, Dan 2:27-30, Mat 7:11, Mat 11:25, Mat 11:26, Mat 13:11, Mat 13:12, Luk 11:13, Joh 3:27, Act 5:31, Act 11:18, Rom 6:23, Rom 11:30, Rom 12:6-8, 1Co 4:7, 1Co 12:4-12, Eph 2:3-5, Eph 2:8, Eph 4:8-11, Phi 1:29, Tit 3:3-5, 1Jo 4:10, 1Jo 5:11, 1Jo 5:12
from the: Gen 1:2-5, Gen 1:14, Gen 1:15, Deu 4:19, Psa 19:1-8, Psa 84:11, Isa 45:7, Isa 60:19, Joh 1:9, Joh 8:12, 2Co 4:6, Eph 1:18, 1Jo 1:5, Rev 21:23, Rev 22:5
no variableness: Num 23:19, 1Sa 15:29, Psa 122:6, Isa 46:10, Mal 3:6, Rom 11:29, Heb 1:11, Heb 1:12, Heb 13:8
Reciprocal: Gen 6:6 – repented Exo 28:3 – filled Exo 31:6 – wise hearted Exo 35:30 – See Exo 35:31 – And he Exo 35:34 – he hath Deu 32:4 – his work Jdg 11:11 – uttered 1Sa 10:12 – who is their 1Ki 4:29 – God 1Ch 29:14 – willingly 2Ch 9:23 – God Ezr 1:5 – whose spirit Ezr 7:27 – put such Neh 2:12 – my God Job 1:21 – the Lord gave Job 23:13 – who can Job 25:3 – upon whom Job 28:12 – General Job 28:20 – General Job 36:3 – fetch Job 38:36 – Who hath put Job 39:17 – General Psa 10:17 – thou wilt prepare Psa 19:7 – perfect Psa 36:9 – in thy Psa 85:12 – the Lord Psa 87:7 – all my Psa 89:34 – nor Psa 102:27 – thou art Psa 119:176 – seek Pro 19:14 – and a Ecc 2:19 – wise under Ecc 3:14 – whatsoever Isa 40:14 – understanding Isa 46:4 – even to your Jer 32:40 – but I Dan 1:17 – God Dan 6:26 – and stedfast Hos 13:14 – repentance Hos 14:8 – From me Mat 19:17 – there Mat 21:3 – straightway Mar 10:18 – that is Luk 18:19 – General Joh 3:3 – again Joh 15:5 – same Joh 19:11 – Thou Act 6:3 – full Act 7:23 – it came Act 16:14 – whose Rom 3:12 – there is none 2Co 3:5 – but 2Co 5:18 – all 2Co 9:15 – Thanks Col 2:12 – the faith 1Th 3:12 – the Lord 2Ti 2:25 – if Heb 6:4 – and have Heb 6:17 – the immutability 1Jo 1:7 – as Rev 1:4 – him
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
THE GIFTS OF GOD
Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with Whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.
Jam 1:17
Thus does the Holy Apostle St. James, to whom, after the Resurrection, had been vouchsafed a special manifestation of his beloved Lord, delight to honour the Great Benefactor of the human race before Whom his soul bowed down in reverent worship.
I. God is the Father of lights.
(a) The lights of the natural world, the sun and moon and stars shining brightly in the heavens own Him as their Lord, and bear testimony to their Creator by their unfading beauty and their wonderful order from generation to generation.
(b) The light of reason and the light of conscience speaking with a still, small voice within the soul of man compel him to turn his eyes heavenward, if he would learn in comfort and in hope the secret of his origin and his destiny.
(c) The light of the prophets of old and the precepts of the law, sometimes obscured by clouds, sometimes hidden by darkness, bursts into a perfect blaze of splendour in the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
(d) There is the light, too, that shines from the heavenly city to guide the pilgrim as he toils along; and if, sometimes, the clouds and mists that arise from earth cause its rays to be indistinctly seen, yet still, if eagerly and enthusiastically welcomed, they are bright enough to guide him to his home.
Of these and others innumerable, God is the Father.
II. With God there is no variableness. He is the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever. Surely we can grasp the thought with eagerness and ecstasy, that God will never change as the long ages of time roll on to eternity. In the midst of all the vicissitudes of our life below, we may, if we will, count upon the love and protection of One with Whom there is no variableness, Who loves unto the end. Neither with God is there any shadow of turning. We, as we turn from place to place, from thought to thought, are for ever creating around us new shadows which darken our way. Each soul has his own shadows which delude and dismay. But with the gift of immortality is planted within the breast a lively hope that some day, by the power of the Cross, we may abide in the presence of the Father of Lights, when the day shall break and the shadows flee away.
III. In one continual stream come down, in rich abundance, the good and the perfect gifts.
(a) Some are national gifts, for which nations are responsible, for which multitudes, in united worship, should render thanks upon their knees.
(b) And there are individual gifts, coming down from the same source, common as the shadows of rain or the shining of the sun. How few of us sufficiently acknowledge their origin, or break forth into praises for the royal bounty.
(c) Then there is the gift of Love, which helps us to bear half the burdens of a toilsome life and sweetens half its many sorrows. The unloving taste not some of the purest joys in which the soul may delight itself and live. There is something imperishable in the joy that arises from the performance of deeds of love to those who are struggling beside us, in whom we recognise the faded image of the God of Love; brotherly love so cleanses and beautifies the soul as to lift it up into a purer life which the changes and chances of mortality can neither defile nor destroy.
These are but a sample of the good and perfect gifts which are continually coming down from above, giving unto life all that is worth living for. There are thousands of other gifts which each heart can number in gratitude for itself. Intellect, courage, faith, hope, peace, competence, and plenty: all are presents from the royal bounty meant for use and cultivation by every soul upon whom they are bestowed.
IV. The day is surely coming on when the Divine Giver shall demand each gift back again with usury; the fruits of each must be manifested in a life dedicated heart and soul unto Christ; each quality of excellence and virtue must be brought to the foot of the Cross and offered there in the devotion of self-sacrificing love; then shall the Father of Lights recognise and receive the disciple of His eternal Son and welcome him to the joy of his Lord.
Rev. W. E. Coghlan.
Illustration
Whatever God gives partakes of His own immortality. Heaven and earth shall pass away, but My word shall not pass away. For the mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed; but My kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant of My peace be removed, saith the Lord. How tender, how happy, how holy, how safe must that gift be, which is identified with God Himself, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning. A gift for ever and ever! Oh! it is a poor thing to have a gift which cannot last. At the best it will only be for a few short years. That kind of gift does not suit a man. It does not suit his immortality! But this gift matches his whole being. It is for ever and ever.
(SECOND OUTLINE)
GOOD AND PERFECT
If anyone should think that to say, Every good thing is a gift from God! is a mere truism, and that, therefore, it does not need any special consideration, let him remember that a truism, for this very reason, because it is so simple and so true,demands the greater care lest we pass it by unheeded and undefined.
I. What is a gift?A gift is something that expresses the mind and betokens the love of the giver, and at the same time brings happiness to the receiver. What then is a good gift? That which fulfils these two requisitions. And what is a perfect gift? That which entirely fulfils these two ends.
II. Is there any difference between a good gift and a perfect gift, or are we to take it only as a repetition of the same thought, expressing the same meaning, rising to the same climax? A perfect gift is one which exactly fits the mind and the taste of the receiver; expresses the whole heart of the giver, and can never be taken away. A gift which has in it perfect adaptation and eternity. Now the worldthose who do not love Godhave the good gift, many, many a good gift; but Gods own dear children, they have the perfect gift. And why? The gift fits, and they feel it fits their whole beingbody, mind, and soul. They have the gift and the Giver; and both the Giver and the gift are inalienable for ever and ever.
III. Some of us have many gifts.They are all from above, from the same Father; but from the want of the light which should reign in that gift, the gift is valueless. Nay, more, it is an unfilled possibility; it is the handle of temptation; it turns to self, to pride, to sin. The gift is abused; and in proportion as the gift is good and perfect, it becomes evil, and it incurs the heavier gift of condemnation. But it is right to use every gift when it comes; and it is one of the strongest arguments you can ever use with God: Oh! God, Thou hast given me this great gift, now, because Thou hast given me this great gift, give me also the light to understand it, to hold it, to keep it, to use it, to enjoy it. Lord, sanctify both the gift and me by that light to Thy glory.
Illustration
In the collect for the Seventh Sunday after Trinity, God is pronounced in the collect to be the Author and Giver of all good things. Whether this was intended or not, the phrase is a most exact echo of the words of St. James in the text. There is a splendid movement in the preamble of the collect, where God is described not only as the Author and Giver of all good things, but the Lord of all power and might. It is impossible not to feel how much we owe to Cranmer and his associates for this preamble. It is true that for this magnificent language there is a small Latin basis, but the change which has been made in it amounts to transformation.
(THIRD OUTLINE)
THE SOURCE OF ALL BLESSING
I. The Sublime Names of God.
(a) The Father. This is comparatively a modern name for God. He was first known as the Elohim; then as Jehovah; then as the Lord; now as the Father.
(b) The Father of Lights. Of sun, and moon, and stars. God is light. He is the Sun not of a system, but of all worldsthe great Fountain and Dispenser of light and heat, of power and life, of order, harmony, and perfection. All is unclouded splendour. His Son declared Himself the Light of the world; and figuratively, He Himself sows light for the righteous, and gladness for the upright in heart.
II. The Infinite Kindness of God.
(a) He is the sole Author of every good gift. In looking at experts or men of genius, we say that their skill and genius were born with them, and therefore natural to them. Granted. But all was God-given. Who dowered Bezaleel (Exo 31:2-5), and Hiram (1Ki 7:13-14), and Sir Isaac Newton, and Lord Bacon, and other famous men, with their extraordinary gifts? God. Nay, who bestows on ordinary men their ordinary gifts? God (Isa 28:24-29).
(b) He is the sole Giver of every perfect boon. Pardon, and peace, and purity. Christ is Gods unspeakable gift (Joh 3:16). He came out of the bosom of the Father (Joh 1:18). Through Him God gives us every blessing (Rom 8:32).
III. The Unchangeableness of God.
(a) His perfection prevents change. And if so in His nature, so in His character, so in His feeling, so in His covenant. Men change; sinners alter for the worse; and even saints have their fluctuationsnot so God. I am the Lord, I change not; therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed.
(b) His absolute perfection prevents even the shadow of a change. There are changes in the sun, which, in a sense, may be called the father of lights. It rises and sets at various times throughout the year; or rather, by the revolution of the earth, it is ever either increasing or decreasing its light. But God has never, age after age, the least variableness, or even the faintest shadow of turning! How awful yet blessed this assurance! How full of consolation to the heirs of promise (Heb 6:17-18).
Illustration
So far as the management of the material universe is concerned, God has declared unmistakably that He has no favourites. He has given to material forces a law which cannot be broken. We trust Him more because there is no devilish element in nature, no wild impulse rushing with eruptions of curse and blessing into space. We begin to see that nature is but a word, is but a figure of speech, is but a fiction of imagination, is nothing in the world but a reverent synonym for the sum total of the laws which God has impressed upon His universe.
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary
Jas 1:17. We may rightly feel indebted to any thing or person that is the source of benefits to us. The planets are not such a source in the sense of being the giver, but instead are themselves a gift to us. The giver of them is God and James calls Him the Father of lights, the last word meaning the planets because they are luminous bodies. Since the Father (or creator) of these lights is the giver of all good things, we should imitate Him and not the planets which have the habit of erring or wandering about. God does not waver and as an indication of the steadiness of His example. James declares that He does not even produce a shadow by turning. The figure is drawn from the circumstance that at certain seasons and at particular places on the earth, when the sun is straight over the equator it cannot cause any shadow. But when it turns to go either north or south (as it seems to do), it will then cast a shadow. James thus describes God as more fixed in His characteristics than the sun.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Jas 1:17. Every good gift. A positive proof of the assertion that God tempteth no man. Not only does evil not proceed from Him, but He is the source only of good. All good is from God. Our higher and spiritual good evidently arises from Him: all good works are the effects of Divine impulses. Our lower and earthly good also comes from Him: our health, our property, our domestic comforts, are the gifts of His bounty. Our very trials, our disappointments, our afflictions, our sicknessesthose tests of character are the proofs of His goodness, and are designed to produce within us the peaceable fruits of righteousness. The statement is true taken in its most universal application.
and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down (more literally, Every perfect gift descendeth from above, or is from above, coming down) from the Father of lights. By lights here are primarily meant the heavenly bodies and by the Father is denoted their Author or Creator; but it may well be applied to all spiritual existencesthe souls of men and angelic spirits. As Bishop Wordsworth beautifully expresses it: God is the Father of all lights: the light of the natural world, the sun, the moon and stars, shining in the heavens; the light of reason and conscience; the light of His law; the light of prophecy, shining in a dark place; the light of the Gospel, shining throughout the world; the light of apostles, martyrs, and confessors, preaching the Gospel to all nations; the light of the Holy Ghost, shining in our hearts; the light of the heavenly city: God is the Father of them all. He is the everlasting Father of the everlasting Son, who is the Light of the world.
with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning. St. James does not here employ, as some suppose, technical astronomical terms, which would not be understood by his readers, but alludes to what is apparent to allthe waning and setting of the natural lights in the firmament. The statement is obviously equivalent to that of St. John: God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all (1Jn 1:5).
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.
Both verse thirteen and verses seventeen are true because both are in the Word of God, however seventeen proves thirteen true. If seventeen is true, and it is, then thirteen must be true.
Every good gift and every perfect gift comes from God. The two terms translated “gift” are two different Greek terms. The first term has the thought of giving with it. Actually in Php 4:15 it is translated giving. “Now ye Philippians know also, that in the beginning of the gospel, when I departed from Macedonia, no church communicated with me as concerning giving and receiving, but ye only.”
The other term has the thought of bounty as well as gift. It would be a bountiful gift. Reverting back to the couple I mentioned that took us under their wing, several years after meeting them, we were moving to Oregon. They asked us over for supper one evening before we left. We arrived and the man met us in a suit and tie, and his wife and daughter were dressed in fine long dresses. We sat and talked for a while, and finally supper was ready – well, read that as lavish dinner, rather than supper.
They ushered us down into their finished basement where a long table was set with silver, crystal, and flowers. At each of the children’s places was a small wrapped present. The dinner was most lavish in comparison to our usual meager grocery shopping on a college students part time income.
They had given us a grand gift, a bountiful gift, to say good-bye. Just further sign of their love for the brethren.
Barnes states of the two words, “The difference between good and perfect here, it is not easy to mark accurately. It may be that the former means that which is benevolent in its character and tendency; the latter that which is entire, where there is nothing even apparently wanting to complete it;”
Just what does “Father of lights” mean? The lexicon mentions the power of understanding of moral and spiritual truth. Not sure what that is based on but that is what they had to say on the subject. “Father” is the normal word for father and “lights” is the term that describes light, so the terms have little to tell us other than their plain meaning.
I would assume that it relates to the fact that truth comes from God, that any light in this world comes from God, and since we are to be the light of the world (Mat 5:14), I assume that this relates to God’s revealing His way upon the earth – He is the source of light. Joh 8:12; Joh 9:5 pictures Christ as the light of the world, thus this may explain the translators plural “lights.”
“With whom is no variableness” tells us that we will not see the God of love that we know turn into a God of hate or evil. He does not change; He has always been and always will be as He is on any particular day.
“Neither shadow of turning” tells us that God does not turn back from anything. What He has declared, He will do – no question. The Greek word translated “turning” comes to us in our language as “trope” which is a usage that changes something to give description. To call a shrewd man a fox would be a trope. There is no sign of this turning in God, He is not variable, and he will not turn away from His character.
This summation of God seems to be included to amplify the statements of James concerning the goodness of God and the badness of man lest anyone try to blame any sin upon God when the blame rests squarely upon the individual themselves.
Fuente: Mr. D’s Notes on Selected New Testament Books by Stanley Derickson
1:17 Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the {o} Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither {p}shadow of turning.
(o) From him who is the fountain and author of all goodness.
(p) He goes on in the metaphor: for the sun by his many and various kinds of turning, makes hours, days, months, years, light and darkness.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Every act of giving (better than "good thing bestowed," Gr. dosis) and every gift given (Gr. dorema) has its source in God. This does not include temptations to sin. God created the sun and moon by which we see variation in light. However there is no variation in God’s dealings with His creatures (cf. 1Jn 1:5). He always does everything for His own glory and His creatures’ good.
"From above" is the translation of the same Greek word (anothen) Jesus used in Joh 3:7 when He told Nicodemus that he must be born "again." There the new birth is the good gift from God that is in view.