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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of James 3:17

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of James 3:17

But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, [and] easy to be entreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy.

17. But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable ] The sequence is that of thought, not of time. It is not meant, i. e. that purity is an earlier stage of moral growth in wisdom than peace, but that it is its foremost attribute. The “purity” indicated is especially that of chastity of flesh and spirit (comp. 2Co 7:2 ; 2Co 11:2; Tit 2:5), and as such is contrasted with the “sensual” character of the false wisdom. Here again we have the tone of one who has learnt from the Masters of those who know, among the teachers of his own people, that wisdom will not “dwell in the body that is subject unto sin” ( Wis 1:4 ). The sequence which places “peaceful” after “pure” has its counterpart in the beatitudes of the Sermon on the Mount (Mat 5:8-9).

gentle, and easy to be intreated ] The word for “gentle” means literally, forbearing. It describes, as in Aristotle ( Eth. 10:6), the temper that does not press its rights, that is content to suffer wrong (comp. Php 4:5; 1Ti 3:3). The second adjective is used by classical writers, both in a passive sense as here, and active, (1) as meaning “persuasive,” “winning its way by gentleness,” or (2) as “obedient.” Our choice between the three meanings must depend on our view of what is most likely to have been the sequence of St James’s thoughts. On the whole, the second seems to me to have the most to commend it. True wisdom shews itself, St James seems to say, in that subtle yet gentle power to persuade and win, which we all feel when we come in contact with one who is clearly not fighting for his own rights, but for the cause of Truth.

full of mercy and good fruits ] The train of thought is carried on. Wisdom is suasive because she is compassionate. In dealing with the froward she is stirred, not by anger, but by pity, and she overflows, not with “every vile deed,” but with the good fruits of kindly acts.

without partiality ] Here again we have a Greek word which admits of more than one sense. The English version gives it an active sense, as describing the temper which does not distinguish wrongly, which is no respecter of persons. The sense in which the verb, from which the adjective is formed, is used in ch. Jas 1:6, Jas 2:4, is, however, that of “doubting,” or “wavering;” and it seems, therefore, probable that St James means to describe true wisdom as free from the tendency which he thus condemns. That freedom goes naturally with the freedom from unreality which the next word expresses. Without vacillation is the condition of “ without hypocrisy.” Where the purpose is single there is no risk of a simulated piety.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

But the wisdom that is from above – Compare the notes at 1Co 2:6-7. The wisdom which has a heavenly origin, or which is from God. The man who is characterised by that wisdom will be pure, peaceable, etc. This does not refer to the doctrines of religion, but to its spirit.

Is first pure – That is, the first effect of it on the mind is to make it pure. The influence on the man is to make him upright, sincere, candid, holy. The word here used ( hagne) is that which would be applied to one who is innocent, or flee from crime or blame. Compare Phi 4:8; 1Ti 5:22; 1Jo 3:3; where the word is rendered, as here, pure; 2Co 7:11; where it is rendered clear, (in this matter); 2Co 11:2; Tit 2:5; 1Pe 3:2, where it is rendered chaste. The meaning here is, that the first and immediate effect of religion is not on the intellect, to make it more enlightened; or on the imagination, to make it more discursive and brilliant; or on the memory and judgment, to make them clearer and stronger; but it is to purify the heart, to make the man upright, inoffensive, and good. This passage should not be applied, as it often is, to the doctrines of religion, as if it were the first duty of a church to keep itself free from errors in doctrine, and that this ought to be sought even in preference to the maintenance of peace – as if it meant that in doctrine a church should be first pure, then peaceable; but it should be applied to the individual consciences of men, as showing the effect of religion on the heart and life.

The first thing which it produces is to make the man himself pure and good; then follows the train of blessings which the apostle enumerates as flowing from that. It is true that a church should be pure in doctrinal belief, but that is not the truth taught here. It is not true that the scripture teaches, here or elsewhere, that purity of doctrine is to be preferred to a peaceful spirit; or that it always leads to a peaceful spirit; or that it is proper for professed Christians and Christian ministers to sacrifice, as is often done, a peaceful spirit, in an attempt to preserve purity of doctrine. Most of the persecutions in the church have grown out of this maxim. This led to the establishment of the Inquisition; this kindled the fires of Smithfield; this inspirited Laud and his friends; this has been the origin of no small part of the schisms in the church. A pure spirit is the best promoter of peace, and will do more than anything else to secure the prevalence of truth.

(It is but too true that much unseemly strife has had the aegis of this text thrown over it. The wrath of man accounts itself zeal for God, and strange fire usurps the place of the true fire of the sanctuary. Yet the authors statement here seems somewhat overcharged; possibly his own personal history may have contributed a little to this result. Although the Greek word hagne, here qualifying the sophia, or wisdom, refers to purity of heart, still it remains true that a pure heart will never relinquish its hold on Gods truth for the sake of a peace that at such a price would be too dearly purchased. A pure heart cannot but be faithful to the truth; it could not otherwise be pure, provided conscientiousness and love of truth form any part of moral purity. Surely, then, an individual solicited to yield up what he believed to be truth, or what were cherished convictions, might properly assign this text as a reason why he could not, and ought not; and if an individual might, why not any number associated into a church?

It is true the Scriptures do not teach that doctrinal purity is to be preferred to a peaceful spirit. However pure a mans doctrine may be, if he has not the peaceful spirit he is none of Christs. But the common view of this passage is not chargeable with any such absurdity. It supposes only that there may be circumstances in which the spirit of peace, though possessed, cannot be exercised, except in meek submission to wrong for conscience sake; never can it turn traitor to truth, or make any compromise with error. The first of the apostle does not indicate even preference of the pure spirit to the peaceful spirit, but only the order in which they are to be exercised. There must be no attempts to reach peace by overleaping purity. The maxim that a pure heart ought not to sacrifice truth on any consideration whatever, never gave rise to persecution: it has made many martyrs, but never one persecutor; it has pined in the dungeon, but never immured any there; it has burned amid the flames, but never lighted the faggot; it has ascended scaffolds, but never erected them; it has preserved and bequeathed civil and religious liberty, but never assaulted them; it is a divine principle – the principle by which Christianity became strong, and will ultimately command the homage of the world. There is another principle, with which this has no brotherhood, that denies the right of private judgment, and enforces uniformity by the sword: its progeny are inquisitors, and Lauds and Sharpes; and let it have the credit of its own offspring.)

Then peaceable – The effect of true religion – the wisdom which is from above – will be to dispose a man to live in peace with all others. See the Rom 14:19 note; Heb 12:14.

Gentle – Mild, inoffensive, clement. The word here used ( epieikes) is rendered moderation in Phi 4:5; patient in 1Ti 3:3; and gentle in Tit 3:2; Jam 3:17, and 1Pe 2:18. It does not occur elsewhere in the New Testament. Every one has a clear idea of the virtue of gentleness – gentleness of spirit, of deportment, and of manners; and every one can see that that is the appropriate spirit of religion. Compare the notes at 2Co 10:1. It is from this word that we have derived the word gentleman; and the effect of true religion is to make everyone, in the proper and best sense of the term, a gentleman. How can a man have evidence that he is a true Christian, who is not such? The highest title which can be given to a man is, that he is a Christian gentleman.

And easy to be entreated – The word here used does not elsewhere occur in the New Testament. It means easily persuaded, compliant. Of course, this refers only to cases where it is right and proper to be easily persuaded and complying. It cannot refer to things which are in themselves wrong. The sense is, that he who is under the influence of the wisdom which is from above, is not a stiff, stern, obstinate, unyielding man. He does not take a position, and then hold it whether right or wrong; he is not a man on whom no arguments or persuasions can have any influence. He is not one who cannot be affected by any appeals which may be made to him on the grounds of patriotism, justice, or benevolence; but is one who is ready to yield when truth requires him to do it, and who is willing to sacrifice his own convenience for the good of others. See this illustrated in the case of the apostle Paul, in 1Co 9:20-22. Compare the notes at that passage.

Full of mercy – Merciful; disposed to show compassion to others. This is one of the results of the wisdom that is from above, for it makes us like God, the Father of mercies. See the notes at Mat 5:7.

And good fruits – The fruits of good living; just, benevolent, and kind actions. Phi 1:11 note; 2Co 9:10 note. Compare Jam 2:14-26.

Without partiality – Margin, or wrangling. The word here used ( adiakritos) occurs nowhere else in the New Testament. It means, properly, not to be distinguished. Here it may mean either of the following things:

(a)Not open to distinction or doubt; that is, unambiguous, so that there shall be no doubt about its origin or nature;

(b)Making no distinction, that is, in the treatment of others, or impartial towards them; or,

(c)Without strife, from diakrino, to contend.

The second meaning here suggested seems best to accord with the sense of the passage; and according to this the idea is, that the wisdom which is from above, or true religion, makes us impartial in our treatment of others: that is, we are not influenced by a regard to dress, rank, or station, but we are disposed to do equal justice to all, according to their moral worth, and to show kindness to all, according to their wants. See Jam 2:1-4.

And without hypocrisy – What it professes to be; sincere. There is no disguise or mask assumed. What the man pretends to be, he is. This is everywhere the nature of true religion. It has nothing of its own of which to be ashamed, and which needs to be concealed; its office is not to hide or conceal anything that is wrong. It neither is a mask, nor does it need a mask. If such is the nature of the wisdom which is from above, who is there that should be ashamed of it? Who is there that should not desire that its blessed influence should spread around the world?

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Jam 3:17-18

The wisdom that is from above is first pure

Characteristics of heavenly wisdom


I.

IT IS HALLOWED. On the spirit of the man who has it there has fallen a sacred hush, as on a temple which a god inhabits. Its precincts are consecrated to worship. All desecrating principles, maxims, thoughts, purposes are excluded. It has no doubtful expedients and utters no words of double meaning. It is clear, because it has been clarified. It is open to heaven and earth without concealments. It is chaste, seeking no unholy pleasures.


II.
IT IS PEACEABLE. It is peaceable, because it is pure. Men that have no false and wicked purposes cannot break the peace. There never was dissension between two friends, never a rupture in any Church, never a rebellion in any State, never a war between two countries, never a wicked controversy of any kind which did not have its origin in some impurity of soul.


III.
IT IS REASONABLE. It is not violent in its maintenance of its own convictions; it is not stubborn, unwilling to hear what may be said on the other side. There are men who deem themselves wise, who storm out what they believe to be the truth. Real wisdom does not so. Where there is a sober conviction of the right, and a firm faith in the final triumph of the right, all that a man has to do is to speak the truth in love. If any man holds an error, the wise man regards him as most unfortunate, and pities him, as a man in good health pities his neighbour whose eruptions show that he is diseased. Gentleness is not weak, and is not the product of weakness. It comes from being reasonable. None but the strong can be gentle; others may be soft and apathetic, but gentleness as much requires strength for its basis as the beautiful flowers and verdure require the strong ground of the geological formations. A gentle man gains by giving. He is not punctilious of his rights. He will maintain them, but always on grounds of reason, not of passion. He holds to his property, not because it is his, but for the reason that he is responsible for it. Just so a man who has this wisdom from above will not be violent in argument. He maintains his opinions, not because they are his opinions, but because he has formed them reasonably, and must maintain them reasonably and not passionately. So he will hear what others have to say.


IV.
IT IS PERSUADABLE. AS the word which we have translated reasonable indicates the condition of the wise mans soul when he is striving to convince others, so this persuadable seems to indicate the posture of his soul when others are striving to convince him. It means that if he has made an error he will not keep wandering on because he is unwilling to retrace his steps. It means that he will not waste energy in endeavouring to hold an untenable position under the control of intellectual pride. It means that he can be won over by fair means and sound argument. He yields to no force that is not reasonable, as he employs no agency that is not reasonable.


V.
IT IS COMPASSIONATE. In a man of true celestial wisdom there is so much sympathy and compassion that it is perpetually bursting out into fruits of goodness, which are so profitable that all men acknowledge them. You cannot know so well the condition of the tree, but fruits are visible and palpable. Men know the tree by the fruit, as God knows the fruit by the tree.


VI.
IT IS NOT PARTISAN. It will not adhere to a party it loves, right or wrong. It will not condemn the other party, wrong or right. It will not oppress the poor when it happens to be rich, nor wrong the rich when it happens to be poor. Appeals on ground of caste, or class, or previous condition, will have no effect upon its judgment. It regards a man for what he is, not for what he has or has not been.


VII.
IT IS FREE FROM ALL HYPOCRISY. Against nothing did Jesus lift up His voice in more clear and terrible notes than against hypocrisy, which was a crying sin among the Jews. (C. F. Deems, D. D.)

The wisdom that is from above


I.
WHAT IS WISDOM?

1. It is prudence, discretion, knowledge reduced to practice, and employed in the use of such means as are most suitable to accomplish the desired end Pro 3:19-20; Pro 8:12).

2. The wisdom that is from above is an inspired definition of the true religion; it is an attractive exhibition of that infallible knowledge which, having descended from heaven, discovers to us the most direct way to God; the means best calculated to make us lovingly acquainted with His holy law; the manner in which those means may be most easily and effectually used; and the happy results which flow from them.


II.
ITS DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTICS.

1. Pure. While religion regulates and transforms all the powers of the mind, its first and immediate effect is not on the understanding to make it more enlightened; or on the judgment to make it more correct; or on the imagination to make it more discursive and brilliant; or on the memory to make it stronger and more retentive; but on the heart, to purify it from all moral defilement, and to make it the more upright, inoffensive, and holy.

2. Peaceable. The design of His government is to induce men to lay aside all causes of strife and alienation, and to promote unity and love.

3. Gentle and easy to be entreated. It is not rash, or authoritative, or fond of display; not rude or overbearing; not harsh or cruel; does not seek to fix upon others that which they disclaim, even though their words or conduct seemed to bear such an interpretation; and is willing to give preference to the sentiments or plans of others when they furnish evidence of superiority. It is not impatient when contradicted; or, if any misunderstanding arises, it is pacific rather than rigorous, complacent rather than censorious.

4. Full of mercy and good fruits. When it is said that the wisdom from above is full of mercy, we learn that it is not implacable and parsimonious, but clement and liberal; not resentful and grudging, but forgiving and bountiful. Full of good fruits, the fruits of good living; sympathising with those who are in trouble, showing kindness to such as are in distress, or by aiding those whose object it is to mitigate human woe in any of its multifarious forms, and to convert sinners from the error of their way.

5. Without partiality. Men of little minds or contracted views are easily dazzled with outward splendour, and, like children, count nothing good but what is gay and adorned with pomp. I-fence they readily give a preference to that which is most attractive in form, and, in the spirit of conscious partiality, undervalue or look coldly on those of greatest worth, because they make the least pretensions. But the wisdom that is from above looks not on men after the outward appearance; it renders to every one his due, without being swayed by self-interest or worldly honour, and determined to do equal justice to all, according to their moral worth.

6. Without hypocrisy. An Israel indeed is a man in whom is no guile, no fraud, no trick, no deceit; all he pretends is genuine; all he says is sincere.

Lessons:

1. That there is a wide difference between the religion here described and that of many who bear the Christian name.

2. That it is both the duty and the privilege of all who bear the Christian name to live in possession of this heavenly wisdom. (W. Lupton.)

Wisdom front above


I.
THE ESSENTIAL CHARACTERISTIC OF GENUINE RELIGION. NOW true religion may be denominated wisdom–

1. As it directs the mind to the most glorious pursuits.

2. As it employs the most efficient means for the attainment of these objects.


II.
ITS HEAVENLY ORIGIN.

1. The contrivance of salvation was from above.

2. The Author of our salvation came from above.

3. The revelation of true religion is from above.

4. All the blessings of our religion are from above.


III.
ITS DISTINGUISHED ATTRIBUTES.

1. It is pure. Not absolute or angelic purity, but spiritual purity. The opposite of depravity and corruption. This purity is supernatural, real, and progressive.

2. It is peaceable. Not contentious. Not boisterous. It commences with the pacification of the conscience towards God. It produces a peaceful state of mind.

3. It is gentle. Hence the Christian resembles the dove, and not the vulture; the lamb, and not the lion.

4. Is easy to be entreated. Not stubborn or self-willed.

5. It is full of mercy.

6. Full of good fruits.

7. Without partiality.

8. Without hypocrisy.

Application:

1. How important that we ascertain if our religion possess these essential attributes!

2. How happy those who experience in their hearts these heavenly fruits!

3. What a blessing is genuine religion to the world at large! (J. Burns, D. D.)

Wisdom or prudence

I, wisdom, says Solomon, dwell with prudence: hence wisdom and prudence, and the characters of wise and prudent, are often mentioned together. Prudence lies in wisely fixing upon a right end of all actions, and in wisely choosing the best means conducive to that end, and in using them at the best time and in the fittest manner.


I.
WHAT SPIRITUAL WISDOM IS, as it is an internal grace, or inward disposition of the mind, respecting Divine things; a mans duty, the salvation of his soul, and the glory of God.

1. It is, in general, grace in the heart: wisdom in the hidden part Psa 51:6; Pro 16:21). This wisdom cometh from God, who gives it entrance, and puts it there (Pro 2:6).

2. Spiritual wisdom, in particular, is a right knowledge of a mans self; no man that is wise in his own eyes, and prudent in his own sight, knows himself; there is more hope of a fool than of such.

3. True spiritual wisdom is no other than the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ, which God commands to shine in the hearts of men.

4. True spiritual wisdom is no other than the fear of the Lord (Psa 111:10; Pro 9:10; Job 28:28). This includes the whole worship of God, internal and external, flowing from a principle of grace; it takes in the whole duty of man, which it is his wisdom to practice, internally and externally.

5. It is being wise unto salvation, or in things respecting that.


II.
WHEREIN THIS WISDOM PRACTICALLY SHOWS ITSELF.

1. In doing good things in general. Such who are wickedly wise are wise to do evil; but such who are spiritually wise are wise unto that which is good, and simple concerning evil (Rom 16:19); and these are capable of doing things both for their own good and for the good of others.

2. This spiritual wisdom shows itself in particular in a profession of religion.

3. This spiritual wisdom shows itself in a becoming walk and conversation.

4. This wisdom shows itself in observing the providence of God in the world and the dispensations of it: in making useful remarks upon it, and in learning useful lessons from it.

5. This spiritual wisdom shows itself in a mans concern about his last end and future state; how it will be with him at last, and how it will go with him in another world (Deu 32:29)..


III.
FROM WHENCE THIS SPIRITUAL WISDOM COMES. God understandeth the way thereof, and He knoweth the place thereof (Job 28:20-23), forit is with Him originally, and in full perfection, yea, it is in Him infinite, unsearchable: it is in His gift to bestow, and is to be asked of Him Jam 1:5).


IV.
THE NATURE AND PROPERTIES OF THIS WISDOM

1. It is from above–from God, Father, Son, and Spirit; it is conversant about heavenly things; it is celestial wisdom, and stands opposed to earthly wisdom in a preceding verse.

2. It is pure in itself and in its effects; productive of purity of heart, life, and conversation.

3. It is peaceable: it influences the professors of it to be at peace among themselves and one another, to cultivate peace in families, among neighbours, and even with enemies.

4. It is gentle: it makes those who have it to be gentle towards all men, moderate and humane, to bear the infirmities of the weak, to forbear and forgive one another injuries done.

5. It is easy to be entreated or persuaded to put up with affronts, to condescend to men of low estate, and not mind high things.

6. It is full of mercy and good fruits: it fills men with compassion to those in distress, and puts them upon acts of beneficence to the poor, according to their ability.

7. It is without partiality; without partiality to themselves, esteeming others better than themselves; and to others, showing no respect of persons.

8. It is without hypocrisy to God and man, not making a show of what they have not, and intend not to do: as it is a grace, it has a close connection with faith unfeigned, with a hope that is without hypocrisy, and with love which is without dissimulation. (T. Hannam.)

The heavenly wisdom

What a change passes on the scene! A bright, celestial form appliers. A fair and fragrant landscape bursts upon the view.

1. The apostle commences his description of the wisdom that is from above with the statement, It is first pure. It avoids and excludes what is false in doctrine, and what is vile in character and action; and this process leads the way and regulates the rest.

2. It is then peaceable. It leads him who possesses it to follow peace, to maintain peace, and to promote peace. The voices of the world are constantly exclaiming, We are for war.

3. It is gentle. It leads him to deal mildly with the broken heart, and even to use meekness towards such as oppose themselves.

4. It is easy to be entreated.

5. It is full of mercy and good fruits. It awakens and sustains a practical kindness in the heart.

6. It is without partiality–a representation, probably, referring to the case of respect of persons, as animadverted on in the second chapter.

7. It is without hypocrisy. Itself genuine and true, it prompts and inclines to strict and consistent honesty in speech, and conduct, and profession. (A. S.Patterson, D. D.)

The heavenly wisdom


I.
ITS PURITY. First pure–not in the order of time, but in importance, in the sense that it is the basal attribute of true wisdom.

1. Christ could not be the wisdom of God if He had not been the holiness of God, and we can never be wise if we are not pure.

2. But there is more implied than sinlessness: it means Divine and spiritual energy. Think of the purity of nature, how beautiful it appears when it is renewing its youth in spring. When the grass grows, the trees bud, and the leaves and flowers open, we see the working of the Divine energy bringing fresh forms of life before us, robed in the purity and beauty of the sanctuary of the Divine life. So in moral and spiritual beings their purity is a sign of the Divine energy which is working in and through them, keeping their thoughts holy and their lives sinless.


II.
ITS PEACEABLENESS. This means that inward peaceable temper which is the fruit of purity of heart, and is never to be found apart from purity. That Divine energy expels from mans nature all the elements of disorder, discord, and restlessness, and fills the soul with order, harmony, and heavenly peace.


III.
ITS GENTLENESS. This was a new spirit brought into the world by Jesus, and which should distinguish His followers from all other men. According to the text, no one is a gentleman in the highest sense of the word if he has not received and is not practising the wisdom that is from above. To the Christian gentleman humanity is sacred, and he can never intentionally hurt the feelings and injure the reputation of others, and will burn in indignation against all that are guilty of such vile and unmanly conduct.


IV.
ITS PERSUASIVENESS. True wisdom shows itself, St. James seems to say, in that subtle yet gentle power to persuade and win, which we all feel when we come in contact with one who is clearly not fighting for his own rights, but for the cause of truth. The followers of Jesus speak not in words which mans wisdom teaches, but in the words of the wisdom that is from above, which fell from the mouth of the Incarnate Word. But there is more in this persuasiveness than the power of eloquent and earnest words of entreaty, for its mightiest influence will be felt through the holy lives and deeds of love and kindness of those who are possessors of this heavenly wisdom.


V.
ITS MERCIFULNESS AND FRUITFULNESS. The train of thought is carried on. Wisdom is suasive because she is compassionate. In dealing with the froward she is stirred, not by anger, but by pity, and she overflows, not with every vile deed, but with the good fruits of kindly acts. Her purity makes her hate sin with perfect hatred, but she loves the sinner with intensity, and yearns for his return from his sinful ways to walk in her ways of pleasantness and paths of peace. She returns a blessing for a curse, a smile for an insult, good for evil, and with a heart overflowing with benevolence she gives water and bread to her enemies.


VI.
ITS IMPARTIALITY. TO suffer wrong to pass uncondemned is impossible to her, for she is first pure. She shows that there is an everlasting distinction between right and wrong, and that according to the necessity of her pure nature she is for the right and against the wrong in whatever form it may show itself. Her eyes that look with compassion upon the oppressed, flash lightnings of holy indignation against the oppressor, and from her mouth that speaks words of heavenly tenderness to the weak, the sorrowful, and the lowly, come thunderbolts against all selfishness, cruelty, sinful ambition, arrogancy of spirit, and pride of heart. And even in the objects of her greatest love and highest delight she detects the least sin and condemns it unreservedly.


VII.
ITS GUILELESSNESS. This wisdom is free from all dissimulation, deceit, and trickery, and is as pure as the light, as transparent as the crystal. Let Divine light in the soul illuminates mans whole nature, so that he is perfectly what he appears. (Z. Mather.)

Divine wisdom

Our first thought in reading the description which the apostle gives of the Divine wisdom is this, that it is totally different from the notion of wisdom which we usually adopt. If you were to ask men to define wisdom, they would begin to recapitulate what we may call the intellectual powers of man. If we asked them to define wisdom as she applied herself to the different walks of life, they would tell us that in the statesman it was foresight; in the merchant it was the power of sagacity or shrewdness; in the barrister keenness; in the teacher insight; in the judge comprehensiveness. When we turn to the apostle he sets aside all these; he gives us no picture of logical powers, of clear discrimination, of power of judgment, or power of imagination, but he gives us a catalogue of moral qualities: it is pure, it is gentle, it is full of mercy, it is full of good fruits, it is easy to be intreated. And as he speaks of it our thought is, it is outside the ordinary conduct and the ordinary definitions of man. But I would ask you to see these two things. That in the first place it is the noblest and truest definition of wisdom, because it recognises the true greatness of man; and also that it is the noblest and truest wisdom because it is capable of universal application. It is, in the first instance, the noblest and truest because it, and it alone, recognises the true greatness of man. If you will but search the annals of the past, you will see it is far, far more in the character of man that greatness is to be round than in the skill and intellectual powers which that character possesses. A man may be brilliant in all these capacities, he may have a power to anticipate events just as the foremost in the land, but it seems to me he may be entirely wanting in the very one thing which–as the history of the past can show–alone can gain the confidence of peoples. How was it that in old Athens the Greeks preferred the slower genius of Nicias to the quicker and more brilliant capacities of Alcibiades? Because with the first the moral character was a guarantee that he would live to use his intellectual powers aright. Wherever you scan the story of the past you will find that the true influence of man is the solid power which is built up primarily and first of all of the character which lies in the background. The ability, this is but the colour of the robe; the character is its very texture, and men ask not what the colour is, but what is the durable character of the fabric; they ask not what are the brilliancy of his parts, not the loftiness of his imagination, not the depth of his insight, but rather the solidity and dependableness of his character. And so he wrote rightly, did the apostle, to say that when you are tempted to win your ascendancy over your fellow-men by the biting jest, by the ready sarcasm, by the quick wit of the tongue, take heed lest in the temporary ascendancy you sacrifice the true greatness of your manhood. It is easy to wound by the sharp word, it is easy to make the spirit quail before the rough tongue, but it is a far nobler thing that the mouth should be filled with gentleness, that the heart shall be levelled with love and the character built up in purity. It is, then, the noblest and the truest definition, because it sets aside the mere accidents of intellectual power, and it sets before us a far nobler ideal of wisdom, that which is nearest to the wisdom of God, pure as our Master is pare, gentle as our Redeemer was gentle, and in the hours of His sorrow and His sympathy full of mercy and good fruits, and abundant as the Divine munificence. But if it is thus the noblest definition, our thoughts are struck by another question, and we ask ourselves, Is it possible to work it in the world? Whence do we seek our evidence? My brethren, there are three great spheres which appeal to and touch the life of man. One is the great sphere of the outer world. We look into the heavens above us, into the air around us, and to the earth beneath us and follow the traces of Gods influence–it is the great sphere of nature. We ask from the sphere of nature, and the answer will be given that the wisdom which is from above is indeed full of mercy, for behold the races of men how anxiously they have inquired concerning the God who made all these things. The orbs of the planets and the growth of the flowers tell us of that token of God the Father, tell us that there is a voice from nature that informs us we are not left orphans in His universe, and this is the answer. And men tell us to behold the evidences of design from the hand of God, but what do they draw from its tokens? They do not ask you to behold the designs of the universe, they do not ask you to look upon its beauty, but they ask you to behold the tokens of mercy. It is not that they can tell us of stupendousness of distances which take away the breath as they are contemplated, it is not that they tell of mixed design, or when they take the fragile flower, of its exquisite form and accuracy, but they say behold how, by a marvellous adaptation, the needs of man, and the needs of the feeblest of Gods creatures, are anticipated. There is another sphere which touches us. I ask you not to look now upon the outer world of the material universe, but turn for a moment and see the world of history, It is that great world which exhibits the lessons of the past, it is that which men will call history, but which wiser men will call the pictures of Gods providence. What is the answer upon this? I answer, it is again that the truest wisdom is found in the moral qualities of purity, gentleness, meekness, and mercy. For our first reading of history is itself a story of man, it is a story of dynasties, it is a story of change, that strange drama which has been going on through all ages. But when we look more closely we begin to read history from another light; it is to mark the deeds of men, it is the development of principles, it is bringing to the test of time what are the enduring powers of the world in which we find ourselves, and as I look back I find once more the powers that endure are the moral qualities which St. James has spoken of. Do you want a clear illustration? Go back nineteen centuries and watch the struggle that is going on. On the one side there is the vast consolidated power of Rome grinding down with its iron heel the nations of the world, heedless of the cries of man and the necessity of reform and purity. On the other side there is the little kingdom which is cradled first in the manger of Bethlehem, which expands in the upper chamber at Jerusalem, which carries its way and plants itself in various parts of the earth, and face to face it has struggled against the imperial power which seeks to crush, and the weapons of the Church are but gentleness, purity, meekness. Do I ask the apostle with what weapons he seeks to combat the world and overcome it, he says by pureness, by knowledge, by love unfeigned, by the Holy Ghost, by the armour of righteousness on the right hand and on the left. There shall be the design of the statesman, there shall be the power of the legislature, all combined to crush it; and on the other side the meek spirit of silence, of patience, and of love. There are the two in conflict, and I ask you now what is the result? The empire has ceased to be which has been founded upon force, but the empire which has been founded upon purity, upon mercy, and upon love, has spread itself everywhere. History has given back the triumph into the hand of moral wisdom, of purity and love. There is another voice which we can summon to our aid. It is not the voice which comes from the contemplation of the world without, or of the history of the past, but it is listening to the voice which speaks to the inner heart of man. It is the sphere of religion. And, again, I say that the answer will be that the flue wisdom is that which is built up of pureness, of love, and of mercy. Behold how many have gathered together the superstitions and the religions of the past, and they have trembled before the God of power, they have been ravished by the face of the god of beauty, but they have not been raised in the social scale, they have not found their hearts touched, for they have failed to cast off the cloak of their sin, and tread their own unworthy self beneath their feet till He came who moved through the world and whose life was one of purity–Which of you convinceth Me of sin? They bear witness to His guilelessness, He did no sin, neither did guile proceed out of His mouth. They bear witness to His gentleness, for they were emboldened to creep to His feet to receive blessings at His hands, as well as His loving-kindness and His mercy. Or I go deeper. I take His religion, and I ask, What is its source and force? You have seen how it seems to spread itself everywhere, that it touches every condition of man, that when it stands face to face with various nationalities it seems to find no difficulty in pouring its beneficent stream into the vessels of whatever shape they may be. The answer is, it is a religion of purity, it is a religion of mercy, it is a religion of gentleness, it comes to man, and it says that purity is the description of the Church, it is the description of dignity, it is the description of humanity, it is the description of God. Here, then, from every voice, of the heart of man, of the history of man, and of the world of man, we get back the same truth that it is indeed the highest wisdom which has as its features gentleness, purity, and love. What, then, shall we say? I say there is the last appeal to our own hearts. My brethren, the glory of it lies in one thing more, and that is that it is a greatness and a wisdom that is open to all. The very power which makes men often so despondent is this, that they say the very walk of life they fain would tread is closed to them because of some weakness of which they are conscious. All men desire greatness; they desire, that is to say, to climb above themselves. Here, then, is the door open to the highest greatness. There is not a greater thing on earth than man; there is not a greater man than the man that has learnt purity, gentleness, and love. And so far more high and noble ambition infinitely than to climb into the high places of the earth, a nobler ambition than all that glittering rank can bestow is the ambition to be a perfect man in Christ Jesus, nearer Him in resemblance of character, in tenderness of heart, in gentleness of speech, nearer to Him in sanctity and purity of life–and this greatness is open to all. (Bp. Boyd Carpenter.)

Divine wisdom


I.
VERY LOVELY, THOUGH VERY BRIEF, IS THIS DELINEATION OF TRUE GODLINESS. It is wisdom from above. Wherein lies wisdom? and what is her true character? Wisdom is the choice of the best end, and the pursuit of it by the best means. It is more than knowledge; for we may know the best end, and we may know the best means, and yet we may neither pursue the one, nor employ the other. But wisdom differs from knowledge in this–that it is knowledge carried into practice; it is knowledge, not in the abstract, but in the concrete–knowledge, not in the head alone, but in the heart and in the life, wrought out, and carried into effect. Can there be any doubt, then, as to what is the noblest end of mortal man? When man fell from his Maker, he fell from his beings end. Now, the wisdom that comes from above has for its end and object to restore man to the pursuit of that high favour, and to put into his soul means for the attainment of that end. Every one that believes in Jesus is restored to Gods love; every one that is led and renewed by His Spirit is transformed again into His image. He, therefore, who is taught this wisdom, chooses God for his Father, Christ for his way, the Spirit for his life. This wisdom is from above, not from beneath. The wisdom that is from beneath is earthly, sensual, devilish, full of pride, and full of dark rebellion against God. Nor is the wisdom which maketh wise unto salvation taught of man, nor discovered by man.

Mighty intellect avails not here; profound learning avails not here; acute understanding is baffled here. Wisdom that maketh wise is from above in the revelation; it is from above in the impartation to the soul. We have not to rest our faith on the decisions of men, or on the vain conjectures of would-be philosophers, who would be wise above that which is written, or wise without what is written; but we have Gods own blessed immutable truth, as the rock of our rest. It has stood, and it shall stand when all things else disappear. The, e can be no doubt, for God hath spoken: there can be no incertitude, for God hath sworn, that by two immutable things, in which it is impossible for God to lie, we might bare a strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us. Never lose sight of this in studying Scripture: it is wisdom from above. We too little study the Bible in this spirit; we too little remember that it is entirely Gods, that it is in no sort of man or from man, and that therefore we are not to treat it as if it were mans. But it is wisdom from above in a still more intimate, and a still more solemn, even in a personal sense. It is wisdom from above in the record, and it is so in the revelation to the soul. God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. Then there is light within; then there is salvation to the soul; then there is wisdom from above: the Spirit teacheth, and the Spirit giveth life.


II.
SHOW THE IMMEDIATE PRACTICAL POWER AND INFLUENCE OF THIS DIVINE WISDOM WHEN THUS RECEIVED BY ANY MAN IN HIS SOUL. It is first pure, then peaceable. Here is its beautiful order: here is the process that works in the soul.

1. It is pure; pure as contrasted with error in principle; pure as contrasted with impurity and uncleanness in moral affection. It is pure in both senses–

(1) Pure in principle: the darkness gives way to the light: we are brought out of darkness into marvellous light; we are translated from the kingdom of Satan into the kingdom of Gods dear Son. What a wonderful revolution takes place in a mans intellect when the light of Heaven shines into it! He had notions before, but he had no convictions: but now notions become convictions, if they were right; and if they were wrong, however cherished, they are swept away as the mountains mists in the morning, when the sun arises in his strength, and the day-spring from on high visits the world.

(2) The wisdom from above is first pure: pure in doctrine. It makes no compromise with error, either in the mans soul at first, or afterwards in his lips or his labours among others.

(3) And then, as it is pure in doctrine, it is pure also in its power and transforming efficacy on the affections, and on all the moral properties of the soul. Yes, when God gives light to the understanding, He implants love in the heart. He gives a clean heart when He reveals a right spirit. He purifies the heart by faith; and faith, working by love, conforms to Christ; and Christ loved makes all to follow in beautiful obedience; for when we love Him, we keep His commandments: and when we keep His commandments, we walk in purity and peace. This is the purifying effect of the wisdom which cometh from above. And if it be pure in the mans heart, it will be pure in the mans intercourse. He will dislike whatever defiles; he will have no fellowship with the workers of darkness, but rather reprove them. Mark the emphatic word here. The wisdom which is from above is first pure, then peaceable. To sacrifice truth to peace is perfidy to God and treachery to Christ. To sacrifice truth to conciliation is to sacrifice the substance to the shadow; I might say, to sacrifice the victim that can be offered to God on the altar of Satan. False peace, and false charity, and false liberalism are an abomination to God. First pure: keep that ever as your order. But then peaceable. Yes, never forget that the direct tendency of the gospel of Christ is as much to produce peaceableness of spirit, of conversation, and of disposition, as it is to produce purity in heart and in affection. (H. Stowell, M. A.)

Divine wisdom, as seen in the nature of the gospel


I.
Revealed truth–the wisdom that is from above–is FIRST PURE, THEN PEACEABLE. It shows how God may dwell with man, and yet not sacrifice His purity; how man may dwell with God, and yet not lose his peace. It neither tarnishes Divine holiness, nor crushes human hope. It guards first the righteousness of the Judge; thereafter and therewith it obtains the pardon of the criminal. It is in Christ crucified that the two apparent contradictions meet. The substitution of Christ for His people is the fulcrum which sustains alike the honour of God and the safety of believing men. God preserves His own purity, and yet lifts the lost into His bosom: the guilty get a free pardon, and yet the motives which bind them to obedience, instead of being relaxed, are indefinitely strengthened.


II.
Revealed truth–the wisdom that is from above–is GENTLE AND EASY TO BE ENTREATED. This is not the view which springs in nature, and prevails in the world. Fear in the conscience of the guilty, after passing through various degrees of intensity and forms of manifestation, ever tends to culminate in the question, Shall I give the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? See the result as it is exhibited in India. The chief gratification of a chief idol is the self-murder of his worshippers under the wheel of the truck that bears his weight. The wisdom that is from above is gentle; a bruised reed shall he not break, and the smoking flax shall he not quench. The wisdom that is from above is easy to be entreated; nay, more, He tenderly entreats you–Come unto Me, all ye That labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.


III.
Revealed truth–the wisdom that is from above–is FULL OF MERCY AND GOOD FRUITS. So far from being in all cases united, these two, in their full dimensions, meet only in the gospel. The administration of a government might be full of mercy, and yet destitute of good fruits: nay, more, the want of good fruit might be directly due to the fulness of mercy. Mercy to the full–an absolutely unconditional pardon to the guilty is in human governments inconsistent with the public good. In the gospel of the grace of God, absolute fulness of mercy to the guilty binds the forgiven more firmly to obedience. The wisdom which is exhibited in the covenant is full of mercy. God could not put more mercy in His covenant, for all His mercy is in it already. Woe to us if that which it contains comes short of our need. It is not a wider door of mercy that we want, but a larger liberty to sin. This Divine wisdom is also full of good fruits. The tree is good, its fruits are good, and it bears them abundantly. Either attribute is in itself precious; and there is an additional interest in the union of the two. If there had not been Divine wisdom in the plan, the profusion of mercy would have blasted in the germ all the promises of fruit. The mercy that is free to us was dearly bought by our Divine substitute. Justice was satisfied while the guilty were set free. There lies the peculiar feature of the mercy which God gives and sinners get through Christ. It does not encourage the forgiven to continue in sin. It makes the forgiven love the forgiver much; and love is the greatest, the only fulfiller of the law.


IV.
Revealed truth–the wisdom that is from above–is WITHOUT PARTIALITY, AND WITHOUT HYPOCRISY. We are so much accustomed to partiality and hypocrisy in human affairs, that it becomes difficult to lodge in our minds the conception of an off, r entirely equal, and an announcement absolutely true. Accustomed in the moral department of human things to a continual state of siege, we have contracted a corresponding habit of suspicion. We lack the tendency, and perhaps the power, to exercise a pure implicit trust. How shall we be brought, in very deed and in simplicity, to trust that God is true, although every man should be a liar? Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me. Take away this suspicious heart, and give a tender, trustful one. The Mediators proposal for peace with God is–

1. Without partiality offered alike to all. All the fallen are in need, and all alike. His own goodness will not admit the best into favour; his own badness will not keep out the worst. Grace, absolutely sovereign and free, is the main principle of the gospel.

2. Without hypocrisy truly offered to each. What have we here? Can the Supreme, consistently with His own honour, plead before His creatures, that He is not a hypocrite, making His offer appear more generous than it really is? Yes; such is His longsuffering condescension. All the repetitions of His offer are of this kind–the overflowings of a compassion that is more than full He stands at the door and knocks; He pleads with sinners, Why will ye die? Strange measure of forbearance this! But is it needed? Do men deny or doubt the sincerity of the offer which the Messenger of the covenant has brought to the world? They do. Nor is it here and there a rare example of peculiar wickedness; it is the commonest sin I know. We do not speak this distrust; but we live it. I have seen a dog tried in this fashion: his owner took a full dish of finest human food from the table, as it had been prepared for the family, and set it before him, encouraging him by word and gesture to eat. The sagacious brute shrank back, lay down, refused, and gave many unmistakable indications that he would be too glad to eat, but he saw clearly it was all a pretence it was too good for him, and never intended for him–and if he should attempt to taste it, the dish could be snatched away, while he would perhaps receive a blow for daring to take the offer in earnest. The picture, although its associations are less grave, possesses, in relation to our subject, the one essential quality of trueness. It represents, more exactly than anything I know in nature, the treatment which Gods offer gets from men. We treat the offer as if the offerer were not sincere. Alas for the pitiful condition of sinful men!–refusing the great salvation, because it is so great that they cannot believe it is really intended to be given free to the unworthy. (W. Arnot.)

Divine wisdom, as seen in the effects of the gospel


I.
THE NEW CREATURE–the work of the Sprit in believers–is FIRST PURE, THEN PEACEABLE.

1. In relation to God. In His approach to you there was first purity and then peace; therefore, as an echo answers to the sound that waked it, the same two in the same order will characterise your approach to Him. As God would not come in peace to the sinful, except on the foundations of holiness, honoured first, true Christians, much as they desire peace, do not expect–will not ask it on other terms. He who is at peace in impurity has not received upon his heart the imperial seal of the King Eternal, but the counterfeit of some false pretender.

2. In relation to ourselves. Peace of conscience is sweet, whether it be false or true, The desire to avoid or escape remorse is an instinct of humanity, acting as strongly and steadily as the desire to avoid or escape bodily pain. When I accept mercy through the blood of Christ, my desire for peace of conscience, one of the strongest forces in my being, becomes a weight hung over a pulley exerting a constant pressure to lift me up into actual righteousness.

3. In relation to the world around. Those who have, through faith, gone down with Christ in His baptism of blood to wash their sins away, acquire a depth and solidity of character which enables them to bear unmoved the tossings of a troubled time. Their life, hid with Christ in God, bears, without breaking, all the strain of the storm. He that believeth shall not make haste. In times of trial the deepest is steadiest.


II.
THE NEW CREATURE–the work of the Spirit in believers–IS GENTLE, AND EASY TO BE ENTREATED. Although the lot of men is, on the whole, much more equal than it seems, yet at certain particular points some have more to bear and do than others. Hard knots occur in some persons as in some trees, while others are constitutionally smoother in the grain. But while I willingly confess that more gnarled natures must endure more pain in the process of being made meek and gentle, I hesitate to own that, in the end, these Christians remain ordinarily more harsh and ungainly than others. I think, although it is not a uniform law, it is, notwithstanding, a common experience, to find in the new man a very low place where in the old man there was a mountain-height. Where the old was harsh and overbearing, the new may be gentle and easy to be entreated; where the old was timidly yielding, the new may bee faithful and bold.


III.
THE NEW CREATURE–the work of the Spirit in believers–Is FULL OF MERCY AND GOOD FRUITS. It is a principle of the gospel that he who gets mercy shows mercy. The little cistern is brought into connection with the living spring, and the grace which is infinite in the Master, is transferred to the disciple in the measure of his powers. When a man is full of mercy in this sinning, suffering world, a stream of benevolence will be found flowing in his track, all through the wilderness. If the reservoir within his heart be kept constantly charged by union with the upper spring, there need be neither ebbing nor intermission of the current all his days, for opening opportunities everywhere abound. Let no disciple of Christ either think himself excused, or permit himself to be discouraged from doing good, because his talents and opportunities are few. Your capacity is small, it is true; but if you are in Christ, it is the capacity of a well. Although it does not contain much at any moment, so as to attract attention to you for your gifts, it will give forth a good deal in a lifetime, and many will be refreshed.


IV.
THE NEW CREATURE–the work of the Spirit in believers–Is WITHOUT PARTIALITY, AND WITHOUT HYPOCRISY. These plants, though not now indigenous in human nature, may, when transplanted, and watched, and watered, grow there, and bear substantial fruit.

1. Without partiality. It is not the impartiality of indifference, but the impartiality of love.

(1) No partiality for persons. Love the poor as well as the rich; the rude as well as the polished; the ungainly as well as the winsome. The redemption of the soul is precious, and the opportunity of applying it in any given case will soon cease for ever.

(2) No partiality for peoples. Care equally for drunken Sabbath-breakers on the Clyde, and ignorant idol-worshippers on the Ganges. A certain proverb is much used, and much abused in our day, by persons who discourage Christian missions to the heathen: Charity begins at home. Expressing only half a truth, it is so employed as to be equivalent to a whole falsehood. It would be more true and more salutary if it were written in full: Charity begins at home, but does not end there.

(3) No partiality for sins. A young man who had used for his own purposes a hundred pounds of his employers money, as it was passing through his hands, fold me in the narrow prison-cell where he was dreeing his punishment, that at the same time in the same city men were going at large and living in splendour, who had notoriously committed the same crime, but prudently committed it on a larger scale than he. I was compelled to own the fact, although, of course, I refused to accept it as an apology. Of the parties to the vices that grow in pairs, why is one accepted in the drawing-room, and the other banished to the darksome wynd? The wisdom which plans and practically sanctions this distinction has not descended from above. The Church, too, must learn to copy more closely the impartiality of her Head. She must not throw a mantle over one sin, while she brandishes the rod of discipline over another. The sin that excludes from the kingdom of heaven should exclude from the communion of saints.

2. Without hypocrisy. When a sinner, softened in repentance, lays himself for pardon along a crucified Christ, he takes on from the Lord a transparent trueness which tells distinctly whose he is, to every passenger he meets on the highway of life. (W. Arnot.)

The wisdom that is from above


I.
THE JUST MOTION OF WISDOM IN GENERAL.

1. True wisdom distinguishes the particular seasons and circumstances of action. All times and all circumstances will not bear all things. It is very possible to destroy the best-laid scheme by an ill-seasoned execution. Every duty to God claims a proper time, and so likewise every duty to our neighbours and ourselves. To gain upon men for their good, there are soft times of address, which a mere accident may present, when a word spoken fitly will have greater weight than the most powerful arguments on other occasions. These a wise man will carefully observe, and strike the iron while it is hot and capable of yielding.


II.
THE EXCELLENCY OF THIS WISDOM.

1. The origination of wisdom is from above.

2. It heightens the excellency of wisdom, that the objects about which it is employed are suitable to its sublime original.

3. The great end it advances shows its excellency. It not only sets us on the way, but puts us in the possession of true happiness at last.


III.
MARK THE DIVINE LINEAMENTS OF IT here touched by the pen of the apostle, and so form a judgment of its beauty and excellence.

1. It is pure. It is like the blessed Author of it. It is the image of God in the soul; resembles Him in that which is the beauty and glory of His nature, His holiness.

2. It is peaceable. Peace is the fruit of holiness, and, therefore, properly placed after it. A pure conscience keeps a calm breast, and disposes the soul to seek and keep peace with others.

3. It is gentle, that is, equal and moderate.

4. It is easy to be intreated, ready to oblige, pliable and condescending to anything for the good of others, that is consistent with a good conscience.

5. It is full of mercy and good fruits; compassionate and liberal; not resting in good words and fair speeches, but doing good works.

6. That we may not be blinded or biassed by prejudice, that we may not confine our good opinions or good deeds to any one party of men, the apostle adds, Wisdom is without partiality, will not suffer us to judge mens characters by their circumstances, to think well or ill of them by external appearances, and treat them accordingly.

7. Without hypocrisy. True wisdom can never be divided from integrity. No man can be wise without being honest. He that walketh uprightly walketh surely.

IN CONCLUSION it follows:

1. That prayer is an indispensable duty on every soul of man. True wisdom is the gift of God; and no man can have the least room or reason to expect it without asking.

2. How foolish, sinful, and contrary to our holy religion are all uncharitable principles and practices! (Wm. Beet.)

Christianity–the wisdom that is from above

1. With propriety it is designated wisdom; for a God of wisdom is its author and its end, and it reveals a scheme of mercy in the device of which omniscience itself was exerted. Yes, with propriety is it called wisdom; for it teaches man to know the character of God, and the riches of Gods love, the natural debasement of humanity, and the means that have been put in operation for securing his eternal weal. With propriety is it called wisdom; for it enlightens the mind, informs the judgment, and regulates the life. With propriety is it called wisdom; for it makes him who lives under its influence wise in the estimation of God Himself. Once more, with propriety is it entitled wisdom; for the end of it is to make men wise unto salvation.

2. Not less appropriately is it designated a wisdom that cometh from above. Its origin is indeed celestial; for it is a beam that issues from God the fountain of light. Its origin is celestial; for the angel of the covenant Himself came down from heaven to reveal its first promise, and make known to Adam the great truth on which it all depends. Yes, its origin is celestial; for without the teaching of the Holy Spirit its high lessons cannot be learned. (Wm. Craig.)

The heavenly origin of wisdom

The ancients, when speaking of any valuable art or discovery highly beneficial to mankind, commonly deduce its origin from heaven, and acknowledge that they owed it to the teaching of the gods. Thus fire is said to have been stolen from heaven; the useful arts of agriculture, and such like, are ascribed to the direction of such and such particular deities; and philosophy itself is said to have come down from heaven. (F. Carmichael.)

The wisdom which is from above


I.
THE NATURE OF THIS WISDOM (Jam 3:17). Now what are its properties, what its distinctive features?

1. The most internal and fundamental of these is purity. It is so, both in its nature and in the influence which it exerts. It is holy and makes holy.

2. Peaceable. This is the opposite of that characteristic of the false wisdom which the apostle had been speaking of, namely, envying and strife. The true, the heavenly, is disposed to peace, it follows after, it delights in peace. It animates its possessor with such a spirit, so that he desires, though he cannot always secure, this blessing.

3. Gentle–mild, forbearing. It corresponds to the meekness of wisdom spoken of in a preceding verse. It is ranked by Paul among the fruits of the Spirit (Gal 5:22-23). A really peaceable disposition may be connected with not a little roughness and harshness of manlier. There may be a sternness, a severity which repels others, and does injustice to the genuine principles and affections of the bosom. This wisdom should subdue and soften the spirit, should infuse into it a real tenderness and sweetness, and it must so far as it is imparted and has free course. Yes; for it embraces a sense of our own obligations to infinite mercy, matchless long-suffering,–it assimilates us to Him from whom it all proceeds, for Christ is made unto His people, wisdom; and how conspicuous was this feature in His character! And it teaches us that such is the disposition which not only becomes us as Christians, but is the most effectual in winning over others to the faith of the gospel.

4. Easy to be entreated–readily persuaded, compliant. It is not obstinate, unbending, implacable. It is willing to learn, whoever may be the teacher, and however disagreeable may be the lesson. It is ready to listen to reason and remonstrance. It does not require much persuasion to induce it to forgive injuries and be reconciled to adversaries. It insists not on studious etiquette, nor on carefully adjusted and elaborately expressed acknowledgments. In this respect its possessors have the mind of Him whose ear is open to the cry of sinners, rebels, and who is always standing waiting to be gracious–ready to pardon.

5. Full of mercy and good fruits. These two are closely connected in the mode of expression, and this accords with their real relation. Mercy is compassion, pity, and has respect to the offending and the miserable. It manifests itself with respect to temporal distress, and still more with reference to spiritual destitution. Tats wisdom has not merely a little of it, but is full of it, according to the text. The mercy which has its spring here, not only flows but overflows. It is cherished, not toward a narrow circle of objects, but one large and stretching far beyond those barriers which limit the sympathies of many. It is shown, not on rare occasions, but frequently, habitually, well-nigh as often as the appeal is made or the need discovered. And it is not a half-hearted thing, not a shallow, superficial feeling, soon exhausted and gone–for it is not only real but deep and enduring.

6. Without partiality and without hypocrisy. The heavenly wisdom is impartial. It does not respect persons. Neither is it one-sided in its attachment to truth and duty. It does not choose this and reject that; but embraces the whole will of God in its regards. And it is equally unprejudiced with reference to the modes of usefulness, means and ways of doing good, being largely free from that narrow-mindedness which is so common in these respects, and which forces itself on our view in so many quarters. It is also without hypocrisy. There is about it no feigning, no pretence, no insincerity. It is open, transparent, consistent. With it the reality and the semblance, the substance and the form, correspond.


II.
THE RESULT OF TINS WISDOM (Jam 3:18). It yields precious fruit–the fruit of righteousness. The expression may mean, either that the fruit springs from, or consists in, righteousness. We understand it in the latter sense. This is its substance, its nature. And so we read in the Epistle to the Hebrews of chastisement yielding the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are exercised thereby. Righteousness is conformity to the will of God, and largely taken, as it is here, embraces the discharge of all the duties we owe directly to Him, as well as those we are bound to perform toward our fellow-creatures. It is equivalent to holiness of heart and life in all its parts; indeed, to true religion in the whole compass of its personal influence and effects. (John Adam.)

The wisdom that is from above

The first and the then may be seriously misunderstood. St. James does not mean that the heavenly wisdom cannot be peaceable and gentle until all its surroundings have been made pure from everything that would oppose or contradict it; in other words, that the wise and understanding Christian will first free himself from the society of all whom he believes to be in error, and then, but not till then, will he be peaceable and gentle. This interpretation contradicts the context, and makes St. James teach the opposite of what he says very plainly in the sentences which precede, and in those which follow. He is stating a logical, and not a chronological order, when he declares that true wisdom is first pure, then peaceable. In its inmost being it is pure; among its very various external manifestations are the six or seven beneficent qualities which follow the then. If there were no one to be gentle to, no one coming to entreat, no one needing mercy, the wisdom from above would still be pure; therefore this quality comes first. Here pure must certainly not be limited to mean simply chaste. The word sensual, applied to the wisdom from below, does not mean unchaste, but living wholly in the world of sense; and the purity of the heavenly wisdom does not consist merely in victory over temptations of the flesh, but in freedom from worldly and low motives. Its aim is that truth should become known and prevail, and it condescends to no ignoble arts in prosecuting this aim. Contradiction does not ruffle it, and hostility does not provoke it to retaliate, because its motives are thoroughly disinterested and pure. Thus, its peaceable and placable qualities flow out of its purity. It is first pure, then peaceable. It is because the man who is inspired with it has no ulterior selfish ends to serve that he is gentle, sympathetic, and considerate towards those who oppose him. He strives, not for victory over his opponents, but for truth both for himself and for them; and he knows what it costs to arrive at truth. A critical writer of our own day has remarked that by an intellect which is habitually filled with the wisdom which is from heaven, in all its length and breadth, objections against religion are perceived at once to proceed from imperfect apprehension. Such an intellect cannot rage against those who give words to such objections. It seems that the objectors do but intimate the partial character of their own knowledge. It will be observed that while the writer just quoted speaks about the intellect, St. James speaks about the heart. The difference is not accidental, and it is significant of a difference in the point of view. The modern view of wisdom is that it is a matter which mainly consists in the strengthening and enrichment of the intellectual powers, Increase of capacity for acquiring and retaining knowledge; increase in the possession of knowledge: this is what is meant by growth in wisdom. And by knowledge is meant acquaintance with the nature and history of man, and with the nature and history of the universe. All this is the sphere of the intellect rather than of the heart. The purification and development of the moral powers, if not absolutely excluded from the scope of wisdom, is commonly left in the background and almost out of sight. What St. James says here is fully admitted: the highest wisdom keeps a man from the bitterness of party spirit. But why? Because his superior intelligence and information tell him that the opposition of those who dissent from him is the result of ignorance, which requires, not insult and abuse, but instruction. St. James does not dissent from this view, but he adds to it. There are further and higher reasons why the truly wise man does not rail at others or try to browbeat and silence them. Because, while he abhors folly, he loves the fool, and would win him over from his foolish ways; because he desires not only to impart knowledge, but to increase virtue; and because he knows that strife means confusion, and that gentleness is the parent of peace. Christians are charged to be wise as serpents, but harmless as doves. Full of mercy and good fruits. The wisdom from above is not only peaceable, reasonable, and conciliatory, when under provocation or criticism, it is also eager to take the initiative in doing all the good in its power to those whom it can reach or influence. The intellectual miser, who gloats over the treasures of his own accumulated knowledge, and smiles with lofty indifference upon the criticisms and squabbles of the imperfectly instructed, has no share in the wisdom that is from above. He is peaceful and moderate, not out of love and sympathy, but because his time is too precious to be wasted in barren controversy, and because he is too proud to place himself on a level with those who would dispute with him. No selfish arrogance of this kind has any place in the character of the truly wise. His wisdom not only enlightens his intellect, but warms his heart and strengthens his will. Without variance, without hypocrisy. These are the last two of the goodly qualities which St. James gives as marks of the heavenly wisdom. Similarity in sound, which cannot well be preserved in English, has evidently had something to do with their selection ( ). The first of the two has perplexed translators. Of the various possible meanings of the word before us we may prefer without doubtfulness. The wisdom from above is unwavering, steadfast, single-minded. Thus Ignatius charges the Magnesians (xv.) to possess an unwavering spirit ( ), and tells the Trallians (i.) that he has learned that they have a-mind unblamable and unwavering in patience ( ). And Clement of Alexandria (Paed. II. 3., p. 190) speaks of unwavering faith ( ), and a few lines farther on he reminds his readers, in words that suit our present subject, that wisdom is net bought with earthly coin, nor is sold in the market, but in heaven. If he had said that wisdom is not sold in the market, but given from heaven, he would have made the contrast both more pointed and more true. The fruit of righteousness is sown in peace for them that make peace. The Greek may mean either for them that make peace, or by them that make peace; and we need not attempt to decide. In either case it is the peacemakers who sow the seed whose fruit is righteousness, and the peacemakers who reap this fruit. The whole process begins, progresses, and ends in peace. (A. Plummer, D. D.)

The seven qualities of wisdom

The seven qualities which James attributes to the wisdom from above are nothing but the seven colours of the one ray of light of heavenly truth, which has been revealed and has appeared in Christ Himself. He is therefore supremely entitled to the name the Wisdom of God. (Langes Commentary.)

The sequence

is that of thought, not of time. It is not meant, e.g., that purity is an earlier stage of moral growth in wisdom than peace, but that it is its foremost attribute. (Dean Plumptre.)

Peaceable

The person endowed with this will not indeed give up the fundamentals of religion, the articles of faith, under the notion of being peaceable. He will not sit by an unconcerned spectator, void of all concern and zeal, while others are doing this. He will not sacrifice good order and government in the Church of God to the caprice or clamours of enthusiasm or faction. No; this is not being peaceable, but a criminal lukewarmness and indifference unworthy of a Christian. In such cases, however peaceable he is otherwise, he will within his proper sphere contend most earnestly for the faith. (Win. Thorold, M. A.)

Gentleness

The Archbishop of Canterbury, speaking after Earl Granville had unveiled the memorial to his predecessor, adorned the occasion by a reference to the secret of the beautiful life of Dr. Taft. I have heard, said he, and I believe it is true, that on the first day of his wedded life he and his bride pledged themselves to each other that they would never quarrel with any one, and I believe that pledge was kept to the end. This memory is better than any memorial in marble.

Power of gentleness

Morning by morning Gods great mercy of sunshine steals upon a darkened world in still, slow, self-impartation; and the light which has a force that has carried it across gulfs of space that the imagination staggers in trying to conceive, yet falls so gently that it does not move the petals of the sleeping flowers, nor hurt the lids of an infants eyes, nor displace a grain of dust. So should we live and work, clothing all our power in tenderness, doing our work in quietness, disturbing nothing but the darkness, and with silent increase of beneficent power filling and flooding the dark earth with healing beams. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)

Full of mercy and good fruits.–Mercy may here be taken for the inward principle, and good fruits for the effect of this principle in our outward actions. Divine wisdom fills men with tenderness and compassion towards those that are miserable in any respect, whether it be from their infirmities of body or mind, or from any calamity that befals them from without; it disposes them to look on the case of others as if it were their own; to have an inward feeling of their unhappiness, and consequently to do whatever lies in their power for their release or assistance; to feed the hungry, to clothe the naked, to visit the sick, to comfort the disconsolate, to instruct the ignorant, to admonish and reclaim transgressors; these are the good fruits which naturally spring from the mercy here mentioned, of which the apostle tells us the wise man is full. True wisdom will be particularly tender and compassionate towards those who have erred from the right path, either in their principles or practice, inclining rather to save than to destroy them, and trying every possible laudable means of bringing them back to a right mind. (F. Carmichael.)

Full of mercy and of good fruits

Far from being savage, unrelenting, or cruel, it feels the Godlike impressions of pity and compassion towards every proper object, the unfortunate and the miserable; it is touched with a strong sense of the miseries of human nature; it cannot but weep with those that weep, and commiserate and assist the indigent and the distressed; it is not content to afford them the cheap offer of mere verbal pity only, of the eye or of the tongue, but will add the real and substantial one of actual aid in proportion to their wants and its own ability; it will not only be full of mercy but full of good fruits likewise. By which last expression we may observe how valuable these works of mercy are in the sight of God, when He who is the blessed author and adorable fountain of all good calls them good; good by way of eminence, not indeed the only way of doing good, yet a principal one, a way most acceptable to Him, most beneficial to man, good in its nature, in its principle, in its fruits and consequences, good to those who receive, and superlatively good to those who truly and religiously practice it. (Wm. Thorold, M. A.)

Without partiality

Superior to a narrow spirit

The person who is endowed, with this heavenly wisdom is above that narrow and selfish spirit which men who act upon worldly motives are always of, who are inclined to think well of, and to wish and do well to such only as are of the same opinion or party, sect, or persuasion with themselves. No, the truly wise and the good man is a man of more enlarged, a more generous, a more Christian spirit and disposition. He is not unmindful indeed of those particular obligations he lies under towards those who are endeared to him by blood, by friendship, by religion. These, all other circumstances equal, will be sure to have the preference, but still they will not so wholly engross his good opinion, his favour, his charity, as to exclude all others from them. No, he will to his power, after the example of his Heavenly Father, be peaceable, he will be gentle, he will be equitable, he will be merciful and charitable to all; and this not out of a motive of vainglory or ostentation, or self-interest, but out of a sincere principle of love to God and to man, without partiality, without hypocrisy, appearing to all what he really is, without disguise, without dissimulation. (Wm. Thorold, M. A. )

The fruit of righteousness is sown in peace

Sowing seeds of peace

Whatever difficulty there may be in this verse in its detail, its broad intention is quite clear–that peace is the seedtime of righteousness, and not righteousness of peace: that we rather become good because we are at peace, than that we have peace because we are good. Peace is the seed. Every truth has in it its higher and its lower range: its higher, which is spiritual; and its lower, which is natural. There is a higher righteousness, which is between God and the sinner; and there is a lower righteousness, which is between man and man. There is a higher peace, which lies in reconciliation with God; and there is a lower peace, which is the man being in harmony with his fellow-creatures, and at rest with his own conscience. Only in both cases the higher carries the lower. To be righteous, in Gods righteousness, is the surest way to be upright in common life. Peace with heaven makes peace on earth. The two are wrapped together when we say, The fruit of righteousness is sown in peace of them that make peace. Let me trace the history or pedigree of righteousness. God is the One only Righteous; and there is no unrighteousness with God. The righteous God made an upright creature in His own image: but He made him free to stand or fall; and, in his freedom, he fell from his uprightness. The righteous God willed to restore him. And here is the problem: to restore the rebel and maintain the righteousness. And He solved it. He, who was Himself the Just One, His own beloved Son, more than consented to His Fathers counsel. And He did it. He went Himself through the whole punishment that was due to all the world. So the law was satisfied; the equivalent was complete and abundant; and it was just with God to forgive the sinner. But here lay another mystery. Christ was not a Man only; He was a Representative Man. He was a Head, and all we His body. What a head does, it is the same as if the body did it. We suffered and died in our Head. Mercy and truth are met together; righteousness and peace have kissed each other. And mans pardon has become the righteousness of God. By Gods grace a man sees this, feels this, believes this. Then he is in the body. Then that man is for-given–because that mans sins have been already punished. And much more than this. That man being in Christ, the righteousness of Christ–which is the righteousness of God–passes on to him. He is covered with it. God sees him in it. He is a justified man. So that, even in the sight of a pure and holy God, that man is righteous. But what as respects his relative duty to his fellow-men? How does he go down to the lower range? He must be an upright man. Else he is no Christian at all! But let us take the other away; let us see the genealogy of peace. Peace was in heaven, and God placed peace in paradise. But sin came, and peace flew away. Then God willed to restore peace. And the counsel of peace was between them both. He who is our peace said, Lo, I come. And He came. And made peace by the blood of His Cross. And man became reconciled to God. Immediately that he was reconciled the Holy Ghost came. And now, man knowing and feeling that he is forgiven, is at peace in his own mind. The sacred Dove comes back again, and nestles sweetly in his bosom. Now, see the moral consequence. Man, being at peace with man, is gentle, peace-loving, peace-making. For love is the child of peace. The Church knits herself into unity; and Christians go forth in forgiveness to enemies–in charity to every man–in mission to the world. And thus–according to the pedigree of righteousness, and according to the genealogy of peace–in both ways, the fruit of righteousness is sown in peace of them that make peace. And who are they that make peace? The Holy Trinity–embodied to us in the Person of the blessed Jesus. It is He who makes peace. He sowed it in those tears, and those drops of blood, which fell so thick in the garden and on Calvary. Seeds, often long dawning, never dead; seeds which, when the Spirit waters them in a mans soul, draw up, and make sweet spring-time, till, in due time, they cluster in the harvest of righteousness: and the fruit of righteousness is sown in peace of them that make peace. It may be strange, but all experience establishes the fact, that the ministry which speaks most of peace, that is, of Christ, which imparts peace, is always the ministry which most checks sin, and raises the moral tone, and promotes, in any people, righteousness in all the common relationships of life. I feel that I have very little else to do but to sow peace. And if you were all at peace with God, in your consciences, and with men, my work would be well-nigh done! But not ministers only. You also, by virtue of your common Christianity–you are all to be making peace. First, you must be yourself at peace; at peace with God, at peace in your own heart, at peace with everybody. You must go about with that peaceful feeling, that gentle quietness, that subdued tone, which only an interest in Christ can give, and which it never fails to give. Speak to every one about the happy parts of religion. Tell of its peace. Be everywhere a comforter. Show Jesus in His attractiveness, especially to the world, and to the bad. Deal tenderly. Aim at a holy, loving influence with those that you have to do with. Be always dropping a seed of heaven. And if thereby you be not a reformer of your age (though you may be); or, if you do not die as one who has done great things for God in your day and generation (yet you may have done)–at least you will have been a faithful follower of your meek and blessed Master, and you will have shown His Spirit, and you will have recognised and acted out His fundamental law, that the fruit of righteousness is sown in peace of them that make peace. (James Vaughan, M. A.)

Fruit of righteousness sown in peace

These words admit of two different interpretations. As the great design which the apostle has in view is to correct the pride, wrath, and malice which prevail among those he wrote to, which he does by laying before them its bad consequences, strife and confusion, and representing how inconsistent it was with that true and heavenly/ wisdom which inspires men with gentleness, peace, and mercy: in this verse he may be understood as showing the advantages of following this true wisdom rather than indulging such noxious passions. The fruit, the reward of righteousness is sown in peace; is kept and reserved in a happier, a more peaceful and glorious state hereafter, of them that make peace, that is, for them that are endued with this wisdom, which delights in peace. The fruits are the reward of the toil of the husbandman; these fruits may be said to be sown when that seed is sown which, by the blessing of God, will produce them. The apostle therefore tells us that peace is a seed, which whoever sows, it will by the goodness of God yield to him the fruits of righteousness. Others conceive the apostle here to be answering an objection against what he had said. Shall we by our gentleness and meekness indulge and cherish the wickedness of others? Ought we not rather to use all our zeal to punish and root it out? The truly wise man, says the apostle, by his compassion and meekness, neither favours nor connives at vice and wickedness, but will correct it with such moderation as is consistent with good order and peace, and shall thereby always have most success on the minds of men. Like a wise physician, he will treat his patients softly and tenderly, will not immediately apply the last and most dreadful remedies, but reserve them till he has tried those of a milder nature without success. Thus, in peace, that is, by the most endearing means of persuasion and kindness, in the spirit of meekness, will the wise
124 man who follows peace sow the fruits of righteousness; correct the vices and reform the lives of those who have gone astray, and bring them to the practice of righteousness with infinitely greater success than those whose harshness and severity may frighten men, or raise their hatred and detestation, but will never succeed so as to persuade or gain them. (F. Carmichael.)


Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 17. The wisdom that is from above] The pure religion of the Lord Jesus, bought by his blood, and infused by his Spirit. See the rabbinical meaning of this phrase at the end of this chapter.

Is first pure] . Chaste, holy, and clean.

Peaceable] . Living in peace with others, and promoting peace among men.

Gentle] . Meek, modest, of an equal mind, taking every thing in good part, and putting the best construction upon all the actions of others.

Easy to be entreated] . Not stubborn nor obstinate; of a yielding disposition in all indifferent things; obsequious, docile.

Full of mercy] Ready to pass by a transgression, and to grant forgiveness to those who offend, and performing every possible act of kindness.

Good fruits] Each temper and disposition producing fruits suited to and descriptive of its nature.

Without partiality] . Without making a difference-rendering to every man his due; and being never swayed by self-interest, worldly honour, or the fear of man; knowing no man after the flesh. One of the Itala has it irreprehensible.

Without hypocrisy.] . Without dissimulation; without pretending to be what it is not; acting always in its own character; never working under a mask. Seeking nothing but God’s glory, and using no other means to attain it than those of his own prescribing.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

But the wisdom that is from above; true wisdom, which is of God, opposed to that which descendeth not from above, Jam 3:15.

Is first pure; either excluding mixture, and then it is opposed to hypocritical; or rather excluding filthiness, and then it is opposed to sensual, Jam 3:15, and implies freedom from the defilement of sin and error, it being the property of true wisdom to make men adhere both to truth and holiness.

Then peaceable; disposeth men to peace, both as to the making and keeping it, in opposition to strife and contention, which is the fruit of the earthly wisdom. Peaceableness, which relates to man, is set after purity, which respects God in the first place, to intimate, that purity must have the preference to peace. Our peace with men must always be with a salvo to our respects to God and holiness.

Gentle; or equal, or moderate, Phi 4:5; 1Ti 3:3; Tit 3:2. It implies that gentleness (as we translate it) whereby we bear with others infirmities, forgive injuries, interpret all things for the best, recede from our own right for peace sake; and is opposed to that austerity and rigidness in our practices and censures, which will bear with nothing in weak, dissenting, or offending brethren.

Easy to be entreated; easily persuadable. True wisdom makes men yield to good admonitions, good counsel, good reason. This is opposed to implacableness, Rom 1:31; pride, and obstinacy in evil, Pro 12:1; 13:1.

Full of mercy; a grace whereby we pity others that are afflicted, or that offend, and is opposed to inhumanity and inexorableness.

And good fruits; beneficence, liberality, and all other offices of humanity, which proceed from mercy.

Without partiality; or, without judging, i.e. either a curious inquiring into the faults of others, to find matter for censures, which many times infers wrangling, as our margin renders it; or a discerning between person and person, upon carnal accounts, which is partiality, as it is here translated, and Jam 2:4.

And without hypocrisy; or, counterfeiting, as they do that judge others, being guilty of the same things, or as bad, themselves: or hypocrisy may be here added, to show that sincerity is the perfection of all the rest before named; purity, peace, and gentleness, &c., may be counterfeit; hypocrisy spoils all; and therefore the wisdom that is from above is sincere, and without hypocrisy.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

17. first pureliterally,”chaste,” “sanctified”: pure from all that is”earthly, sensual (animal), devilish” (Jas3:15). This is put, “first of all,” before”peaceable” because there is an unholy peace with the worldwhich makes no distinction between clean and unclean. Compare”undefiled” and “unspotted from the world,”Jas 1:27; Jas 4:4;Jas 4:8, “purify . . .hearts”; 1Pe 1:22,”purified . . . souls” (the same Greek).Ministers must not preach before a purifying change of heart,”Peace,” where there is no peace. Seven (the perfectnumber) characteristic peculiarities of true wisdom are enumerated.Purity or sanctity is put first because it has respectboth to God and to ourselves; the six that follow regard our fellowmen. Our first concern is to have in ourselves sanctity; our second,to be at peace with men.

gentle“forbearing”;making allowances for others; lenient towards neighbors, as to theDUTIES they owe us.

easy to beentreatedliterally, “easily persuaded,” tractable;not harsh as to a neighbor’s FAULTS.

full of mercyas to aneighbor’s MISERIES.

good fruitscontrastedwith “every evil work,” Jas3:16.

without partialityrecurringto the warning against partial “respect to persons,”Jas 2:1; Jas 2:4;Jas 2:9. ALFORDtranslates as the Greek is translated, Jas1:6, “wavering,” “without doubting.“But thus there would be an epithet referring to one’s selfinserted amidst those referring to one’s conduct towards others.English Version is therefore better.

without hypocrisyNotas ALFORD explains fromJas 1:22; Jas 1:26,”Without deceiving yourselves” with the name without thereality of religion. For it must refer, like the rest of the sixepithets, to our relations to others; our peaceableness and mercytowards others must be “without dissimulation.”

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

But the wisdom that is from above,…. Which has God for its author; which is infused into the soul by the Spirit of God; and leads into the knowledge of things that are above, of heavenly things; and which only is true wisdom and knowledge; and those who are possessed of it are the only true Gnostics; for which,

[See comments on Jas 3:13] namely, the grace of God: this wisdom

is first pure; it is pure in itself, it is free from everything that is earthly, carnal, or sensual, or devilish; it produces purity of heart, of life, and conversation; and is the means of keeping persons pure and chaste, and free from impure lusts, lusts of uncleanness, pride, envy, wrath, c. which prevail in carnal and unregenerate men:

and then peaceable it inclines and engages those who have it to live in peace with the saints, and even with all men; with those of their own household, with their neighbours, yea, with their enemies: it is also “gentle”; or makes men gentle, moderate, and humane, so as that they bear, and forbear; they bear with the infirmities of the weak; readily forgive injuries done them; do not rigidly exact what is their due, but recede from their just right for the sake of peace and love; and do not bear hard upon others for their failings, but cover them with the mantle of love: and it is

easy to be treated; or those who have it readily yield to the superior judgments and stronger reasonings of others; and are easily induced to hope and believe all things, and entertain a good opinion of men, and their conduct; and are far from being proud, arrogant, obstinate, and overbearing:

full of mercy and good fruits; of compassion and beneficence to the poor; feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, visiting the widows and fatherless in their affliction; and doing all other good works and duties, both with respect to God and man, as fruits of grace, and of the Spirit:

without partiality: to one another; or making a difference between them; showing no respect to persons; bestowing upon the poor and indigent, without any distinction: and

without hypocrisy; either with respect to God or man; not making show of that which they have not, or do not intend.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

First pure ( ). First in rank and time. H is from the same root as (holy), old adjective, pure from fault, not half-good and half-bad, like that above.

Then peaceable ( ). Old adjective from (peace), loving peace here, bringing peace in Heb 12:11 (only N.T. examples). But clearly great as peace is, purity (righteousness) comes before peace and peace at any price is not worth the having. Hence Jesus spurned the devil’s peace of surrender.

Gentle (). Old adjective (from , reasonable, fair), equitable (Phil 4:5; 1Pet 2:18). No English word renders it clearly.

Easy to be entreated (). Old adjective (, ), compliant, approachable. Only here in N.T.

Mercy (). Practical help (Jas 2:13; Jas 2:16).

Good fruits ( ). in Mt 7:17f. Good deeds the fruit of righteousness (Php 1:11).

Without variance (). Late verbal adjective (from alpha privative and , to distinguish). “Unhesitating,” not doubting () like the man in 1:6. Here only in N.T. This wisdom does not put a premium on doubt.

Without hypocrisy (). Late and rare verbal adjective (alpha privative and ). Not hypocritical, sincere, unfeigned (Ro 12:9).

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

First. Emphasizing its inner quality, pure, as distinguished from its outward expressions. The idea is not first numerically, but first essentially. The other qualities are secondary as outgrowths of this primary quality. Gentle [] . See on 1Pe 2:18.

Easy to be intreated [] . Only here in New Testament.

Without partiality [] . Only here in New Testament and very rare in classical Greek. Rev., without variance or doubting. See on ch. Jas 1:6.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) Heavenly, supernatural wisdom is first in order or rank with purity and holiness of living with fruit bearing language of peace, gentleness, and fair play. This wisdom is easy to be persuaded or entreated, full of mercy. This wisdom from above cultivates the virtues of purity and holiness in teaching without variance and hypocrisy, Rom 12:9-16. The fruit of righteousness, teaching with supernatural wisdom is done with peace and harmony, 1Pe 1:22.

2) Peace is a “seed-bed” in which right thinking and right deeds may grow. The home, the church, the community, and businesses in the nation that experience peace and harmony constitute a splendid seed-bed for principles of righteousness where they may be sown and grown with profit, Mat 5:9.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

17 But the wisdom which is from above. He now mentions the effects of celestial wisdom which are wholly contrary to the former effects. He says first that it is pure; by which term he excludes hypocrisy and ambition. (127) He, in the second place, calls it peaceable, to intimate that it is not contentious. In the third place, he calls it kind or humane, that we may know that it is far away from that immoderate austerity which tolerates nothing in our brethren. He also calls it gentle or tractable; by which he means that it widely differs from pride and malignity. In the last place, he says that it is full of mercy, etc., while hypocrisy is inhuman and inexorable. By good fruits he generally refers to all those duties which benevolent men perform towards their brethren; as though he had said, it is full of benevolence. It hence follows, that they lie who glory in their cruel austerity.

But though he had sufficiently condemned hypocrisy, when he said that wisdom is pure or sincere; he makes it more clear by repeating the same thing at the end. We are hence reminded, that for no other reason are we beyond measure morose or austere, but this, because we too much spare ourselves, and connive at our own vices.

But what he says, without discerning ( sine dijudicatione ,) seems strange; for the Spirit of God does not take away the difference between good and evil; nor does he render us so senseless as to be so void of judgment as to praise vice, and regard it as virtue. To this I reply, that James here, by discerning or distinguishing refers to that overanxious and overscrupulous inquiry, such as is commonly carried on by hypocrites, who too minutely examine the sayings and doings of their brethren, and put on them the worst construction. (128)

(127) “Pure,” ἁγνή, is to be understood according to what the context contains. It means what is free from taint or pollution: the kind of taint must be learnt from the passage. The wisdom from above is contrasted with the wisdom from below: the latter has envy and contention; the former is “pure,” being free from envy, and is “peaceable.”

(128) The word ἀδιύκριτος is found only here, and has been variously rendered, because the verb from which it comes has various meanings, — to discern, to make a difference, to judge, to examine, to contend or litigate, and to doubt. It is rendered by the Vulg., as “not judging” — uncensorious; by Beza, “without contending” — incontroversial; by Erasmus, “making no difference” — impartial; and by Hammond, “not doubting,” i.e., as to the faith. “Uncensorious,” or, “impartial;” seems the most suitable rendering; not given to rashness in judging of others, or not shewing respect of persons, previously condemned in Jas 2:1. Then follows “undissembling,” not saying one thing and meaning another.

There seems to be a complete contrast between the two kinds of wisdom. The wisdom from above is not envious, but pure; is not contentious, but peaceable; does not create confusion, but is patient and conciliatory; and instead of producing “every evil work,” it is full of mercy or benevolence, and of the fruits of benevolence, being not censorious or partial in judgment, and not dissembling, or acting dishonestly. By this comparison, we see what were some of the things included in “every evil work;” they were the reverse of mercy or benevolence, and its fruits, even censoriousness or partiality, and dissimilation. And yet those who exhibited all those evil things thought that they had wisdom! and even gloried in it!

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

WISDOM FROM ABOVE

Text 3:1718

Jas. 3:17

But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, easy to be entreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without variance, without hypocrisy.

Jas. 3:18.

And the fruit of righteousness is sown in peace for them that make peace.

Queries

259.

What is the source of this wisdom from above? (see Jas. 1:17)

260.

Why do you think the text gives special emphasis to the fact that the purity of this wisdom comes before the peace?

261.

How much peace could one have without the purity of wisdom from above?

262.

Do you think it would be wise to compromise doctrine for the sake of peace? Why so or why not?

263.

How many characteristics does this wisdom from above have? (count them).

264.

Compare this number with the number of fruits of the Spirit listed in Gal. 5:22 ff, and the number of Christian graces listed in 2Pe. 1:5-9.

265.

Do you think the purity is first above just peace, or above all the other qualities listed?

266.

What does the word pure mean?

267.

Define each of the qualities counted in question 263.

268.

Is the fruit of righteousness of Jas. 3:18 a part of the description of the wisdom, or is it another thought? How can you tell?

269.

Jas. 3:18 is an enlargement of one of the qualities of wisdom. Which one?

270.

Why all this emphasis upon peace if purity is really the most important?

271.

Does Jas. 3:18 indicate that the fruit of righteousness may be sown in something other than peace? How could the fruit of righteousness be sown in strife?

272.

How can one make peace?

273.

How does this section of Scripture apply especially to the elders of the church?

Paraphrases

A. Jas. 3:17

The good wisdom from God is first of all faultless, but a man who has it also seeks peace through kindness and is quick to be corrected. Like God, he shows mercy and the fruits of the Spirit are evident in his life; which is constant and unchanging, and true to the core.

18.

And he is able to witness righteousness in peace, because he is a man who seeks peace.

B.*Jas. 3:17

But the wisdom that comes from heaven is first of all pure and full of quiet gentleness. Then it is peace-loving and courteous. It allows discussion and is willing to yield to others; it is full of mercy and good deeds. It is wholehearted and straightforward and sincere.

18.

And those who are peacemakers will plant seeds of peace and reap a harvest of goodness.

Summary

Gods wisdom in the Christian must seek purity, and this is followed with the Christian graces and fruits with a sincere desire for peace.

Comment

The wisdom that is from above is contrasted with the wisdom that is earthly, sensual and devilish. This true wisdom that is a gift from God (Jas. 1:5), and that always cometh down from the Father of lights, (Jas. 1:17), is here described with seven characteristics.

It is interesting to note that there are seven fruits of the spirit (Gal. 5:22 ff), that there are seven Christian graces (2Pe. 1:5-9), and now seven qualities of the wisdom from above are noted. Some commentators see in this tendency to group items in numbers of seven within the Bible (days of the week, etc.) as making or revealing a particularly holy or perfect quality to the number. This is nowhere stated or even implied. We might also note that there are nine special spiritual gifts, listed in 1Co. 13:4-7. Likewise, others feel there is something especially holy about the number three. There are three parts to man (so they say); body, mind, soul; or body, soul and spirit. There are the Father, Christ and the Holy Spirit. But why should three be chosen instead of two, we may ask. There is the outer man and there is the inner man. There is God and there is the devil. There is good and there is evil. There is worldliness and spirituality. There is a fleshly nature and a spiritual nature. There is light and there is darkness.

Since the Bible itself does not call any particular number as being more holy or complete than the other numbers, it might be the more reasonable conclusion to put no particular significance to the number seven, (or two or three, for that matter)! To do so would be to ignore the fact that the Bible is its own best commentary. It is poor hermeneutics to seek and find meanings not intended by the original author, or not clear within the text.
This wisdom from above is clearly the one that James recommends, even though it is understood from this text without being specifically stated. Original meanings of the author are not always specifically stated. They may be implied by statements, or (more commonly) implied by the context. The more forceful expression seems to be as James has here accomplished: to be content with the explanation and to leave the admonition to the reader. And now let us look at the seven qualities of wisdom from above:

(1) It is first pure. Purity has the significance of being without contamination. To be unmixed with evil qualities is to be Godlike. The clean, or holy, moral inward attitude, is that Christ-like perfection toward which the Christian aims. Wisdom, too, can have this quality. Such wisdom would be unmixed with worldly, sensuous, or devilish wisdom. It would take into account all knowledge from God, and discount knowledge contrary to Gods revelation. It would be motivated by Gods kind of selfless love rather than mans kind of self-love. It would be wisdom that seeks not its own, is not puffed up.

What about this wisdom is to be pure? All about it! Whether motivation that drives it, or knowledge that feeds it, or its very source. Its motivation is to be Gods kind of love (agape). Its knowledge is just as obviously to be that revealed knowledge from God. Partial knowledge that comes from mans limited vision is often put in contrast with revealed knowledge. Descriptive sciences can never be as complete nor flawless as that knowledge that is revealed by the author of all that is. Although the Bible may contradict science (mans description of what he thinks he sees), Gods revelation never contradicts existence! There is no disharmony between what God said and what God did in creation. Mans eyes, ears, and test tubes are entirely inadequate to discover all, and even correctly interpret what they do discover, of the things that God made. Wisdom that is pure, is wisdom built upon knowledge of revelation. Knowledge of science, no matter how thorough, would be entirely inadequate for such wisdom. This is the reason that Bible training is more important for a wise life than training in the liberal arts and sciences.

The peace is desirable, but never to be desired above purity. To be quick to receive correction is also admirable and a part of Godly wisdom; but never must this correction contaminate the purity of the saint or of his life. Wisdom from above is first pure! Purity is never to be sacrificed, even if all the other qualities must be sacrificed in its place!

(2) Wisdom from above is peacable. The desire for harmony and unity leaves no room for pleasure in division. Contention is to be avoided where it is possible with the preservation of purity. The peace of Christ is to arbitrate your hearts (Col. 3:15) and to be the determining factor in all issues that do not tamper with the purity.

The Christian warfare is directed not against members of our own army. Soldiers fight and die side by side facing a common enemy. When the saints of God turn upon one another to bite and devour one another they act completely out of harmony with Gods wisdom and throw the camp of God into bitter confusion. The devil, though in the end to be destroyed, does win temporary battles and overthrow pockets of Christian soldiers that have not the wisdom to seek peace within their own camps.
After stating that wisdom is first in importance of the characteristics of Godly wisdom, peace is listed secondly. Whether or not the order after the word purity is with a meaningful purpose may not be determined, but certainly few will deny the damage caused because peace is not sought. Like bantam roosters in their arrogance of self-love, those who love not peace spend their time looking for a fight. With chips on their shoulders they peck from brother to brother until they find someone who will take up the challenge. Then after weeks of furious activity and a flurry of feathers, the victor cries, I won, I won in the midst of the shambled wreckage of a destroyed church. The sweet taste of victory of personal pride is swallowed up by a greater victory, for the devil won the battle!
(3) Godly wisdom is gentle, or reasonable and gracious. The gentle spirit does not demand that which would bring harm or hurt to his neighbor, even if ones own right must be forfeited. Gentleness speaks of the manner in which one saint touches the heart and life of another person, whereas peace speaks of the inner desire for harmony. The two are related.

Paul speaks of this desire not to bring hurt as the gentleness of Christ, in 2Co. 10:1. It is this gentle spirit that brings one to turn the other cheek rather than retaliating. This is true whether our activity had to do with other saints, or with non-Christians. Tough but O, so gentle should be the make-up of the child of the King. Tough when it comes to purity of doctrine and life, but gentle when it comes to bringing hurt to others. Our desire should be to hang on to Christ like a bulldog, but to love our neighbor like a kitten; but at all cost, hang on to Christ.

(4) Easy to be entreated is also descriptive of him who has Godly wisdom. This is the characteristic of being compliant, or obedient. Easily to be persuaded (except away from matters of purity), the Christian is himself a teachable person. Far from being dogmatic and unyielding, he is ready to learn, even from his pupils.
The wise man says, Let us sit together and learn from the Word of God. While the foolish (worldly wise) person says, Im right, and youre wrong. Theres no purpose in looking it up in the Word of God. Ive read it many times! It is good human relations to admit the possibility of error rather than being absolute in ones knowledge and decision in all matters. The man who knows so much he is unwilling to learn more is losing knowledge. If one is not willing to grow in knowledge and understanding, then he will lose that which he has, as well as lose those whom he would teach.
One of the dangers in dealing constantly with those who are being taught is to grow stale and lose the learning spirit. The positive arrogance of a teacher who is no longer easily entreated will spoil his personal work. The person who spends a lifetime in the classroom situation needs the earnest prayers of his fellow Christians lest in the midst of teaching he find a rut and lose his learning spirit. (And cannot this also happen in the arm chair of the living room?)
(5) The truly wise man is full of mercy and good fruits. The mercy and compassion of Jesus are the subject of much Biblical teaching. We cannot expect forgiveness unless we, too, have the forgiving spirit. The merciful are blessed of God to the extent they shall find mercy.

Deeds of charity toward the poor and the sick are often associated with this mercy. (See Jas. 2:13; Luk. 10:37). The poor in spirit and the sick in heart could also be included in this love of those in need; mercy is associated with both compassion and forgiveness. Christians have a wonderful opportunity to express mercy when others who have treated them in an evil or harsh fashion come for repentance and forgiveness. The unmerciful may demand and eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, but the merciful spirit of the saint is to forgive even seventy times seven. And is not this the mercy we seek through Christ?

Being filled with good fruits immediately reminds one of the fruit of the Spirit in Gal. 5:22-23. These fruits of the Spirit are all spiritual qualities within the saint that can be observed by others around him. Immediately after stating these fruits of the Spirit Paul says If we live by the Spirit, by the Spirit let us also walk. Gal. 5:25.

Thus the good fruits, even if they allude to the fruit of the Spirit, have to do with the effects of being filled with Godly wisdom. The produce, or effects, is the meaning of fruits. The deeds and acts that are manifest to others are good, rather than evil.
Note that mercy and good fruits are to fill the saint of God. Full of has the idea that the persons life and character are overflowing constantly with the particular quality mentioned. The idea expressed is to have full measure (metaphorically, of course, for the author is referring to spiritual qualities rather than measurable material substance). A person may be filled with evil things, thus having a full measure of hypocrisy (Matt. 28:38), or of envy, murder, strife, deceit, and malignity (Rom. 1:29); or adultery as in 2Pe. 2:14. For a person to have a full measure of these evil things might imply that there is no room left for a measure of the finer virtues, and the fruits of the Spirit are crowned from the life.

In the same way, to be full of mercy and good fruits might imply there is no room left for a measure of evil fruits. The best way to overcome evil is to so fill ones life with the finer things that there is no room for the evil. Thus one who fills his life with mercy finds that he has in the process overcome the temptations to bitter jealousy and strife. And one who has filled his life with good fruits has found that in the process the evil things have been crowded out. The idle hours are usually hours of temptation for the Christian.

(6) Without variance, or without doubtfulness in action, is the opposite from the doubleminded man described in Jas. 1:8 who is unstable in all his ways. The Godly wise person has no discord for he has no uncertainty or partiality that would lead him to vacillate. His action is consistent for he has but one mind; the mind of Christ. The teacher who is not consistently noble and righteous in both his attitude and his deeds, will soon lose the respect of his pupils. The teacher who has variance is one who is cut apart or divided in two. This division within himself gives him an unstable character and vacillating deeds.

(7) Too many Christians are just play acting, is the way a Jamaica preacher states the quality of hypocisy. It is a very good expression for the original word refers to the acting of the stageplayer (from a word meaning to answer, because stage-actors answer one another in dialogue). The word is sometimes translated without dissimulation in 2Co. 6:6; 1Pe. 1:22; Rom. 12:9; (R.V.), or translated unfeigned (A.V.).

This discrepancy between what a person says and what he thinks; or between evil intentions and pretended good deeds, is soon discovered; or if not discovered, it is sensed. Hidden purposes and selfish motives are often covered up with a display of Christ-like purposes and pseudo affections. This is a quality naturally hated by all men, for it has the significance of sweet-tasting poison, or a skin-deep loveliness deliberately used to cover up a horrible ugliness.
In other people we admire the quality of honesty, and are ready to take at face value one whom we believe to be open and above board. But in our own selves we must fight the temptation to gloss over petty and selfish motives with a pretended righteousness rather than changing the motives themselves. Love of self coupled with a desire to be thought righteous leads to such a temptation.
And the desire to be thought righteous may come from noble or innoble tendencies. One may desire the righteous reputation for political, personal, or monetary reasons; or he may have the desire for a Christian reputation out of a sense of obligation and recognition of right. In other words, his desire for a noble front may spring from a conscience that is partially satisfied in the reputation alone. The saint should understand, however, that this partial satisfaction of the conscience is also a partial deadening of the conscience; and that in this play acting method of overcoming his awareness of a continued attitude of selfishness he is quenching the Spirit within him, and becoming habitual and automatic in the devils fine art of deceit.

One may reason, I will not be deceitful. I hate hypocrisy, so I will lay bare my divisive and bitterly jealous heart. Then, proud of his lack of hypocrisy, he bowls his way through the hearts and lives of others about him, laying waste the church of the living God and sowing seeds of division in his arrogance. This action may overcome the hypocrisy, but does not overcome the sin. There is no peace, for the seed has been sown in anger and bitterness, and anger and bitterness are reaped at harvest-time. And the fruit of righteousness is sown in peace for them that make peace, Jas. 3:18.

If any of you lacketh wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all liberally and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him. Thank you, Lord, for showing the way in Jas. 3:13-18!

Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series

(17) But the wisdom that is from above . . .Whereas, in sweetest contrast to all this repulsive foulness and riot, the true wisdom from above is first pure, chaste as the Lamb of God, the Word made flesh (Joh. 1:14), then peaceful, gentle, and complianteasy to be won, full of mercy and good fruits, impartial, not double-minded (non duplex), nor hypocritical. Compare with this beautiful description St. Pauls list of the fruits of the Spirit, love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance (Gal. 5:22), and his discourse on Love (1 Corinthians 13).

Truly this wisdom cannot be gotten for gold, neither shall silver be weighed for the price thereof; Happy is the man that findeth her. (Read Job. 28:14-19, and Pro. 3:13-18.)

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

17. Contrasted picture of the wisdom that is from above.

First pure The pure is first as being foremost, and comprehending all the following points, and being inner essence of the whole. It stands in antithesis against the terrible trial of Jas 3:15. To be pure is to be untainted by the tempers expressed in Jas 3:16.

Then After the inner pure follow all the external qualities of character and action.

Peaceable In antithesis against envying and strife, Jas 3:16.

Gentle The reverse of roughness, violence, of word or manner, which exhibit themselves in sweeping assertions and hyperboles.

Easy to be entreated Or, rather, persuaded; the reverse of obstinacy, the pride of a false consistency, or a set persistence in one’s own way.

Full of mercy Pity for the unfortunate, and judicious compassion for the guilty.

Good fruits The reverse of evil work, Jas 3:16.

Without partiality, and without hypocrisy These two clauses are two Greek words in the original which have similar terminations, and so make a word-echo. We might nearly parallel them by the words, neither hypercritical, nor hypocritical. The first of the two Greek words may signify, making no undue distinctions, (hence fair, impartial,) as, for instance, between rich and poor. Or, it may mean unequivocal, unambiguous, clear from equivocation or just liability to being doubted. The latter of the two words is, accordingly, rendered rightly in the English translation. We might (with these last definitions of the two) preserve the terminal similarity of sound by, without equivocation or dissimulation.

In regard to the two contrasted wisdoms of 13-17 we may note: First, it is in accordance with the Old Testament use of the word wisdom, which makes it belong to the moral rather than to the intellectual sphere. It refers not so much to the degree of sagacity or scientific education as to the right state of the heart. Second, St. James does not intend to define wisdom in its broadest moral sense, but only as in reference to the vices he has just been reprehending; namely, a use of the tongue as an instrument of emulations and strifes. His wisdom, then, is peace, obtained by gentleness, fairness, sincerity, and silence.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

‘But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, easy to be entreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without variance, without hypocrisy, and the fruit of righteousness is sown in peace for those who make peace.’

In total contrast to all this is the wisdom that has come from above, in those who have been born from above (Jas 1:5; Jas 1:17-18; Joh 3:3). There is here an indirect reference to the Holy Spirit (compare 1Co 2:11-16). This wisdom is pure (hagnos) and free from all defilement, besmirchment and divisiveness, for its eyes are fixed on God and it seeks only to know His thoughts and His will (Mat 5:8, compare 1:28).

o It is ‘peaceable (eirenikos)’, encouraging peace and ensuring it (compareMat 5:9). Eirene means peace, and when it is used of men its basic meaning is of right relationships between man and man, and between man and God. True wisdom produces right relationships. ‘There is a kind of clever and arrogant wisdom which separates man from man, and which makes a man look with superior contempt on his fellows. There is a kind of cruel wisdom which takes a delight in hurting others with clever, but cutting, words. There is a kind of depraved wisdom which seduces men away from their loyalty to God. But the true wisdom at all times brings men closer to one another and to God.’

o It is ‘gentle (epieikes).’ Epieikes means ‘befitting, suitable, equitable, fair, mild, gentle’. Aristotle defined it as “what is just beyond the written law” (and thus the spirit of the law and not the letter) and as “justice and better than justice” and as “whatever steps in to correct things when the law itself becomes unjust.” The man who is epieikes is the man who is aware ‘when it is actually wrong to apply the strict letter of the law. He knows how to forgive when strict justice gives him a perfect right to condemn. He knows how to make allowances and when not to stand on his rights, how to temper justice with mercy, always remembers that there are greater things in the world than rules and regulations.’ It is to be ‘sweetly reasonable’. ‘It is the ability to extend to others the kindly consideration we would wish to receive ourselves’.

o It is ‘forbearing’ (eupeithes), thoughtful and considerate, and ever willing to understand. It is compliant, approachable and responsive.

o It is ‘merciful’ (eleos) and compassionate (Mat 5:7), as God is merciful and compassionate, to both the worthy and the unworthy, and it produces good fruits.

o It is ‘adiakritos’, that is, undivided. That means that ‘it is not wavering and vacillating; it knows its own mind; it chooses its course and abides by it’. It is without discord and dissimulation, and not divided in mind, being to some extent like God in His unchangeableness (Jas 1:17).

o It is genuine and without pretence and show (anupokritos). It is aiming at genuine perfection even as our Father in Heaven is perfect (Mat 5:48). In Jas 1:20 we learned that man’s anger does not work the righteousness of God. But the wisdom that is from above does, and results in blessing and peace for all.

o And finally it is itself the fruit of righteousness, and also produces the fruit of righteousness in the godly living, behaviour and right attitude of those who receive that wisdom (see Mat 5:16). It is known by its fruits (Mat 7:20). The ‘fruit of righteousness’ may be the fruit that results from righteousness, or the fruit that results in righteousness, or indeed both.

‘The fruit of righteousness is sown in peace for those who make peace.’ And this fruit of righteousness comes from a peaceable heart, and offers continual peace, to those who are peacemakers, that is, God’s true people (Mat 5:9). Isaiah also similarly tells us that ‘the work of righteousness will be peace, and the effect of righteousness quietness and peace for ever’ (Isa 32:17), while Hebrews speaks of ‘the peaceable fruit of righteousness’ (Heb 12:11). See also Pro 11:30; Amo 6:12. It comes from a heart at peace, and benefits all who are of a peaceful heart. Such are those who have been begotten from above through the word of truth (Jas 1:18).

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Jas 3:17 . The character of the true wisdom, which (in contrast to Jas 3:15 ) is designated as ] comp. with this expression, Pro 2:6 ; Wis 7:25-26 ; Philo, de profug. p. 571: ; de nom. mut. : .

] By characteristic is distinguished from the rest, which are introduced by , because it belongs to its nature, “designates its internal quality” (Kern). It is ] i.e. , (Oecumenius); thus free from all impurity. Lange explains by consecrated; incorrectly according to N. T. usage; even in the classics, the reference to the gods sufficiently often steps into the background.

In the series of characteristics following after , which describe according to its manifestations (Kern), the first three are named which indicate the contrasts to and : ] peaceful (comp. , Mat 5:9 ): ] fair, mild ; see on 1Ti 3:3 (not = yielding ): ] . . (opposite , Tit 3:5 ): easy to persuade , that is, pliant, not contending in party-strife.

Then follows ] by which it is described as rich in active love: is particularly mentioned, because compassion is the most direct proof of love; comp. chap. Jas 1:27 , Jas 2:13 ; forms the contrast to .

The series closes with two words united by similarity of sound

, , which express the contrast to everything of an uncertain and hypocritical nature. ] is differently explained according to the different meanings of the root ; Luther renders it impartial; Lorinus, Hornejus, Grotius (“sine partitione, nempe iniqua”), Baumgarten, Estius, Schulthess, Hottinger, Kern, Schneckenburger, Lange (“not separatistic, not sectarian”), and others understand it in the same sense; Beza explains it by “quae non discernit homines;” similarly Gebser undivided , that is, those who have the true wisdom do not separate from each other; the explanation of Pott: pacificus , agrees with this; the Vulgate, on the other hand, renders it non judicans; and Semler: nec temere judicans de aliis Christianis, qui suo more vivunt. It is best to start from the meaning of as it occurs in the N. T., to doubt , and accordingly, with de Wette and Wiesinger, to take = expers omnis cujuscunque ambiguitatis et dubitationis (similarly Wetstein = non duplex). [185] ] is unhypocritical, upright; see Rom 12:9 ; 2Co 6:6 .

These two characteristics are also added with special reference to the state of things among the readers. On , see chap. Jas 1:6-8 , Jas 2:4 ; on , chap. Jas 1:22 ; Jas 1:26 , Jas 2:1 .

All the characteristics are attributed to true wisdom from the effects which it produces among those who are partakers of it; since it makes them pure, peaceable, etc.; the virtues of which it is the source belong to it.

[185] The same signification is also adopted by Neander, when he says, having man in view: “James requires inner unity of soul, assured conviction, so that the soul be not driven to and fro by extraneous considerations, and by conflicting doubts. James’ meaning is hardly to be described in one word. The notion of impartiality or simplicity is most in accordance with it.”

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

DISCOURSE: 2369
THE NATURE OF TRUE RELIGION

Jam 3:17. The wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and easy tube entreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy.

RELIGION, like a tree, must be judged of by its fruits. That which savours of pride, earthliness, or sensuality, is not of God. Its character is justly drawn in the words before us. It is,

I.

Holy in its nature

Religion, above all other things, is entitled to the name of wisdom
[It enlightens the mind, informs the judgment, regulates the life; and he who lives under its influence, is wise in the estimation of God himself.]
Being from above, it resembles its Divine Author
[Religion is a beam issuing from God the fountain of light; and, as in him is no darkness at all, so neither is there any thing impure in that which flows from him. It may be mixed with sin, but in its own nature it is pure; and, in proportion as it prevails, it will dissipate the clouds of ignorance and sin. All spiritual or fleshly filthiness will surely vanish before it [Note: Mat 5:8. Act 15:9. 2Co 7:1.].]

In consequence of this it is,

II.

Useful in its tendency

It renders us,

1.

Amiable in our spirit

[Though men differ widely in their natural tempers, yet the unregenerate are, on many occasions, quarrelsome, fierce, implacable. But as soon as ever religion exerts its influence on our minds, we mortify these unhallowed tempers, and become peaceable, gentle, and easy to be entreated. From thenceforth it is the delight of our souls to cultivate and promote peace, to maintain in ourselves a meek and quiet spirit, and to exercise, as occasion may require, forbearance and forgiveness to all around us.]

2.

Benevolent in our conduct

[Compassion and diligence are inseparable attributes of true religion. The real Christian is not, like the barren fig-tree, covered with the leaves of an outward profession, but destitute of fruit. He labours to abound in every good word and work, and to benefit to the utmost the bodies and souls of his fellow-creatures. His heart is full of love, and out of the abundance of his heart he both speaks and acts.]
It is within us a living principle, that is,

III.

Uniform in its operations

Its extends,

1.

To duties without limitation

[The grace of God will not admit of partiality in our obedience. It will stimulate us to difficult and self-denying duties, as well as to those which are more easy and pleasant; and will make us as solicitous to do what is right towards strangers or enemies, as towards our own friends or partisans [Note: 1Ti 5:21.].]

2.

To desires without reserve

[Religion penetrates to the inmost soul, and regulates all our motives and principles of action. The person whose outward conduct only is good, is in Gods sight no other than a whited sepulchre. The man whose heart is right with God, will watch against all selfish ends, and endeavour to act with a single eye to the glory of his God.]

Infer
1.

How unjustly is religion condemned in the world!

[Many consider religion as destructive of all personal and social happiness; but what is there in this representation of religion that deserves such a character? Let the world call it folly if they will; but God accounts it wisdom.]

2.

What reason have the most godly to blush and be ashamed!

[We must not estimate our religion by our opinion? so much as by our practice. Doubtless we must build on Christ as our only foundation; but we have no evidence of an union with him any further than we raise upon him this holy superstructure. Alas! what poor builders have the very best of us been; and how little progress have we made when we judge by this test!]

3.

What need have we to wait continually upon our God in prayer!

[This wisdom is from above, and can be derived from God alone; and how can we obtain it of him, but in the exercise of prayer? Let us then ask it of him, who has promised to impart it liberally, and without upbraiding [Note: Jam 1:5.].]


Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)

17 But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and easy to be intreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy.

Ver. 17. Easy to be entreated ] Tractable, docile, not as horse and mule that must be ruled with rigour, not with reason, Psa 32:9 . Without partiality (or, without judging), without hypocrisy. These two stand fitly together; to note, that the greatest censurers are usually the greatest hypocrites; and as any one is more wise, he is more sparing of his censures.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

17, 18 .] Character and praise of heavenly wisdom .

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

17 .] But (contrast) the wisdom from above is first of all pure (“Ad duplex genus qualitas revocatur: altero interna vis uno vocabulo exprimitur, quippe una ipsa cterarumque effectrix, altero extern rationes sex notationibus describuntur, qu ad primarium scriptoris consilium invidi rixisque occurrendi omnes redeunt.” Theile. , , , c. It is hardly necessary to guard any scholar against the abuse of this text often found, when it is made to signify that the heavenly-wise must be pure, i. e. free from all contact with any thing that offends, before he can be peaceable: and thus it is used to further, instead of to discourage, an uncharitable spirit), then (= in the second place: its external qualities are now enumerated) peaceable, forbearing ( , Aristot. Eth. Nic. x. 6. See note on Php 4:5 ), easily persuaded (“suadibilis,” vulg. The word occurs in the active sense of “easily persuading,” in schyl. Agam. 274, : and Choeph. 259, : but not, that I am aware, in this passive sense), full of compassion (the great triumph of the Christian practical life is won by : see ch. Jam 2:13 ) and good fruits (contrast to above), without doubting (as might be expected, from the various meanings of , this word has been variously interpreted. Luther, E. V., and most Commentators render it “ without partiality ,” unparteiisch, thus giving to a passive adjective an active meaning: and in the same spirit, c., . : Beza, “ absque disceptatione :” vulg., “ non judicans :” Calvin, “Nimis anxiam et scrupulosam inquisitionem notat, qualem fere in hypocritis cernere licet, qui dum nimis exacte inquirunt in fratrum dicta et facta, nihil non in sinistram partem rapiunt:” Bengel, “Non facit discrimen ubi non opus est, v. gr., inter potentes et tenues.” The passive sense is kept by Gebser, who understands “undivided:” the heavenly-wise keeping banded together in love: Wetst., “ non duplex .” Two considerations contribute to substantiate the rendering given above, which is that of De Wette, Wiesinger, and Huther. 1. The word would seem, from its close junction with , rather to betoken an inner quality than (as Gebser above) an outward circumstance: 2. when thus used of an inner quality, cf. ch. Jam 1:6 and Jas 2:4 , our Apostle, in common with other N. T. writers, signifies by it ‘ to doubt .’ So that I would understand by it “expers omnis cujuscunque ambiguitatis et simulationis,” as Huther), without feigning (“These two characteristics are also added with especial reference to the state of things among the readers: on , cf. ch. Jas 1:6-8 ; Jas 2:4 ; on , ch. Jas 1:22 ; Jas 1:26 ; Jas 2:1 .” Huther).

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Jas 3:17 . : the divine character of wisdom is beautifully expressed in Wis 7:25 , , . : in Wis 9:10 , the prayer is uttered that God would send forth wisdom “out of the holy heavens ”; of that which is thus holy the first characteristic would be purity, the two ideas are inseparable; it is also possible that in the mind of the writer there was the thought of the contrast between purity and the sin which he knew some of his hearers to be guilty of (see above, the notes on Jas 1:12 ff., Jas 4:3-4 ). ; only elsewhere in the N.T. in Heb 12:11 ; cf. Pro 3:17 , where it is said of wisdom that “all her paths are peace”. The word is evidently chosen to emphasise the strife referred to in an earlier verse. : the word is meant as a contrast to unfair, unreasonable argument, cf. Pss. of Son 5:14 . : this word, again, implies a contrast to the unbending attitude of self-centred controversialists; it does not occur elsewhere in the N.T. : the exact reverse of the cursing and bitterness of which some had already been convicted; in Wis 7:22-23 , wisdom is spoken of as having a spirit which is: . : Cf. above (Jas 1:6 , Jas 2:4 ) which, as Mayor points out, makes it probable that we must understand the adjective here in the sense of “single-minded”; perhaps one might say that here it means almost “generous,” in contrast to the unfair imputations which might be made in acrimonious discussion; the word occurs here only in the N.T. : Cf. 1Pe 1:22 ; “genuine,” as contrasted with the spurious “earthly” wisdom.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

pure. Greek. hagnos. See 2Co 7:11.

peaceable. Greek. eirenikos. Only here and Heb 12:11. Peace must not be sought at the expense of truth.

gentle. Greek. epieikes. See Php 1:4, Php 1:5.

easy, &c. Greek. eupeithes. Only here.

without partiality. Greek. adiakritos. Only here. Compare App-122.

without hypocrisy. Greek. anupokritos. See Rom 12:9). Compare App-122.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

17, 18.] Character and praise of heavenly wisdom.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Jam 3:17. , first of all is pure) Pure from earthly, animal, and devilish defilements. He here anticipates, as it were. Being about to commend peace, he first removes that unholy peace with the world, which collects together and cements in one indiscriminate mass everything that comes in its way: Jam 1:27, at the end, and Jam 4:4 throughout. Thus also, cleanse your hands, etc.: Jam 4:8; 1Pe 1:22.-(, indeed) in Jam 3:18, , but, follows.-, peaceable) The whole; the parts follow.-) gentle (indulgent), lenient, not harsh in cases where the question is as to the duties of a neighbour (the duties which a neighbour owes to us).-) tractable, easy, not morose, where the question is as to the fault of a neighbour.- , full of mercy) where the question is as to the misery of a neighbour.- , of good fruits) There follow two more distinguished fruits, and worthy of special commendation to those whom he addresses: not judging and without pretence.-, not judging) It does not make a difference (discrimination or distinction) where it is not necessary; for instance, between the great and the humble. Hesychius , . It embraces all things which are good and just: it rejects all things which are evil. It acts without any difference (partiality), not harshly esteeming one in preference to others.-, without pretence) removed from pretence and flattery, which is exercised directly towards the powerful, indirectly towards the humble, by harshness.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

Jas 3:17-18

THE WISDOM FROM ABOVE

Jas 3:17-18

17 But the wisdom that is from above is first pure,—The wisdom that is from above is, by James, put in contrast with that “wisdom” described by him earlier as “earthly, sensual, devilish” (verse 15), which produces jealousy and faction and results in confusion and every vile deed (verse 16). This wisdom to which James is now to give special attention is “irom above,” because it originates with God and not with men; and, being from above is heavenly in character and not earthly. Because it comes from above, it is God’s gift (cf. “the giving God,” Greek of Jas 1:5), and must be sought from him. It comes down from him “‘with whom can be no variation, neither shadow that is cast by turning.” (Jas 1:17.) Solomon said, “My son, if thou wilt receive my word, and lay up my commandments with thee; so as to incline thine ear unto wisdom, and apply thy heart to understanding; yea, if thou cry after discernment, and lift up thy voice for understanding; ii thou seek her as silver, and search for her as hid treasure, then shalt thou understand the fear of Jehovah, and find the knowledge of God. For Jehovali giveth wisdom; and out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding.” (Pro 2:1-6.)

This wisdom is ”first pure, then peaceable….” This is sometimes explained to mean that no peace can exist until purity has been obtained; and as applied to the church, it is our obligation first to attain to purity in doctrine and teaching, in the absence of which there can be no peace between brethren. On this ground, disturbances in the church, on the pretense of attaining to purity in doctrine are justified. There are two basic errors involved in such reasoning: (1) James’ teaching here applies to peace in the heart of the individual, and was designed to emphasize the fact that peace cannot there reign until purity controls the heart; it is, therefore, an incorrect exegesis which would apply it to the church; (2) purity is first for logical rather than chronological reasons; for if we were the only persons on earth, and there was no one else to be gentle to, no one coming to us to be entreated. no one needing mercy, the wisdom from above would still be pure! The word “pure,” (hagnos, from hagios) denotes that which is uncontaminated, without fault, wholly good. It is a kind of goodness which shrinks from any pollution whatsoever. It is such a state of mind and of heart without which one cannot see God. (Mat 5:8.)

Purity of doctrine and practice on the part of the church is, of course, absolutely essential and must be sought after by all who love the Lord. We must ever contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the saints. (Jud 1:3.) A pure faith and a faultless practice may be enjoyed only by constant vigilance against every suggestion and semblance of error. We must not, however, fall into the error of assuming that because others hold to error, we cannot enjoy peace in Christ. An alleged defense of the truth, at the expense of a sincere heart and a peaceful disposition, is illogical and irrational. It is absurd to attempt to do right by doing wrong! Men have made murderers of themselves on the pretense of doing God’s will. (Mat 10:17; Mat 10:21; Mat 24:9-10.) The wisdom that is from above is pure, free from all defilement.

then peaceable,—(epeita eirenike). The wisdom that is from above is first pure, “then peaceable,” peace-loving, exhibiting that disposition in the individual which produces and maintains peace. (Heb 12:11.) It is peaceable because its basic characteristic is purity. It is impossible for a factious spirit, and a fractious disposition to issue from a pure heart. It is significant that James, who so often reflects, in his writings, the teaching of our Lord in the Sermon on the Mount, follows the same order as designated there in the Beatitudes. Here, as there, purity precedes peace: (1) “Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God.” (Mat 5:8.) (2) “Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called sons of God.” (Mat 5:9.) Because the wisdom which is from above is “peaceable,” it not only instills peace in the hearts of its possessors, it also exhibits itself in peaceful pursuits in life. There is no blessing pronounced upon those who cause dissension, and whose activities produce strife; God, who is “the Lord of Peace” (2Th 3:16), gives peace only to the peaceable. Men yearn for peace; peace in the heart, peace in the life, peace “in our time.” The ancient benediction was a pronouncement of peace: “Jehovah bless thee, and keep thee: Jehovah make his iace to shine upon thee, and be gracious unto thee: Jehovah lift up his countenance upon thee, and give thee peace.” (Num 6:24-26.) The Hebrew word of greeting is, to this day, Shalom! which means peace. When the writer of these notes was in Israel some months ago, he heard this salutation repeatedly expressed. When people meet you there, they say, Shalom! When they bid you goodby they repeat the salutation. It is an expression of a wish for peace for iriends. Jesus promised his disciples peace: “‘Peace I leave with you ; my peace I give unto you ; not as the world giveth, give I unto you.” (Joh 14:27.) Paul wrote, “‘And let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, to the which also ye were called in one body; and be ye thankful.” (Col 3:15.) The Greek for the word “rule,” in this passage means to “arbitrate,” (the margin), to umpire (so Williams translates). Where peace is the arbitrator, serenity of life prevails and contentment reigns. This is the kind of peace which the “wisdom” that is “from above” produces in the heart.

gentle, easy to be entreated,—These are the third and fourth characteristics of the “wisdom which is from above.” “Gentle,” (epieikes, from eikos, that which is reasonable, fair in dealing,) designates an attitude of forbearance, the exhibition of a disposition vhich does not demand its rights, but is willing, if necessary, to suffer wrong in the cause of right. The word appears in Php 4:5 and 1Ti 3:3. We ought always to be fair and reasonable in our dealings one with another. It is highly absurd for one who fancies that truth is all on his side to be unwilling to consider the views of those who oppose him. One may entertain pity for an opponent for holding inconsistent and contradictory opinions, but should not despise him for it. We feel the most sincere concern for a friend afflicted with a serious malady, and we should be equally exercised regarding one whose mental and spiritual health is impaired. Some shrink from gentleness on the ground that it is weakness under another name; but, the truth is, a gentle disposition results from strength, and is maintained thereby. One sure of his position does not feel the necessity oi defending it with passion; he maintains it from premises wrought out by reason from revelation and arrived at calmly and soberly. Some assume they are strong in argument only if they are violent in argument. Some seek to make up in thunder what they lack in lightning; but, it should be remembered that it is the lightning that kills! He who has established a sincere conviction of the truth in his heart, and possesses a genuine faith in the ultimate triumph of right, will disdain such efforts, and be content to speak the truth in love. Gentleness is not a natural characteristic ; men are not born gentle. It results from wisdom; wisdom is a gift from God (Jas 1:5); therefore gentleness is a gift from God.

This wisdom is also “easy to be entreated,” (eupeithes, from eu, easy, and peithomai, to persuade, hence, persuadable, willing to consider.) This is a word occurring no where else in Scripture. One easy to be entreated is open to reason, ever ready to hear what others have to say, and to be willing to yield to what is right. It is not to be interpreted as meaning that one is susceptible to every vagrant impulse, or carried about by every wind of doctrine (Eph 4:14); there is no weakness or deficiency of courage inherent in the word. He who is thus influenced will listen carefully to what others have to say and, if it appears that the course he has adopted is an erroneous one, he will not hesitate to abandon it, and to accept that which is right. Such a one will not persist in a course that is wrong, simply because it is that originally launched; he will readily yield to convincing argument and sound logic. This disposition will exhibit itself both inwardly and outwardly. One who is “easy to be entreated,” will utilize the same gentle forbearance and persuasiveness toward others.

full of mercy and good fruits,—The foregoing characteristics oi “the wisdom which is from above,” are attitudes and dispositions of the heart; here, the writer moves to an area of conduct on the part of the Christian, and designates the practical, outward, visible aspects of this wisdom. The gentle, pure, persuasive soul is also “full of mercy,” and “good fruits,”-is active in the performance of those deeds earlier described as “pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father.” (Jas 1:27.) “Mercy,” here ( ele011s) is compassion, the disposition to desire to help those in distress; and, the “good fruits,” (karpon agathon) result from such an attitude of heart. A man possessed of such a disposition is like a tree ever in bloom, and ever bestowing its blessed fruits upon those about it. This, indeed, is the test of the heart’s status; one cannot always know the condition of the tree, but one can easily determine the character of the tree by the nature of the fruit. As Jas 1:27 affords an example of the manner in which this mercy exhibits itself, so Jas 2:15 indicates the situation where such is wanting. It should be remembered that this entire section of the Epistle is by Jam es addressed primarily to teachers who are expected to exhibit in their lives the principles herein outlined. If such is to be characteristic of those who teach and preach his word, with what great severity must the Lord regard those who not only do not do such themselves, but who seek to discourage others in the performance thereof !

without variance,—“Variance, (adiakritos, from a, not, and diakrino, to distinguish), means to hesitate, to doubt; and has the marginal reading, “doubtfulness or partiality.” Thus, one without variance, does not doubt, is not drawn by divided opinions, and is stable in his views regarding religion. His attitude is exactly opposite to that of the “double-minded man” mentioned in Jas 1:8. Compare, also, Jas 1:6, and Jas 2:4, where the verb form of the same word appears.

The wisdom which is from above enables one to be furn in his views, and to entertain complete confidence in God and in his word. It is good for us to keep an open mind regarding all matters which we have not thoroughly explored, and to be willing to bring our views into harmony with any new truth we may acquire; but, we must recognize the fact that the fundamentals of the faith, which are neither obscure nor difficult, are easily grasped, and from these we should never move away, nor suffer them to be taken from us. The faithful disciple of the Lord has confirmed convictions; these convictions are grounded in a robust faith in God’s word; and to question them is to question the word, and ultimately, the Lord himself. A vacillating, changeable disposition is neither conducive to Christian growth, nor to useful service in the vineyard of the Lord ; and does not originate in the heavenly wisdom. We should all acquire and maintain principles by which to guide our lives and these may be properly obtained only from God. Those thus directed follow a compass which is not deflected by worldly acclaim or selfish interests, not by current views announced by favorite preachers. They recognize that truth is unchangeable, and that the New Testament reads exactly the same as it did a quarter of a century ago. They are consistent in attitude toward the principles of true religion because they obtained them at the source.

without hypocrisy.—(Anupokritos, from a, not; and hupokrino, hypocrisy.) The word hypokrites (a hypocrite) meant originally a play-actor, i.e., one who plays a part, and thus does not reflect his true situation. A hypocrite is, therefore, one who practices deception, one who appears to be other than what he really is. The wisdom which is from above does not prompt one to wear a niask, but to appear in one’s own true character-a character based upon the principles of true Christianity. Hypocrisy was exceedingly common among the Jews; and our Lord’s most severe denunciations were leveled against them because of this sin. (Matthew 23 :lff.) Those who are without hypocrisy, are sincere, open in their dealings, and without pretense. Hypocrisy is dishonesty; it deceives and misleads others for selfish ends, and must, therefore, be strictly avoided by all who would please the Lord. It is possible to be hypocritical not only in action but also in attitude. Feigned piety, and an affected holiness, are as contemptible in God’s sight as deceptive actions. Neither has any place in the lives of Christians.

18 And the fruit of righteousness is sown in peace—“And” (de, moreover), indicates something to be considered besides the products of the “wisdom which is from above.” It is a reference to the “good fruits,” which do result from such wisdom, and here summed up in “the fruit of righteousness,” (karpos….dikaiosunes, fruit growing out of righteousness.) “Righteousness,” is right-doing, (Psa 119:172; Act 10:34-35; see, also the comments on Jas 1:20.) Thus, the “fruit of righteousness” is the good which righteousness prompts its possessor to do. It is not correct to say that “the fruit of righteousness,” is righteousness itself. “Of righteousness,” is genitive of origin, that which issues from righteousness, in this case, fruit produced by righteousness. All the good we do issues from righteousness, which in tum, flows out of the wisdom which is from above. All that is bad issues from that “wisdom” which is from below, and which is earthly, sensual, devilish. Isaiah said, “And the work of righteousness shall be peace; and the effect of righteousness, quietness and confidence for ever.” (Isa 32:17.) Thus, the fruit is that which comes from the tree–righteousness. For comparaable expressions, see “fruits worthy of repentance” (Luk 3:8), and “the fruit of light” (Eph 5:9), where, in the former instance the fruit is to be distinguished from the repentance, and in the latter from the light. The meaning is that the blessed results of righteousness can never prosper except in an atmosphere of peace.

The “fruit of righteousness” is “sown in peace,” (en eirenei spttiretai, sown in the sphere of peace.) Peace is its rightful and proper habitat; it is the realm where righteousness grows and flourishes, and where its fruit-good deeds-abound. Righteousness is the seed from which good deeds grow, and the good deeds then become seeds from which further fruit springs. It is the responsibility of all-particularly teachers and preachers-to cultivate peace by sowing good deeds which are expressions of righteousness. The fruit of righteousness is a holy life. This is sown in peace, not in strife, conflict, and war. Peace is conducive to the spread of the truth, and contributes to it; whereas, strife, division, faction and partyism hinder and restrain it. Here, again, we observe the close connection between the Epistle of James, and the Sermon on the Mount:

“Blessed are the peacemakers : For they shall be called sons of God.” (Mat 5:9.)”The fruit of righteousness is sown in peace For them that make peace.” (Jas 3:18.)

Peacemakers are intimately related to God; being acknowledged by him as “sons;” and the harvest of that which is sown in peace is the “fruit of righteousness.” David said, “Light is sown for the righteous, and gladness for the upright in heart.” (Psa 97:11.)

for them that make peace.—(Tois poiousin eirenen, by the ones making peace.) See Eph 2:15, where a similar: phrase occurs. Peace was, by the ancient Hebrew writers, regarded as one of the most desirable forms of blessedness; and, those possessed of this grace would be those who sowed the seed of, and later harvested “the fruit of righteousness.” Peace is, indeed, a fruit of righeousness; and it, in tum, becomes the sphere in which righteousness and all which issues from it grows and flourishes. To this the true wisdom leads, and in it finds its noblest accomplishments. Christ is our peace (Eph 2:14), and through him we are reconciled to God. The peace which he gives is available through righteousness-the keeping of his commandments. In him we have peace, peace with ourselves, peace with one another, peace with God. “Mercy and truth are met together; righteousness and peace have kissed each other.” Whether the phrase should be rendered,. “for them that make peace,” or “by them that make peace,” (the question cannot be definitely decided), it is clear that what is taught here is that peacemakers are the ones who sow the seed the fruit of which is righteousness. It is an action which finds its origin in, develops by, and ends in a state of peace.

Discussion Questions on James Chapter Three

(The question numbers refer to the verse number.)

1.How important is it to teach the truth?

What is implied in the phrase stricter punishment?

Will judgment be worse for those who teach falsely?

Why will judgment be stricter for teachers?

Does this passage suggest that we don’t need teachers?

2.List some ways we stumble.

How do we stumble in word?

Are any of us a perfect man?

What is a bridle? What does it do?

What would it take to bridle the whole body?

3.Explain the use of a bit in a horse’s mouth.

How does this control the horse?

Why does turning the head direct the whole body?

4.What does the rudder do on a large ship?

What is the point of the bit and rudder examples?

5.What is the meaning of the word tongue in this chapter?

The tongue (as used here) is: a) a muscle in the mouth; b) a language (English or Spanish, for example); c) the words uttered

What does it take to start a large forest fire?

How does this illustration compare with the tongue?

6.How is the tongue a fire?

How is the tongue a world of iniquity?

How does the tongue defile the whole body?

How is the tongue set on fire by hell?

What is hell in this passage?

What does the Greek word gehenna mean?

What is the difference in the Greek words gehenna and hades in the New Testament?

7.Name some animals that might be tamed.

Name some animals that might be pets in your house.

What animals are tamed in a circus?

If we can tame tigers, why can’t we tame the tongue?

8.Why can’t we tame our tongue?

What kind of training will it take to control the tongue?

Discuss: Companion in Mal 2:14.

How is the tongue an unruly evil?

Why does James say it is full of deadly poison?

9.How do we bless with the tongue?

List some ways we use the word bless today.

How do we curse with the tongue?

Does this mean we use profanity or take God’s name in vain?

What is the contradiction mentioned in this verse?

How are we made in the similitude of God?

10.What is the point of this verse?

Is it possible to bless and curse with the same tongue?

What does James say should not be?

11.Explain the illustration of the water from a spring.

12.Explain the example of a fig tree and grapevine.

What is the conclusion of these examples?

13.Do you know any wise men?

Is this the same as the wise men who visited the child Jesus?

Discuss the wise men in Daniel 2.

How would you define wise and understanding?

What is meekness?

Does having wisdom keep us from sinning?

14.What is envy?

What is bitter envy?

Why is self-seeking (selfish ambition in KJV) included here?

What is boasting?

Why is boasting wrong?

Is it ever OK to boast?

15.What is the difference in earthly wisdom and heavenly wisdom?

Why is earthly wisdom called sensual?

What does James mean by calling this wisdom demonic?

16.What is every evil thing?

Study 1Th 5:22.

What is the confusion mentioned here?

How do envy and self-seeking lead to evil things?

17.How would you describe wisdom that is from above?

How is it pure?

How is it peaceable?

How is it gentle?

How is it willing to yield?

How is it full of mercy?

How does it bear good fruit?

How is it without partiality?

How is it without hypocrisy?

Where can you buy this kind of wisdom?

18.What is the fruit of righteousness?

Name some kinds or types of peace.

How can we have peace with God?

How can we live in peace with others?

How can we find internal peace?

Did Jesus come to bring peace?

Compare – Luk 2:8-14 and Mat 10:34.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

the wisdom: Jam 3:15, Jam 1:5, Jam 1:17, Gen 41:38, Gen 41:39, Exo 36:2, 1Ki 3:9, 1Ki 3:12, 1Ki 3:28, 1Ch 22:12, Job 28:12, Job 28:23, Job 28:28, Pro 2:6, Isa 11:2, Isa 11:3, Dan 1:17, Luk 21:15, 1Co 2:6, 1Co 2:7, 1Co 12:8

first: Jam 4:8, Mal 3:3, Mat 5:8, Phi 4:8, Tit 1:15, 1Jo 3:3

peaceable: 1Ch 22:9, *marg. Isa 2:4, Isa 9:6, Isa 9:7, Isa 11:2-9, Isa 32:15-17, Rom 12:18, Heb 12:14

gentle: Isa 40:11, 1Co 13:4-7, 2Co 10:1, Gal 5:22, Gal 5:23, Eph 5:9, 1Th 2:7, 2Ti 2:24, Tit 3:2

full: Joh 1:14, Act 9:36, Act 11:24, Rom 15:14, 2Co 9:10, Phi 1:11, Col 1:10

without: Jam 2:4, Mal 2:9, 1Ti 5:21

partiality: or, wrangling

hypocrisy: Isa 32:6, Mat 23:28, Luk 12:1, Luk 12:2, Joh 1:47, Rom 12:9, 1Pe 1:22, 1Pe 2:1, 1Jo 3:18

Reciprocal: Gen 13:8 – Let Exo 23:3 – General 1Sa 2:29 – and honourest 1Sa 18:15 – wisely 1Ki 4:29 – God 1Ki 6:7 – neither hammer 1Ki 12:13 – answered 2Ch 1:11 – that thou mayest 2Ch 9:23 – God Ezr 7:25 – the wisdom Job 36:3 – fetch Psa 18:35 – gentleness Psa 34:14 – seek Pro 14:29 – slow Pro 16:21 – wise Pro 24:23 – things Pro 30:5 – word Ecc 2:19 – wise under Ecc 2:26 – wisdom Ecc 9:17 – General Isa 32:17 – the work Mat 5:7 – are Mat 7:17 – every Mat 15:12 – Knowest Mat 22:16 – neither Joh 3:3 – again Act 6:3 – full Rom 1:14 – both to 1Co 4:21 – and 1Co 7:15 – but 1Co 14:33 – but 2Co 5:16 – know we no 2Co 13:11 – live Eph 1:17 – the spirit Eph 4:3 – General Phi 4:2 – that Col 1:9 – wisdom Col 3:12 – mercies Col 3:16 – all Col 4:5 – Walk 1Ti 4:12 – in word 1Ti 5:1 – entreat 2Ti 2:7 – and Heb 12:11 – peaceable Jam 1:20 – General Jam 1:27 – Pure Jam 2:1 – with Jam 3:13 – with meekness 1Pe 2:18 – the good 1Pe 3:8 – having 1Pe 3:11 – seek 2Pe 3:15 – according

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

MARKS OF TRUE WISDOM

But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and easy to be intreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy.

Jam 3:17

This text is often misapplied. It is used to promote rather than restrain religious controversy, whereas the whole context of the passage shows that its application is designed to foster the Christian graces.

I. Marks of true wisdom.

(a) Pure. This may be applied to doctrine, practice, and life.

(b) Peaceable. There is no room for the controversial spirit in the heart that is filled with wisdom from above.

(c) Gentle. There is no truer mark of a real Christian than a quiet and gentle spirit. It was possessed by Him Who is made unto us Wisdom, for when He was reviled He reviled not again. To be like Christ we must be meek and gentle.

(d) Easy to be intreated. We all know of men and women who in their dealings with their fellow-men are as hard as nails. They resist every appeal made to them; they have no compassion.

(e) Full of mercy and good fruits. How can the man filled with Divine wisdom be otherwise? He has obtained mercy, and he seeks therefore to be merciful. The unmerciful servant lacked wisdom, and he met with his reward.

(f) Without partiality. Divine wisdom makes men and women large-hearted. It is because so many of us lack this wisdom that the lines

The ways of men are narrow,

But the gates of heaven are wide

have passed into a proverb of reproach against Christian people. We who believe in the Fatherhood of God must accept the corollary of the Brotherhood of man.

(g) Without hypocrisy. Sincerity is one of the chiefest of Christian virtues. The world cannot tolerate a hypocrite. Let transparent honesty rule our life.

II. Have we this wisdom?It may be ours; it should be ours, for God has made abundant provision. If any man lack wisdom let him ask of God, Who giveth to all men liberally. Ask, and ye shall receive, and like the Lord Himself you shall increase in wisdom day by day.

Illustration

It is a principle of the Gospel that he who gets mercy shows mercy. When a man is full of mercy in this sinning, suffering world, a stream of benevolence will be found flowing in his track all through the wilderness. If the reservoir within his heart be kept constantly charged by union with the upper spring, there need be neither ebbing nor intermission of the current.

Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary

Jas 3:17. In verses 14-16 James designates the kind of wisdom that does not come from above (or heaven); the present verse describes the kind that does come from the higher source. First pure signifies that it is of the most importance for a man’s information to be pure or unmixed with anything false. Then peaceable indicates that peace is not to be desired unless it is according to the truth. That is why Paul placed it on condition in Rom 12:18. Gentle means to be mild and fair in one’s temperament even when insisting on truth as being preferable to peace. Easy to be in-treated is all from one Greek word that means to be of a yielding disposition and not stubborn when the heavenly wisdom is presented. Full of mercy means that one’s life is merciful toward those in difficulties whenever the occasion arises, and not only when it is the most convenient to be so. Fruits are the deeds that are performed and heavenly wisdom will prompt one to produce good deeds. Without partiality denotes an attitude that does not show respect of persons. (See chapter 2:1-4.) Without hypocrisy means that our expressions of friendliness to others will be sincere and not a mere pretense. A tree Is known by its fruit, hence if a man is being influenced by the wisdom that is from above, he will exhibit the characteristics that are described in this verse.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Jas 3:17. But. Now follows a description of the heavenly wisdom in contrast to the earthly. The heavenly wisdom is described by seven qualities which, as has been well said, are nothing but the seven colours of the one ray of light of heavenly truth which has appeared and been revealed in Christ Himselfthe Wisdom of God.

the wisdom which is from above is first, in the first place. Purity is its primary quality; all other qualities of heavenly wisdom are subservient to this. We must, however, beware of perverting this remark in the interests of intolerance and party-strife; these are the bitter fruits, not of heavenly, but of earthly wisdom.

pure, free from all impure and corrupt mixtures; separated from everything that offends; no stain of sin must pollute it; everything that is morally evil is abhorrent to its nature. The word is to be taken in its widest sense, as all sin is impurity.

then peaceable, opposed to envy and party-strife; desirous to make and maintain peace. The spirit of love will cause us, as much as possible, to live peaceably with all men; instead of strife there will be a readiness to be reconciled.

gentle, kind, forbearing, considerate, making every allowance for the ignorance and frailties of others, imitating the character of Him who is meek and lowlythe gentle Jesus.

easy to be intreated, or rather, easy to be persuaded, willing to be reconciled when differences arise, and always ready to meet its opponents half way.full of mercy and good fruits, benevolent, compassionate to the afflicted, charitable to the poor, ready to extend relief and assistance to the destitute.

without partiality. This has been variously rendered. Some, without contending, not entering into controversy; others, without judging, not finding fault with others; others, not making a difference, that is, impartial. Perhaps the most correct meaning, and most in accordance with the doctrine of St. James, is, without wavering or doubting; not feeble or changeable, without vacillation(see Note on Jas 2:4).

and without hypocrisy, without pretence, showing a naturalness in behaviour, meaning all the kindness it expresses, without affectation, its actions being in accordance with its words.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Our apostle here enters upon a comparison between earthly wisdom, and spiritual heavenly wisdom; between wisdom that is not, and wisdom that is from above.

Observe, 1. That wisdom which is not from above characterized and described. 1. It is earthly, it is suited to earthly minds, and it is employed about earthly things: earthly wisdom is mere folly; it is said to be wise only for this world, and to have such an unsavory spirit as will relish nothing but what is earthly. 2. Sensual; such wisdom as tendeth only to gratify the senses, and is conversant about outward pleasures, which are the pleasures of the beast, and not of the man: such sensual satisfactions do only please the sensitive appetite, which it is the highest rational pleasure to mortify an subdue. 3. Devilish; because it is such wisdom as is found in the devil; he is only wise to do mischief. As a man has a fleshly part in common with the beast, so there are some sins which the Scripture calls fleshly and beastly lusts, as uncleanness, riot, excess, and the like; but as man has somewhat in common with the angels, namely, his spirit and soul, so there are some sins which are called Satan’s lusts, His lusts he will do Joh 8:44.

Thus envy, pride, wrath, revenge, malice, slander, these sins make a man devilish, like unto Satan; hence is St. Paul’s exhortation, To cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit. 2Co 7:1

Lord, pity the deplorable ruins of mankind, compassionate fallen man, who hath not only somewhat of the beast, but also somewhat of the devil, in him by nature! O deplorable degradation! And should he sacrifice himself, he could not save himself without a sanctifier: he must be restored to the divine likeness here, or never enjoy his Maker hereafter.

Observe, 2. He next describes spiritual wisdom to us, and that, first by its original, it is from above. All wisdom is known by its descent; carnal wisdom is of the earth earthly; spiritual wisdom is from above, and has a heavenly Author, and its original and descent is heavenly: The wisdom that is from above.

Secondly, he describes spiritual wisdom by its effects and fruits, by its properties and qualities, and reckons up eight of them.

1. True wisdom is pure and holy wisdom, and sinless craftiness: the heart of such a person is clean, though not wholly free from sin, and his way is undefiled: this pure wisdom will not brook the filthiness either of error in judgment, or sin in practice: error is a blot as well as sin, and is as damnable as sin; the one is an open road, the other a secret path to hell and destruction; he that is wise, and has a due care of his soul’s salvation, will be as much afraid of erroneous principles, as he is of debauched practices. 2. Peaceable: true wisdom teaches to avoid all strife and contention: there is a sweet connection between wisdom and peace; the wisest are the meekest men; they are peaceable and peace-makers; not ready to provoke others, nor easily provoked themselves: such as see most need of pardon from God, are most ready to pardon others, to live peaceable with all: yet note, though wisdom be pure and peaceable, yet it is first pure, then peaceable; as God is the first and best of Beings, so purity is the first and best of blessings; the chief care then must be for purity and truth; but next to purity we must regard peace: truth must be preferred, but peace must not be neglected; we must treat with God by prayer, and treat with man by condescension, as far as a good conscience will suffer, for obtaining and preserving peace: The wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable. 3. True wisdom is gentle, in opposition to strife and contention; the word also signifies moderate and patient, Php 4:5 1Ti 3:3. Such a Christian is moderate in doubtful opinions, moderate in his judging of others, moderate and patient in his whole conversation, receding sometimes from his own right for peace sake. 4. Easy to be entreated; not inflexible, but persuadable: he that has an inflexible will, had need have an infallible judgment. Indeed there may be a flexibility and easiness to a fault; some good natures (as they are called) are easily drawn away to sin by evil company, and wicked counsel; in such a case, to turn a deaf ear to all entreaties is not obstinacy, but religious resolution. 5. Full of mercy; this has a double object, such as want, and such as offend: and so there is mercy in giving and in forgiving: it is the glory of a man to pass by a transgression, and the honour of a Christian to put on bowels of mercy: without this garment we shall appear naked at the bar of God. 6. Full of good works. Religion is not a dry rod, but it blossoms and brings forth fruit; fruits of humanity and civil courtesy, as well as fruits of piety and pious charity: when we begin to be religious, we must not leave off to be kind and courteous: Be pitiful, be couteous, 1Pe 3:8. 7. Without partiality; that is, without making any difference between person and person, because of outward respects, which is a high point of wisdom; folly discovers itself in nothing more than by doting upon outward splendor. Fools, like children, account nothing good but what is gay; but wisdom teaches us to value and put an estimate upon persons and things, according to their intrinsic worth, and doth nothing by partiality. 8. Without hyposcrisy: in true wisdom there is no prevailing guile, but a true simplicity, and godly sincerity found with it, and this is the highest piece of wisdom; the hypocrite is the greatest fool; the sincere Christian is the truly wise, and the only wise man. The wisdom from above is pure and peaceable, without partiality, and without hypocrisy.

Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament

The Fruits of Heavenly Wisdom

In contrast to the wisdom from the devil, James presents the wisdom from heaven. He begins his list of the fruits of heavenly wisdom with the word “pure.” It might be described as being free from fault. To achieve freedom from fault, one must submit his life to the Savior. He must be willing to repent and be baptized in the name of Jesus to receive remission from his sins ( Act 2:38 ).

“Peaceable” describes a peace lover. Jesus said the peacemakers would be called children of God ( Mat 5:9 ). After all, God sent his Son to make peace between himself and sinful man ( Rom 5:8-10 ; Eph 2:13-16 ). The wisdom which comes down from God is also “gentle.” That is, fair in its treatment of others and mild mannered. “Willing to yield” describes one with an open mind who can be persuaded to change when the facts are laid before him.

The one with God’s wisdom will likewise be full of compassion, or “mercy.” (compare Mat 6:14-15 ). Jesus repeatedly filled this role while on earth ( Mat 8:1-17 ; Mat 9:1-8 ; Mat 9:18-38 ; Mat 14:13-21 ; Mat 23:37 ). God’s wisdom will cause a man to be full of “good fruits”, too. Our Lord said, “A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a bad tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Therefore by their fruits you will know them” ( Mat 7:18-20 ). The American Standard Version translates the next word by putting “variance.” Roberts says, “here the word seems to mean ‘not vacillating,’ ‘not acting one way in one circumstance and another in a different one.'” The man who is truly wise will not be doubtful or uncertain in his actions (Remember 1:8). Neither will he have “hypocrisy.” This originally stood for an actor on a stage, thus one who was acting like someone other than himself. Jesus gave stern warnings to the scribes and Pharisees because of their hypocrisy ( Mat 23:1-39 ).

True wisdom will produce right living in the wise. That right living will be a fruit sown in the fertile ground of peace. This will in its own turn produce peace in the lives of the wise and those with whom they associate ( Jas 3:17-18 ).

Jas 4:1

Fleshly Gratification

Having just talked about peace, it is natural that James would go on to discuss the origin of strife. The strife of which James speaks is that between brethren. He could also be describing the battle that goes on within a brother. No matter which of the two he had in mind, James discovered the true source of all war. “Wars” describes a state of conflict, while “fights” refers to individual battles. These conditions arise because of one’s seeking for pleasure or gratification of fleshly desire ( Jas 4:1 ).

Paul described to Titus the state of Christians before they were washed. “For we ourselves were also once foolish, disobedient, deceived, serving various lusts and pleasures, living in malice and envy, hateful and hating one another” ( Tit 3:3 ). Such desire arrays itself against the man ( 1Pe 1:22 ; Luk 8:14 ). The pursuit of its fulfillment will cause one to fight against all in his way, including brethren (compare Rom 7:23 ). The results of such cause us to remember James’ discussion of earthly wisdom in 3:14-16. Obviously, conflicts are born of such false wisdom. Though we do not rejoice in it, the early church had some of the same problems we see today ( 1Co 6:1-8 ; 1Co 14:23-40 ; Gal 5:15 ; Eph 4:1-16 ; Php 4:1-3 ).

Fuente: Gary Hampton Commentary on Selected Books

Jas 3:17. But the wisdom that is from above Of celestial origin; which comes from God; is first pure From all unholy and corrupt mixtures, whether of error or sin. It is agreeable to the tenor of divine and evangelical truth, and conscientious in the discharge of every duty to God and man; it is therefore purified from all that is earthly, sensual, and devilish; then peaceable Desirous of making and maintaining peace; and willing, in order thereto, to sacrifice any thing, except important truth and manifest duty; gentle Soft, mild, yielding, not rigid; easy to be entreated Persuaded and reconciled where any matters of disgust may have arisen; not stubborn, sour, morose; full of mercy Of pity and compassion toward persons in a state of ignorance, guilt, and depravity; ready to relieve the miseries and pardon the faults of others; and good fruits Both in the heart and in the life; two of which are immediately specified; without partiality To those of our own sentiments or denomination, to the injury of others; loving all without respect of persons; embracing all good things, rejecting all evil. The original word, , is, literally, without making a difference. This character of true religion was very properly mentioned to those whom the apostle had rebuked for their respect of persons, Jas 2:1-9. Without hypocrisy Intending all the kindness it expresses, and glad to extend its good offices as universally as possible; or without dissimulation, as may be rendered; that is, frank and open. Thus, in this beautiful passage, St. James describes the excellent nature of that temper which is recommended by the Christian religion, and the happy effects which it produces. It is the highest wisdom; it comes from God, and makes those who receive it holy and happy. All the apostles, except Paul, were illiterate men; but, according to their Masters promise, they had, by the inspiration of the Spirit, a wisdom and eloquence given them, far exceeding what they could have acquired by the deepest erudition. Of the fulfilment of Christs promise, the epistle of James is a striking proof. Search all heathen antiquity, and see whether it can produce any sentiments more noble, or more simply and beautifully expressed, than those contained in this chapter, and indeed throughout the whole epistle. Macknight.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, [and] easy to be intreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy.

One of the conclusions I came to in my study in wisdom was that real wisdom comes from God, but that assumed and flaunted wisdom is from self. Beyond all that this distinction makes is seen in the list that James sets forth here.

Wisdom from God is:

“Pure” James says “first pure,” not that pure is the first in the list, even if it is, but that most importantly it is pure. Or, truly it is pure. The word speaks of moral purity, being immaculate, or something that excites reverence. Without blemish, might be a good line of thought.

When you speak forth out of your wisdom is it as pure as the driven snow, or is there something not quite so pure about what you say?

“Peaceable” would relate to being undisturbed by trifles or free from agitation. It relates to being undisturbed by trifles. I didn’t watch much of the Supreme Court Chief Justice confirmation hearings but I was impressed with Judge Roberts as he listed to the questions of the lunatics on the committee and made good answer in spit of their total lack of wisdom. He was not swayed or upset or disturbed with the little stuff, because he knew what the result was going to be. He concentrated on the majors and allowed the minors or trifles to blow on by.

This peace among men comes from our peace with God. If the up and down relationship is correct then the horizontal relationships will also be correct.

Of course the committee was irritate that they couldn’t upset the man, they goaded him, they shot barbs at him, were very rude and cantankerous with him, but he made his point – let’s deal with the big, correct issues not this petty stuff you are toying around with.

“Gentle” is, according to the lexicon, related to being patient, to moderation, to being suitable or equitable and fair. Someone suggested that it might mean to allow for the limitations of others, being patient with those that are less able to.

Yesterday I was entering an intersection on a green light when a woman made a left hand turn in front of me. I was very “gentle” with her; I just called her dingbat, rather than some of those other words that she so richly deserved. I was allowing for her limitations, which was her limited ability to drive, as well as her limited mental capacity. That was sarcasm; don’t take me too literally 🙂

“Easy to be entreated” indicates that the person is open to reason, open to be talked to, open to possible change. It has the idea of compliant.

Now, that has a wide set of ramifications in the church today. Complaint takes on a whole different character if your pastor is a dictator. YOU WILL BE COMPLIANT probably isn’t the thought of James, it would be more the thought of when someone comes to you with a problem, you are open to listen and work out the solution. Compliant would carry with it the idea of compliant with what is right. You don’t want to comply or become part of error.

“Full of mercy” Full means full, or topped off – it is used of a person full of thought toward good or bad. “Mercy” is a desire for kindness toward another with the desire to extend that kindness. When the big storm hit New Orleans great mercy was shown by the public toward the survivors. They opened their cupboards, they opened their pocket books and they even opened their homes to the plight of the people. The desired to help and they took action on that desire.

“Full of good fruits” is simply a person that fills their time doing good. “Fruit” relates to the fruit you eat, fruit of the field or fruit of your physical being, your children. The joy of doing good, should be evident the first time that one does a good thing. The joy of doing is a great reward. When traveling I would often stop to give assistance to people having car trouble.

What a joy to help them get themselves out of a terrible situation. One night late we stopped and a man was stranded. He had no flashlight nor tools with him and we were in a deserted part of the freeway. We towed him down off the interstate and took a look at the car. His battery terminals were in need of attention and within a few minutes he was up and running. I gave him a tract as I left.

As we drove off the man was in his car reading the tract by the light of the dome light. What a feeling of accomplishment and a real feeling that I existed for a purpose that night.

I am afraid, I don’t stop any more due to the danger, well now and then I do if it looks like it is safe. I changed this custom one day when I stopped to help two fellows. One had a big wrench in his hand but they didn’t know what was wrong with the car. I wondered to my self, so why does he think it will take that big a wrench to fix it when he doesn’t know what is wrong. I stuck my head under the hood and could see him moving around behind me, so I casually moved around to the front of the car and when he moved around behind me again, I moved to the side and headed for my car wishing them good luck. I really didn’t want my head to become an extension to that wrench.

“Without partiality” relates to being fair, no matter who the person is, be they black or white, Jew or Gentile, rich or poor. Treat all the same way. In the above illustration of our helping travelers, we stopped to assist families, old clunker cars, and nice new cars, anyone that was in trouble. The joy of those we helped was the same, and the joy we received was the same – all are equal, and all should be treated equally.

“Without hypocrisy.” Absolute honesty with yourself as well as with others. The church is to be a place of openness and honesty among its people but I find all too often that there are secrets, lies and half truths within believer’s relationships with others.

I find that boards are not totally honest with the people, pastors are not necessarily honest with their people, and I rather doubt that the congregation is all that honest toward the leadership either.

How do we think we can function when we treat one another with so little respect? We have no trust, we have no respect and we have little honest communication. That makes for a rather stunted church.

And so, with this long list of advantages to Godly wisdom why don’t we relate to Jam 1:5 more often? “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all [men] liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.”

It seems to me that if we were wise Paul’s exhortation to the Ephesians would be our gain. Eph 4:29-32 “Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers. 30 And grieve not the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption. 31 Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice: 32 And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you.”

Fuente: Mr. D’s Notes on Selected New Testament Books by Stanley Derickson

3:17 But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, [and] easy to be intreated, full of {d} mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy.

(d) He sets mercy against the fierce and cruel nature of man, and shows that heavenly wisdom brings forth good fruits, for he that is heavenly wise, refers all things to God’s glory, and the profit of his neighbours.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

3. The importance of loving peace 3:17-18

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)

In contrast, the wisdom God gives has several characteristics. It is pure, meaning free of the defilements mentioned. It is peaceable, namely, peace-loving, peace-practicing, and peace-yielding. It is gentle or considerate of others. It is reasonable, that is, open to reason and willing to yield to reasonable requests. It is full of mercy in that it is actively sympathetic to the needy, and it is full of good fruits (good works). It is unwaveringly single-minded in its devotion to God rather than double-minded. It is, finally, without hypocrisy, namely, true to appearances.

"Thus ’purity’ is not just one quality among others but the key to them all." [Note: Adamson, p. 154.]

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)

Chapter 17

THE WISDOM THAT IS FROM ABOVE.

Jam 3:17-18

AT the beginning of his Epistle St. James exhorts those of his readers who feel their lack of wisdom to pray for it. It is one of those good and perfect gifts from above, which come down from the Father of lights, who “giveth to all liberally, and upbraideth not”. {Jam 1:5; Jam 1:17} He now, after having sketched its opposite, states, in a few clear, pregnant words, what the characteristics of this heavenly gift of wisdom are. In both passages he probably had in his mind, and wished to suggest to the minds of his readers, well-known utterances on the same subject in the Books of Proverbs, Ecclesiasticus, and Wisdom.

“My son, if thou cry after discernment, and lift up thy voice for understanding; if thou seek her as silver, and search for her as for hid treasures; then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord, and find the knowledge of God. For the Lord giveth wisdom; out of His mouth cometh knowledge and understanding”. {Pro 2:3-6}

Again, the magnificent “Praise of Wisdom” in the twenty-fourth chapter of Ecclesiasticus, in which Wisdom is made to tell her own glories, opens thus: “I came forth from the mouth of the Most High, and covered the earth like a cloud”; and it continues, “Then the Creator of all things gave me a commandment, and He that created me caused my tabernacle to rest, and said, Let thy dwelling be in Jacob, and thine inheritance in Israel. Before time was, from the beginning, He created me, and until times cease I shall in nowise fail” (vv. 3, 8, 9).

And in the similar passage in the Book of Wisdom, in which the praise of Wisdom is put into the mouth of Solomon, he says, “Wisdom, which is the worker of all things, taught me. She is the breath of the power of God, and a pure emanation from the glory of the Almighty: therefore doth no defiled thing fall into her. For she is the effulgence {: Heb 1:3} of the everlasting light, the unspotted mirror of the power of God, and the image of His goodness. And being one, she can do all things; and remaining in herself, she maketh all things new; and in all generations entering into holy souls, she maketh them friends of God, and prophets. For God loveth nothing but him that dwelleth with wisdom” (7:22, 25-28).

Three thoughts are conspicuous in these passages. Wisdom originates with God. It is consequently pure and glorious. God bestows it upon His people. These thoughts reappear in St. James, and to them he adds another, which scarcely appears in the earlier writers. Wisdom is “peaceable, gentle, easy to be entreated, full of mercy, and good fruits.” In Proverbs we do indeed read that “all her paths are peace” (Pro 3:17); but the thought is not followed up. It does not seem to occur to the son of Sirach; and not one of the twenty-one epithets which the writer of Wisdom piles up in praise of this heavenly gift (7:22, 23) touches upon its peaceable and placable nature. It was left to the Gospel to teach, both by the example of Christ and by the words of His Apostles, how inevitably the Divine wisdom produces, in those who possess it, gentleness, self-repression, and peace.

“But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, easy to be entreated.” The “first” and the “then” may be seriously misunderstood. St. James does not mean that the heavenly wisdom cannot be peaceable and gentle until all its surroundings have been made pure from everything that would oppose or contradict it; in other words, that the wise and understanding Christian will first free himself from the society of all whom he believes to be in error, and then, but not till then, will he be peaceable and gentle. That is, so long as folly and falsehood remain, they must be denounced, and made either to recant or to retire; for only when they have disappeared will wisdom show itself easy to be entreated. Purity, i.e., freedom from all that would dim the brightness of truth, must precede peace, and there can be no peace until it is obtained.

This interpretation contradicts the context, and makes St. James teach the opposite of what he says very plainly in the sentences which precede, and in those which follow, the words which we are considering. It tries to enlist him on the side of partisanship and persecution, at the very moment when he is pleading most earnestly against them. He is stating a logical, and not a chronological order, when he declares that true wisdom is “first pure, then peaceable.” In its inmost being it is pure; among its very various external manifestations are the six or seven beneficent qualities which follow the “then.” If there were no one to be gentle to, no one coming to entreat, no one needing mercy, the wisdom from above would still be pure; therefore this quality comes first.

When the author of the Book of Wisdom says that wisdom is “a pure emanation from the glory of God: therefore can no defiled thing fall into her” (7:25), he is thinking of a pure stream, into which no foul ditch is able to empty its polluting contents, or of a pure ray of light, which does not admit of mixture with anything that would color or darken it. He does not use the word for pure which we have here () but one which signifies “unmixed,” and hence “unsullied” () and which occurs in Php 1:10 and 2Pe 3:1. The word used here by St. James is akin to “holy” (), and primarily signifies what is associated with religious awe (), and hence “hallowed,” especially by sacrifice. From this it became narrowed in meaning to what is free from the pollution of unchastity or bloodshed. As a Biblical word it sometimes has this narrow meaning; but generally it implies freedom from all stain of sin, and therefore is not far removed in meaning from “holy.” But it is worth noting that whereas Christ and good men are spoken of as both pure and holy, yet God is called holy, but never pure. Divine holiness cannot be assailed by any polluting influence. Human holiness, even that of Christ, can be so assailed, and in resisting the assault it remains “pure.”

In the passage before us “pure” must certainly not be limited to mean simply “chaste.” The word “sensual,” applied to the wisdom from below, does not mean unchaste, but living wholly in the world of sense; and the purity of the heavenly wisdom does not consist merely in victory over temptations of the flesh, but in freedom from worldly and low motives. Its aim is that truth should become known and prevail, and it condescends to no ignoble arts in prosecuting this aim. Contradiction does not ruffle it, and hostility does not provoke it to retaliate, because its motives are thoroughly disinterested and pure. Thus, its peaceable and placable qualities flow out of its purity. It is “first pure, then peaceable.” It is because the man who is inspired with it has no ulterior selfish ends to serve that he is gentle, sympathetic, and considerate towards those who oppose him. He strives, not for victory over his opponents, but for truth both for himself and for them; and he knows what it costs to arrive at truth. We have a noble illustration of this temper in some of the opening passages of St. Augustines treatise against the so-called “Fundamental Letter” of Manichaeus. He begins thus:-

“My prayer to the one true God Almighty, of whom, and through whom, and in whom are all things, has been and is, that in refuting and disproving the heresy of you Manichaeans, to which you adhere perchance more through thoughtlessness than evil intent, He would give me a mind composed and tranquil, and aiming rather at your amendment than your discomfiture It has been our business, therefore, to prefer and choose the better part, that we might have an opportunity for your amendment, not in contention, and strife, and persecutions, but in gentle consolation, affectionate exhortation, and quiet discussion; as it is written, The Lords servant must not strive, but be gentle towards all, teachable, forbearing, in meekness correcting them that oppose themselves”

“Let those rage against you who know not with what toil truth is found, and how difficult it is to avoid errorsLet those rage against you who know not with how great difficulty the eye of the inner man is made whole, so that it can behold its SunLet those rage against you who know not with what sighs and groans it is made possible, in however small a degree, to comprehend God.”

Finally, let those rage against you who have never been deceived by such an error as that whereby they see you deceived

“Let neither of us say that he has already found the truth. Let us seek it as if it were unknown to us both. For it can be sought for with zeal and unanimity only if there be no rash assumption that it has been found and is known.”

And to the same effect, although in a different key, a critical writer of our own day has remarked that “by an intellect which is habitually filled with the wisdom which is from heaven, in all its length and breadth, objections against religion are perceived at once to proceed from imperfect apprehension. Such an intellect cannot rage against those who give words to such objections. It sees that the objectors do but intimate the partial character of their own knowledge.”

It will be observed that while the writer just quoted speaks about the intellect, St. James speaks about the heart. The difference is not accidental, and it is significant of a difference in the point of view. The modern view of wisdom is that it is a matter which mainly consists in the strengthening and enrichment of the intellectual powers. Increase of capacity for acquiring and retaining knowledge; increase in the possession of knowledge: this is what is meant by growth in wisdom. And by knowledge is meant acquaintance with the nature and history of man, and with the nature and history of the universe. All this is the sphere of the intellect rather than of the heart. The purification and development of the moral powers, if not absolutely excluded from the scope of wisdom, is commonly left in the background and almost out of sight. What St. James says here is fully admitted: the highest wisdom keeps a man from the bitterness of party spirit. But why? Because his superior intelligence and information tell him that the opposition of those who dissent from him is the result of ignorance, which requires, not insult and abuse, but instruction. St. James does not dissent from this view, but he adds to it. There are further and higher reasons why the truly wise man does not rail at others, or try to browbeat and silence them. Because, while he abhors folly, he loves the fool, and would win him over from his foolish ways; because he desires not only to impart knowledge, but to increase virtue; and because he knows that strife means confusion, and that gentleness is the parent of peace. Christians are charged to be “wise as serpents, but harmless as doves.”

The Scriptural view of wisdom does not contradict the modern one, but it is taken from the other side. In it the education of the moral and spiritual powers is the main thing, while intellectual advancement is in the background or out of sight. There is nothing in the teaching of Christ or his Apostles that is hostile to intellectual progress; but neither by His example, nor by the directions which His disciples received or delivered, do we find that culture was regarded as part of, or necessary to, or even a very desirable companion for, the Gospel. Neither Christ nor any one of His immediate followers came forward as a great promoter of intellectual pursuits. Why is this? It would perhaps be a sound and sufficient answer to say, that valuable as such work would have been, there was much more serious and important work to be done. To convert men from. sin to righteousness was far more urgent than to improve their minds. But there is more to be said than this. That perverse generation had to “turn, and become as little children,” before it could enter into the kingdom of heaven. To develop a mans intellectual powers is not always the best way to make him “humble himself as a little child.” Increase of knowledge may make a Newton feel like a child picking up pebbles on the shore of truth, but it is apt to make “the natural man” less childlike. But for no one, whether catechumen, or convert, or mature Christian, can the cultivation of his intellect be as pressing a duty as the cultivation of his heart. “To speak with the tongues of men and of angels,” and to “know all mysteries and all knowledge,” is as nothing in comparison with love. And it is in some measure possible to see why this is so. Mans moral nature certainly suffered, and ruinously suffered, at the Fall. It is not so certain that his intellectual nature suffered also. If it did suffer, it suffered through the moral nature, because depravation of the heart depraved the brain. In neither case would there be any necessity for the Gospel to pay special attention to the regeneration of the intellect. If mans intellect was unscathed by his fall from innocence, it could continue its natural development, and go on from strength to strength towards perfection. If, however, the loss of innocence has entailed a loss of mental capacity, then the wound inflicted on the intellectual nature through the moral nature must be healed in the same way. First purify the heart and regenerate, the will, and then the recovery of the intellect will follow in due course. It is easy to reach the intellect through the heart, and this is what the wisdom that is from above aims at doing. If we begin with the intellect, we shall very likely end there; and in that case the man is not raised from his degradation, but equipped with additional powers of mischief. “Into a soul that deviseth evil, wisdom will not enter, nor yet dwell in a body that is sunk in sin”. {/RAPC Wis 1:4}

“Full of mercy and good fruits.” The wisdom from above is not only peaceable, reasonable, and conciliatory, when under provocation or criticism, it is also eager to take the initiative in doing all the good in its power to those whom it can reach or influence. Thus it goes hand in hand with that pure and undefiled religion which visits “the fatherless and widows in their affliction” {Jam 1:27}. Just as St. James has no sympathy with a faith which does not clothe the naked and feed the hungry, and offer of its best to God, {Jam 2:15-16; Jam 2:21} nor with a tongue which blesses God and curses men, {Jam 2:9} so he has no belief in the heavenly character of a wisdom which holds itself aloof in calm superiority to all cavil and complaint, with a condescending air of passionless impartiality. The intellectual miser, who gloats over the treasures of his own accumulated knowledge, and smiles with lofty indifference upon the criticisms and squabbles of the imperfectly instructed, has no share in the wisdom that is from above. He is peaceful and moderate, not but of love and sympathy, but because his time is too precious to be wasted in barren controversy, and because he is too proud to place himself on a level with those who would dispute with him. No selfish arrogance of this kind has any place in the character of the truly wise. His wisdom not only enlightens his intellect, but warms his heart and strengthens his will. He believes that “the wise man alone is king,” and that “the wise man alone is happy,” yet not because he has the crown of knowledge and abundance of intellectual enjoyment, but because he “fulfils the royal law, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself,” {Jam 2:8} and because happiness is to be found in promoting the happiness of others.

“Without variance, without hypocrisy.” These are the last, two of the goodly qualities which St. James gives as marks of the heavenly wisdom. Similarity in sound, which cannot well be preserved in English, has evidently had something to do with their selection (, ). The first of the two has perplexed translators, and the English versions give us considerable choice: “without variance,” “without wrangling,” “without partiality,” “without doubtfulness,” “without judging.” Purvey has for the two epithets “deeming without feigning,” following the Sixtine edition of the Vulgate, which has judicans sine simulatione, instead of non judicans, sine simulatione. The word occurs nowhere else either in the Old or in the New Testament; but it is cognate with a word which St. James uses twice at the beginning of this Epistle, {, Jam 1:6} and which is there rendered “doubting” or “wavering.” Of the various possible meanings of the word before us we may therefore prefer “without doubtfulness.” The wisdom from above is unwavering, steadfast, singleminded. Thus Ignatius charges the Magnesians (15) to “possess an unventuring spirit” ( ), and tells the Trallians (1) that he has “learned that they have a mind unblameable and unwavering in patience” ( ). And Clement of Alexandria (“Paed.,” II 3, p. 190) speaks of “unwavering faith” ( ), and a few lines farther on he reminds his readers, in words that suit our present subject, that “wisdom is not bought with earthly coin, nor is sold in the market, but in heaven.” If he had said that wisdom is not sold in the market, but given from heaven, he would have made the contrast both more pointed and more true.

“The fruit of righteousness is sown in peace for them that make peace.” The Greek may mean either “for them that make peace,” or “by them that make peace”; and we need not attempt to decide. In either case it is the peacemakers who sow the seed whose fruit is righteousness, and the peacemakers who reap this fruit. The whole process begins, progresses, and ends in peace.

It is evident that the heavenly wisdom is preeminently a practical wisdom. It is not purely or mainly intellectual; it is not speculative; it is not lost in contemplation. Its object is to increase holiness rather than knowledge, and happiness rather than information. Its atmosphere is not controversy and debate, but gentleness and peace. It is full, not of sublime theories or daring hypotheses, but of mercy and good fruits. It can be confident without wrangling, and reserved without hypocrisy. It is the twin sister of that heavenly love which “envieth not, vaunteth not itself, seeketh not its own, is not provoked, taketh no account of evil.”

Fuente: Expositors Bible Commentary