Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of James 2:23
And the Scripture was fulfilled which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness: and he was called the Friend of God.
23. And the scripture was fulfilled ] The use of the words commonly applied to the fulfilment of prophetic utterances implies that St James saw in the statement of Gen 15:6 that which, though true at the time, was yet also an anticipation of what was afterwards to be realised more fully. Of that prophecy, as of others, there were, to use Bacon’s phrase, “springing and germinant accomplishments.” What was then reckoned as righteousness continued to be reckoned, as with an ever-increasing value, which reached its maximum in the sacrifice of the son who was the heir of the promise.
and he was called the Friend of God ] The words seem to refer, in the English version of the Bible, to 2Ch 20:7 and Isa 41:8, where the term “my friend” is applied to Abraham by Jehovah. Singularly enough, however, the term is not found in the Hebrew, nor in the LXX. version, with which St James, writing in Greek, must have been familiar, and which gives, in the first of the two passages, “Abraham thy beloved,” and in the second, “whom I loved.” The distinctive title first appears in Philo’s citation of Gen 18:1 ( De resipisc. No, c. 11), and, after St James, in Clement of Rome ( Epist. ad Cor. I. 10). It was probably the current phrase in the Jewish schools, and has descended to the Arabs, with whom the name of El Khalil Allah (the friend of God), or more briefly El Khalil, has practically superseded that of Abraham. Even Hebron, as the city of Abraham, and so identified with him, has become El Khalil, “the friend.”
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And the Scripture was fulfilled which saith – That is, the fair and full meaning of the language of Scripture was expressed by this act, showing in the highest sense that his faith was genuine; or the declaration that he truly believed, was confirmed or established by this act. His faith was shown to be genuine; and the fair meaning of the declaration that he believed God was carried out in the subsequent act. The passage here referred to occurs in Gen 15:6. That which it is said Abraham believed, or in which he believed God, was this: This shall not be thine heir (namely, Eliezer of Damascus), but he that shall come forth out of thine own bowels, shall be thine heir. And again, Look now toward heaven, and tell the stars, if thou be able to number them. And he said unto him, So shall thy seed be, Jam 2:3-5. The act of confiding in these promises, was that act of which it is said that he believed in the Lord; and he counted it to him for righteousness.
The act of offering his son on the altar by which James says this Scripture was fulfilled, occurred some 20 years afterward. That act confirmed or fulfilled the declaration. It showed that his faith was genuine, and that the declaration that he believed in God was true; for what could do more to confirm that, than a readiness to offer his own son at the command of God? It cannot be supposed that James meant to say that Abraham was justified by works without respect to faith, or to deny that the primary round of his justification in the sight of God was faith, for the very passage which he quotes shows that faith was the primary consideration: Abraham believed God, and it was imputed, etc. The meaning, therefore, can only be, that this declaration received its fair and full expression when Abraham, by an act of obedience of the most striking character, long after he first exercised that faith by which he was accepted of God, showed that his faith was genuine. It he had not thus obeyed, his faith would have been inoperative and of no value. As it was, his act showed that the declaration of the Scripture that, he believed was well founded.
Abraham believed God, and it was imputed … – See this passage fully explained in the notes at Rom 4:3.
And he was called the friend of God – In virtue of his strong faith and obedience. See 2Ch 20:7; Art not thou our God, who didst drive out the inhabitants of this land before thy people Israel, and gavest it to the seed of Abraham thy friend forever? Isa 41:8. But thou, Israel, art my servant, Jacob whom I have chosen, the seed of Abraham my friend. This was a most honorable appellation; but it is one which, in all cases, will result from true faith and obedience.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Verse 23. The scripture was fulfilled] He believed God; this faith was never inactive, it was accounted to him for righteousness: and being justified by thus believing, his life of obedience showed that he had not received the grace of God in vain. See Clarke on Ge 15:6; “Ro 4:3“; “Ga 3:6“; where this subject is largely explained.
The friend of God.] The highest character ever given to man. As among friends every thing is in common; so God took Abraham into intimate communion with himself, and poured out upon him the choicest of his blessings: for as God can never be in want, because he possesses all things; so Abraham his friend could never be destitute, because God was his friend.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
And the Scripture was fulfilled; this illustrious instance of Abrahams obedience did so clearly evidence the sincerity of his faith, that it did most plainly appear, that what the Scripture said of him, it spoke most truly, viz. that he did indeed believe God,
and it was counted to him for righteousness. Things are said to be fulfilled when they are most clearly manifested. As those words, Psa 2:7; This day have I begotten thee, are said to be fulfilled at Christs resurrection, Act 13:32,33; not that he was then first begotten of the Father, but that he was then in a glorious manner declared to be the Son of God by the resurrection from the dead, Rom 1:4. So here Abrahams offering up his son being the evident discovery of his faith, it did by that appear, that the Scripture report of him was true, that he
believed God, & c.: he did believe before, and his faith was imputed to him before, but it was never so fully made known, as by this so high an act of obedience.
It was imputed unto him for righteousness; viz. as apprehending Christ in the promise. Faith is said to be imputed for righteousness, Rom 4:3-6, as being the instrument or means of applying Christs righteousness, by which elsewhere we are said to be justified, Rom 3:24,25; 5:19; 2Co 5:21; Phi 3:9.
And he was called the Friend of God; either he was the friend of God; to be called, sometimes times implies as much as to be, Isa 48:8; or properly, he was called, 2Ch 20:7; Isa 41:8; and that not only on the account of Gods frequent appearances to him, conversing with him, revealing secrets to him, Gen 18:17,18; Joh 15:15, and entering into covenant with him; but especially his renewing the covenant with him upon the sacrificing of his son, and confirming it by oath, and thereby, as it were, admitting him into a nearer degree of friendship, Gen 22:16, &c.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
23. scripture was fulfilledGe 15:6, quoted by Paul, asrealized in Abraham’s justification by faith; but by James, asrealized subsequently in Abraham’s work of offering Isaac,which, he says, justified him. Plainly, then, James must meanby works the same thing as Paul means by faith, onlythat he speaks of faith at its manifested development, whereas Paulspeaks of it in its germ. Abraham’s offering of Isaac was not a mereact of obedience, but an act of faith. Isaac was the subject of thepromises of God, that in him Abraham’s seed should be called. Thesame God calls on Abraham to slay the subject of His own promise,when as yet there was no seed in whom those predictions could berealized. Hence James’ saying that Abraham was justified by sucha work, is equivalent to saying, as Paul does, that he was justifiedby faith itself; for it was in fact faith expressed in action,as in other cases saving faith is expressed in words. So Paul statesas the mean of salvation faith expressed. The “Scripture”would not be “fulfilled,” as James says it was, butcontradicted by any interpretation which makes man’s worksjustify him before God: for that Scripture makes no mention of worksat all, but says that Abraham’s belief was counted to him forrighteousness. God, in the first instance, “justifies theungodly” through faith; subsequently the believer isjustified before the world as righteous through faithmanifested in words and works (compare Mt25:35-37, “the righteous,” Mt25:40). The best authorities read, “But Abraham believed,”c.
and he was called the Friendof GodHe was not so called in his lifetime, though hewas so even then from the time of his justification but he wascalled so, being recognized as such by all on the ground ofhis works of faith. “He was the friend (in an activesense), the lover of God, in reference to his works; and (in apassive sense) loved by God in reference to his justificationby works. Both senses are united in Joh 15:14;Joh 15:15” [BENGEL].
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And the Scripture was fulfilled,…. Ge 15:6 which speaks of Abraham’s faith, and the imputation of to him for righteousness; for the above action of Abraham, in offering up his son, was a clear proof of the truth of his faith, there commended: by this it was made known what a strong faith he had in God, and what reason there was to believe that he was a justified person.
Abraham believed God, and it was imputed to him for righteousness;
[See comments on Ro 4:3] which shows both that Abraham was justified before he wrought this work, and therefore that could not be the cause or matter of his justification, but only an effect and evidence of it; and that his justification was by faith, or that object which his faith regarded, and had to do with, was his justifying righteousness:
and he was called the friend of God, 2Ch 20:7 he was loved by God with an everlasting love, who showed acts of friendship to him; called him by his grace, and blessed him with spiritual blessings, and increased him with the increase of God; favoured him with near communion with him, honoured him with high characters, and distinguished him by peculiar marks of his favour, and reckoned his enemies and friends as his own; Ge 12:8 and Abraham, on the other hand, loved God, and showed himself friendly to him; trusted in him, and believed every word of his; readily complied with his will, and not only yielded a cheerful obedience to his commands, but enjoined his children after him to observe them: this was a name which Abraham was well known by among the eastern nations; hence he is called by the Mahometans, , “Khalil Allah”, the friend of God; and Mahomet says himself c,
“God took Abraham for his friend.”
c Koran, Sura 4:125.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Was fulfilled (). First aorist passive indicative of , the usual verb for fulfilling Scripture. So James quotes Ge 15:6 as proving his point in verse 21 that Abraham had works with his faith, the very same passage that Paul quotes in Ro 4:3 to show that Abraham’s faith preceded his circumcision and was the basis of his justification. And both James and Paul are right, each to illustrate a different point.
And he was called the friend of God ( ). First aorist passive indicative of . Not a part of the Scripture quoted. Philo calls Abraham the friend of God and see Jubilees 19:9; 30:20. The Arabs today speak of Abraham as God’s friend. It was evidently a common description before James used it, as in Isa 41:8; 2Chr 20:7.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Was fulfilled [] . Not was confirmed, which the word does not mean either in New – Testament or in classical usage, but was actually and fully realized. James here uses the formula which in the Old Testament is employed of the realizing of a former utterance. See 1Ki 2:27; 2Ch 36:22 (Sept.).
Imputed [] . Lit., as Rev., reckoned.
He was called the friend of God. The term, however, does not occur either in the Hebrew or Septuagint, though it is found in the A. V. and retained in Rev. Old Testament. In 2Ch 20:7 (Sept.), thy friend tw hjgaphmenw, thy beloved. In Isa 41:8 (Sept.), my friend is on hjgaphsa whom I loved. “The friend of God” is still the favorite title of Abraham among the Jews and Mohammedans.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) Abraham’s offering Isaac upon the altar confirmed Old Testament Scriptures that had asserted Abraham believed God. His offering of his son was imputed or calculated or accredited to him for, or with reference to righteousness, because this act caused him to be called “a friend of God”, Gen 15:6, to which Jas 2:21 refers and Isa 41:8; 2Ch 20:7.
2) Abraham’s offering his son Isaac did not cause him to start loving God or to start having faith in God. His sacrificial act was an outward demonstration of his inward love for God and faith in God and His Word, Rom 4:3.
3) Faith in God, in the sense of trust for salvation, must precede all religious ceremonies on an individual’s part that will be pleasing to God. Rom 4:3 asserts that Abraham believed God and “it”, his belief, was counted, computed or calculated “for righteousness.” James then describes how this righteousness was manifested in Abraham’s life after he had been saved-.
4) There is no contradiction between the writing of the Apostle Paul in Rom 4:1-25 on the subject of Abraham’s faith and that of Jas 2:1-26. Harmony always exists in the Scriptures when understood in the setting of each writer’s writings, in their contextual setting.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
23 And the Scripture was fulfilled. They who seek to prove from this passage of James that the works of Abraham were imputed for righteousness, must necessarily confess that Scripture is perverted by him; for however they may turn and twist, they can never make the effect to be its own cause. The passage is quoted from Moses. (Gen 15:6.) The imputation of righteousness which Moses mentions, preceded more than thirty years the work by which they would have Abraham to have been justified. Since faith was imputed to Abraham fifteen years before the birth of Isaac, this could not surely have been done through the work of sacrificing him. I consider that all those are bound fast by an indissoluble knot, who imagine that righteousness was imputed to Abraham before God, because he sacrificed his son Isaac, who was not yet born when the Holy Spirit declared that Abraham was justified. It hence necessarily follows that something posterior is pointed out here.
Why then does James say that it was fulfilled? Even because he intended to shew what sort of faith that was which justified Abraham; that is, that it was not idle or evanescent, but rendered him obedient to God, as also we find in Heb 11:8. The conclusion, which is immediately added, as it depends on this, has no other meaning. Man is not justified by faith alone, that is, by a bare and empty knowledge of God; he is justified by works, that is, his righteousness is known and proved by its fruits.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(23) The scripture was fulfilled.Namely, that earlier declaration of God (Gen. 15:6) when the childless Abraham, with only a Syrian slave for his heir, trusted in the divine promise that his own seed should be as the number of the stars of heaven.
Abraham believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness.He proved his faith by obedience, when he freely gave back to the Giver his son, the heir of all the promise.
The Friend of God.Amatus a Deobeloved of Him, not the friend to God, nor lover of Him, as some have hastily imagined. It is not an exact quotation from the Hebrew Bible, though the substance thereof may be found in Isa. 41:8. The term was traditional throughout the East, and is used by the Arabs as descriptive of the patriarch to this day.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
23. Fulfilled By the external act of faith the works the faith received a consummation, a perfection, whereby the very Scripture declaring his justification by faith, was visibly fulfilled.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘And the scripture was fulfilled which says, “And Abraham believed God, and it was reckoned to him for righteousness”, and he was called the friend of God.’
So Abraham’s action in offering Isaac in obedience to God’s command brought to completeness (fulfilled) his action of earlier believing in God and His promises, and thus being reckoned as righteous. It demonstrated to Heaven and earth that it was true that he really was righteous, and had become so those many years before when he believed. His action in offering Isaac had not made him righteous. It had simply demonstrated that he was righteous. It had capped many years of faithful response. Once Isaac had been delivered no one could ever again be in doubt about the fact that he was the friend of God, one on whom God smiled, and one who loved God, and it had all been made apparent because of his actions, his ‘works’.
For ‘the friend of God’ see 2Ch 20:7, ‘did you not give — this land for ever to Abraham your friend?’ Notice there that this demonstrates that he was called the friend of God on the basis of Gen 15:18 where he was promised the land, and not on the basis of Genesis 22, where he was not promised the land. Again in Isa 41:8 Abraham is seen as Abraham’s friend, but in that case it was because he was specially chosen. Thus Abraham became God’s friend, first because he was chosen, and then because he believed God. His works simply proved that he recognised Him as his friend.
We can compare here the many who came to Jesus and said that they believed, and that they accepted Him as their Lord, and then went away smugly satisfied but unchanged. They felt that they had done their bit and that Jesus should be grateful. But Jesus said of them, ‘not every one who says to me ‘Lord, Lord’ will enter under the Kingly Rule of God, but only those who do the will of My Father Who is in Heaven’ (Mat 7:21). For how can we be said to have entered under the Kingly Rule of God if we do not do His will? And how can we be said to have been ‘saved’ (‘made whole’) if we have in fact become no different? If we have become no different then the truth is that God has passed us by. But if that is so it is our fault not His.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Jam 2:23. And the scripture was fulfilled, &c. The passage here referred to, is recorded Gen 15:6 and is there applied to Abraham’s firm trust in the promise of God, concerning a son and heir. Now that was about fifty years before his binding Isaac as a victim upon the altar (Gen 22:9; Gen 22:24.); by which act of obedience St. James here intimates, that the passage mentioned, Gen 15:6 was fulfilled; not that that passage was a prophesy, or prediction of this event, but that the words which were then used concerning the faith of Abraham, were now in a higher sense applicable to that patriarch; because he had now fully demonstrated his faith by a most signal act of obedience. The Jews used this, or the like expression, that such or such a scripture was fulfilled, in a very great latitude. Frequently, indeed, they understood by it an accomplishment of a prediction in the strict and primary sense; but very often they intended no more by it than to say, that a similar event happened; that there was a very remarkable agreement in particular circumstances between former and latter things; that a general rule or saying was applicable to a particular case: and finally, they often used such expressions, when they meant no more than that the words of Holy Scripture, or of some antient prophet, might be aptly accommodated to the case in hand, or were very proper to express their present meaning. This text itself is sufficient to shew us, that they did not always intend by it the accomplishment of a prophesy: but there are many other passages, both in the New Testament, and in the writings of the Jewish Rabbis, to confirm this interpretation. See on Rom 10:13.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Jas 2:23 . Since what was said of Abraham in the preceding appears to conflict with the Scripture, Gen 15:6 , James was obliged to solve this apparent contradiction, therefore he adds to what he has said: and ( thus ) the Scripture was fulfilled which says , “ But Abraham believed God, and it was reckoned to him for righteousness; and he was called a friend of God. ” Most expositors (also von Oettingen) explain by comprobare, confirmed, and find here the thought expressed, that by Abraham being justified , the scripture: “that faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness,” received its confirmation. But in this explanation of the word there is an arbitrary weakening of the idea. signifies neither in the N. T. nor in classical usage: “to confirm ,” but always “to fulfil ” (see Cremer); with regard to a saying, the realization of the thought expressed in it by an action following is indicated by , whether that saying be in the form of a prediction or not. This meaning of the verb is also here to be recognised, and indeed so much the more as James uses the formula with which not only in the N. T. but also in the O. T. (1Ki 2:27 ; 2Ch 36:22 ; 1Ma 2:55 ) generally the fulfilment of a proper prediction, and always the real proof of an earlier spoken thought, is expressed.
The scripture which was fulfilled is Gen 15:6 , where it is said not only that Abraham believed Jehovah, but that He (Jehovah) reckoned it to him for righteousness. James (as also Paul in Rom 4:3 ; Gal 3:6 ; see also 1Ma 2:52 ) cites the passage according to the LXX., where the passive is used instead of the active ; whilst he only deviates from the Greek text in this, that he (as also Paul in Rom 4:3 ) uses instead of ; it is to be observed that in the corresponding passage, Psa 106:31 , the passive is also in the Hebrew.
Instead of the expression used in these passages, the form: , is also found in the O. T. Deu 24:13 ; Deu 6:25 (where the LXX. incorrectly translate by ). The contrary of this is indicated by the expression: , Pro 27:14 .
All these expressions import a judgment which God pronounces to Himself on a definite conduct of man, by which He either reckons it for righteousness or for a curse; with Abraham it was his faith on account of which God declared him a righteous person.
But in what does James see the fulfilment of this scripture, that testifies this judgment of God on believing Abraham? Evidently in what he had already said, namely, that Abraham , and which he indicates by what follows: ; for these words since they belong not to the scripture are co-ordinate not with , but with . . . It is true God regarded Abraham as His ( is not, as Hofmann and Philippi think, God’s friend, who loved God, but God’s friend whom God loved [153] ) the instant he reckoned his faith to him for righteousness; but he was called so at a later period, namely, only at the time that he was declared righteous by God on account of his works. The expressions and are not regarded by James as equivalent, but according to his representation the former was imparted to Abraham purely on account of his faith ( ), but the latter only when his faith was completed by works, thus on account of his works ( ), so that thereby that scripture was fulfilled. It is true this scripture is abstractly no promise; but as it notifies facts which point to later actions in which they received their full accomplishment, James might consider it as a word of promise which was fulfilled by the occurrence of these later actions. [154]
The appellation of Abraham as a is not indeed found in the LXX.; but in 2Ch 20:7 , Jehoshaphat calls him in his prayer (LXX.: ), and in Isa 41:8 God Himself calls him (LXX.: ); comp. also Ges. Asar . v. 11: ; also it was not unusual for the Jews to call him ; to Gen 18:17 , the LXX. have added to the words , for which Philo puts . It is evident from what has preceded that we cannot, with Grotius, Hornejus, Pott, and others, explain = factus est, fuit.
[153] Lange comprehends both; but at all events, according to the context, the reference given above is to be recognised as the prevailing one.
[154] Namely: the faith with which Abraham received the promise of God points to the later obedience, and the divine reckoning of his faith for righteousness points to the declaration of righteousness imparted to him by God at a later period after proof of his obedience.
REMARK.
When de Wette explains by realized , this is so far inappropriate, as does not directly refer to the fact itself, but to the saying of scripture, and as neither of of Abraham, nor of ., can it be said that it “was something not yet wholly real, but the full realization of which occurred only at a later period.” For although both point to a later period, yet there was in them something which had actually taken place, as Lange correctly adduces. Hofmann also gave an incorrect reference to the word, explaining it: “In the offering of Isaac it was proved that God had rightly estimated the faith of Abraham when He counted it for righteousness;” for, on the one hand, there was no need of a proof that God had rightly estimated something, of which there is no indication in James, and, on the other hand, has not the meaning of confirming or proving. [155] In opposition to the explanation of Philippi: “the scriptural expression concerning Abraham’s justification by faith was, because His justification by faith is in itself a thing invisible as it were, an unfulfilled prophecy, until it became visible through proof by works,” it is, apart, from the unjustifiable insertion of “ as it were ,” to be observed that Abraham’s act of obedience, happening at a later period, confirmed indeed his faith (thus that ), but not the righteousness adjudged to him on account of his faith (that .), and accordingly would be suitable only for the first half of the scriptural expression. It is peculiar that, according to the explanation of Philippi, the same meaning: “to be proved,” is in essence ascribed to the three words
, , .
[155] Also in Brckner’s explanation: “Both the fact that Abraham believed God, and that this faith was reckoned to him by God for righteousness, was confirmed and proved in the offering of Isaac, leading to this that Abraham ,” the idea receives not its right meaning. Lange has here in essentials adopted the correct meaning.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
23 And the scripture was fulfilled which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness: and he was called the Friend of God.
Ver. 23. And it was imputed ] See Trapp on “ Gen 15:6 “ See Trapp on “ Rom 4:3 “ See Trapp on “ Gal 3:6 “
The friend of God ] A very high style. If Eusebius held it such an honour to be the friend of Pamphilus, and Sir Fulk Greville, Lord Brook, to be friend to Sir Philip Sidney, causing it to be so engraven upon his tomb; what is it to be the friend of God? And yet such honour have all the saints.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
23 .] and the Scripture was fulfilled which saith, But ( , LXX) Abraham believed God, and it was reckoned unto him for righteousness (i. e. that saying of Scripture, which long preceded the offering of Isaac, received its realization, not, it may be, its only realization, but certainly its chief one, in this act of obedience. It was not, until this, fulfilled, in the sense of being entirely exemplified and filled up. Wiesinger combats this sense as an unworthy one, and follows Wolf and Knapp in understanding and not only “cum illud ipsum quod prdictum erat evenit, sed etiam ubi tale quid accidit quo ejusmodi dicta. quoquo modo vel confirmantur et illustrantur.” But this is not satisfactory, unless the case in point be such a prominent illustration as to constitute the main fulfilment; and then we come to much the same point. No such objection as that which Wiesinger brings (viz. that we make thus the truth of God’s saying depend on Abraham’s subsequent conduct) lies against our view, that the saying received on and not till this occasion its entire and full realization. It was true, when uttered: but it became more and more gloriously true of Abraham’s life and acts till it reached this its culminating point, in his chief act of self-denying obedience): and he was called (couple with not with ) God’s friend (‘amatus a Deo,’ not ‘amans Deum.’ This appellation of Abraham is not found in the LXX. In ref. Gen., where they have , Philo, De Resip. No, 11, vol. i. p. 401, cites it . . And in Isa 41:8 the words are rendered by the vulg. “semen Abraham amici mei,” and by the E.V. “the seed of Abraham my friend.” So also in 2Ch 20:7 ).
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Jas 2:23 . There is some little looseness in the way the O.T. is used in these verses; in Jas 2:21 mention is made of the work of offering up Isaac, whereby, it is said (Jas 2:22 ), faith is perfected; then it goes straight on (Jas 2:23 ) to say that the Scripture was fulfilled which saith, “Abraham believed ”; this reads as though the quotation were intended to refer to the offering up of Isaac, the proof of perfected faith; but as a matter of fact the quotation refers to Abraham’s belief in Jehovah’s promise to the effect that the seed of Abraham was to be as numerous as the stars of heaven. In the O.T., that is to say, there is no connection between the quotation from Gen 15:6 and the offering-up of Isaac. This manipulation of Scripture is strongly characteristic of Jewish methods of exegesis. : the N.T. = Septuagint, which differs from the Hebrew in reading instead of , and the passive for the active. Faith, according to Jewish teaching, was a good deed which was bound to bring its reward; it was one of those things which demanded a reward; the phrase (“the merit of faith, i.e. , “trustfulness”) occurs in Beresh. Rabba , chap. 74, where it is parallel to (“the merit of [keeping] the Law”); merit, that is to say, is acquired by trusting God, just as merit is acquired by observing the precepts of the Torah ; the man who has acquired sufficient merit is in a state of Zecth, i.e. , in that state of righteousness, attained by good works, wherein he is in a position to claim his reward from God. Very pointed, in this connection, are the reiterated words of Christ in Mat 6:5 ; Mat 6:16 , “Verily, I say unto you, they have received their reward”. : Cf. 2Ch 20:7 ; Isa 41:8 ; Dan. 3:35 (Septuagint); in Sir 6:17 the Septuagint reads: , ; the Hebrew has: “For as He Himself is, so is His friend, and as is His name, so are his works” (“works” must refer, most likely, to the “friend,” not to God); the Syriac runs: “They that fear God show genuine friendship, for as He Himself is, so are His friends, and as is His name, so are His works”. In the Book of Jubilees , xix. 9, it says in reference to Abraham; “For he was found faithful (believing), and was written down upon the heavenly tablets as the friend of God”; this is repeated in xxx. 20, but from what is said in the next verse it is clear that all those who keep the covenant can be inscribed as “friends” upon these tablets. Deissmann ( Bibelstudien , pp. 159 f.) points out that at the court of the Ptolemies was the title of honour of the highest of the royal officials. In Wis 7:27 the “friends of God” is an expression for the “righteous”. The phrase , therefore, while in the first instance probably general in its application, became restricted, so that finally, as among the Arabs, “the friend of God,” Khalil Allah , or simply El Khalil , became synonymous with Abraham. Irenus, iv. 16, iv. 34, 4, refers to Abraham as “the friend of God,” but he does not mention our Epistle; if a reference to this was intended it is the earliest trace of an acquaintance with it. See, further, an interesting note of Nestle’s in the Expository Times , xv. pp. 46 f.; cf. Gen 18:17 where the Septuagint reads, , which is quoted by Philo with instead of . . In the MS., 69 in the verse before us is rendered (see critical note above).
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
James
GOD’S FRIENDS
Jam 2:23 .
When and by whom was he so called? There are two passages in the Old Testament in which an analogous designation is applied to the patriarch, but probably the name was one in current use amongst the people, and expressed in a summary fashion the impression that had been made by the history of Abraham’s life. A sweet fate to have that as the brief record of a character, and to be known throughout the ages by such an epitaph. As many of us are aware, this name, ‘the Friend,’ has displaced the proper name, Abraham, on the Lips of all Mohammedan people to this day; and the city of Hebron, where his corpse lies, is commonly known simply as ‘the Friend.’
‘My object in this sermon is a very simple one. I merely wish to bring out two or three of the salient elements and characteristics of friendship as exercised on the human level, and to use these as a standard and test of our religion and relation to God.
But I may just notice, for a moment, how beautiful and blessed a thought it is which underlies this and similar representations of Scripture – viz., that the bond which unites us to God is the very same as that which most sweetly and strongly ties men to one another, and that, after all, religion is nothing more or less than the transference to Him of the emotions which make all the sweetness of human life and society.
Now, I shall try to bring out two or three points which are included in that name, ‘the Friend of God,’ and to ask ourselves if they apply to our relations to Him.
I. First, friends trust and love one another.
Mutual confidence is the mortar which binds the stones in society together, into a building. It makes the difference between the herding together of beasts and the association of men. No community could keep together for an hour without mutual confidence, even in regard of the least intimate relationships of life. But it is the very life-blood of friendship. You cannot say, ‘A.B. is my friend, but I do not trust him.’ If suspicion creeps in, like the foul malaria of tropical swamps, it kills all friendship. Therefore ‘he was called the Friend of God’ is by James deduced from the fact that ‘he believed God, and it was imputed to him for righteousness.’ You cannot make a friend of a man that you do not know where to have. There may be some vague reverence of, or abject reluctant submission to, ‘the unknown God,’ the something outside of ourselves that perhaps makes for righteousness; but for any vivid, warm throb of friendship there must be, first, a clear knowledge, and then a living grappling of that knowledge to my very heart, by my faith. Unless I trust God I cannot be a friend of God’s. If you and I are His friends we trust Him, and He will trust us. For this friendship is not one-sided, and the name, though it may be ambiguous as to whether it means one whom I love or one who loves me, really includes both persons to the compact; and there are analogous, if not identical, emotions in each. So that, if I trust God, I may be sure that God trusts me, and, in His confidence, leaves a great deal to me; and so ennobles and glorifies me by His reliance upon me.
But whilst we know that this belief in God was the very nerve and centre of Abraham’s whole character, and was the reason why he was called the friend of God, we must also remember that, as James insists upon here, it was no mere idle assent, no mere intellectual conviction that God could not tell lies, which was dignified by the name of belief, but that it was, as James insists upon in the context, a trust which proved itself to be valid, because it was continually operative in the life. ‘Faith without works is dead.’ ‘And Abraham, our father, was he not justified by works?’
And so the Epistle to the Hebrews, if you will remember, traces up to his faith all the chief points in his life. ‘By faith he went out from the land where he dwelt; by faith he dwelt in tabernacles,’ in the promised land, believing that it should be his and his seed’s; ‘by faith’ he offered up his son on the altar.
Thus we come to this, that the heavenly and the earthly friend, like friends on the low levels of humanity, love each other because they trust each other, I have said that the words ‘My friend’ may either mean one whom I love or one who loves me, but that the two things are in the present connection inseparable. Only let us remember where the sweet reciprocation and interchange of love begins. ‘We love Him because He first loved us.’ ‘When we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son.’ And so we have to turn to that heavenly Friend, and feel that as life itself, so the love which is the life of life, has its beginning in Him, and that never would our hearts have turned themselves from their alienation, unless there had poured down upon them the attractive outflow of His great love. It was an old fancy that, wherever a tree was struck by lightning, all its tremulous foliage turned in the direction from which the bolt had come. When the merciful flash of God’s great love strikes a heart, then all its tendrils turn to the source of the life-giving light, and we love back again, in sweet reverberation to the primal and original love. Dear brethren, I lay upon your heart and mine this thought, that friends trust and love each other. Do we trust and love our God?
II. Friends have frank, familiar intercourse with one another.
Let us turn to the illuminatlve example in our text, and remember God’s frankness with Abraham. ‘Shall I hide from Abraham the thing that I will do?’ Let us cap that-as we can, marvellous and great as the utterance is – by another one, ‘I call you not servants, but friends; for all things that I have heard of My Father I declare unto you.’ So much for God’s frankness. What about Abraham’s frankness with God? Remember how he remonstrated with Him; how he complained to Him of His dealings; how he persisted with importunity, which would have been presumptuous but for the friendship which underlay it, and warranted the bold words. And let us take the simple lesson that if we are friends and lovers of God, we shall delight in intercourse with Him. It is a strange kind of religion that does not care to be with God, that would rather think about anything else than about Him, that is all unused to quiet, solitary conversation and communion with Him, but it is the religion of, I wonder, how many of us to-day. He would be a strange friend that never crossed your threshold if you could help it; that was evidently uncomfortable in your presence, and ill at ease till he got away from you, and that when he came was struck dumb, and had not a word to say for himself, and did not know or feel that he and you had any interests or subjects in common. Is that not a good deal like the religion of hosts of professing Christians? ‘He was called the friend of God,’ and he never, all his days, if he could help it, thought about Him or went near Him!
If we are friends of God, we shall have no secrets from Him. There are very few of those who are dearest to us to whom we could venture to lay bare all the depths of our hearts. There are black things down in the cellars that we do not like to show to any of our friends. We receive them upstairs, in the rooms for company. But you should take God all through the house. And if there is the trust and the love that l have been speaking about, we shall not be afraid to spread out all our foulness, and our meanness, and our unworthy thoughts of, and acts towards, Him, before His ‘pure eyes and perfect judgment,’ and say, ‘Nobody but my best friend could look at such a dungheap, but I spread it before Thee. Look at it, and Thou wilt cleanse it; look at it, and it will melt away. Look at it, and in the knowledge that Thou knowest, my knowledge of it will be less of a torment, and my bosom will be cleansed of its perilous stuff.’
Tell God all, if you mean to be a friend of His. And do not be afraid to tell Him your harsh thoughts of Him, and your complaints of Him. He never resents anything that a man who loves Him says about Him, if he says it to Him. What He resents – if I might use the word – is our huddling up grudges and murmurings and questionings in our own hearts, and saying never a word to the friend against whom they offend. Out with it all, brethren! Complaints, regrets, questionings, petitions, hot wishes, take them all to Him; and be sure that instead of their breaking, they will, if spoken, cement the friendship which is disturbed by secrecy on our parts.
If we are God’s lovers, He will have no secrets from us. ‘The secret of the Lord is with them that fear Him; and He will show them His covenant.’ There is a strange wisdom and insight, sometimes amounting even to prophetic anticipation, which creeps into a simple heart that is knit closely to God. But whether the result of our friendship with Him be such communication of such kinds of insight or no, we may be sure of this, that, if we trust Him, and love Him, and are frank with Him, He will in so far be frank with us, that He will impart unto us Himself, and in the knowledge of His love we shall find all the knowledge that we need.
III. Friends delight to meet each other’s wishes.
Let us go back to our story again. The humble, earthly friend of God did as God bade him, substantially all his life, from the day when he made the ‘ Great Refusal,’ and left behind him home and kindred and all, until the day when he went up the sides of Moriah to offer there his son. Abraham met God’s wishes because Abraham trusted and loved God. And what about the Divine Friend? Did He not meet Abraham’s wishes? You remember that wonderful scene, which presents, in such vivid and dramatic form, the everlasting truth that the man who bows his will to God, bows God’s will to his, when he pleaded for Sodom, and won his case by persistence and importunity of lowly prayer. And these historical notices on both sides are for us the vehicles of the permanent truth that, if we are God’s lovers and friends, we shall find nothing sweeter than bowing to His will and executing His commandments. As I dare say I have often said to you, the very mark and signature of love is that it delights to divine and fulfil the desires of the beloved, and that it moulds the will of each of the parties into conformity with the will of the other.
Ah, dear brethren I what a commentary our religion is. upon such thoughts! To how many of us is the very notion of religion that of a prohibition of things that we would much like to do, and of commands to do things that we had much rather not do? All the slavery of abject submission, of reluctant service, is clean swept away, when we understand that friendship and love find their supreme delight in discovering and in executing the will of the beloved. And surely if you and I are the friends of God, the cold words, ‘duty,’ ‘must,’ ‘should,’ will be struck out of our vocabulary and will be replaced by ‘delight,’ ‘cannot but; ‘will.’ For friends find the very life – I was going to say the voice-of their friendship in mutual obedience.
And God, the heavenly Friend, will do what we wish. In that very connection did Jesus Christ put the two thoughts of friendship with Him and His executing His disciple’s behests; saying in one breath, ‘Ye are My friends if ye do whatsoever I command you,’ and in the next, ‘Ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you.’ This conformity of will, so that there is but one will in, the two hearts, which is the very consummation and superlative degree of human friendship and love, applies as truly to the friendship between man and God.
IV. Friends give gifts to each other.
Let us go back to our story. What did Abraham give God? ‘Forasmuch as he hath not withheld his only son from Me, I know that he fears Me.’ And what does God give to His friends? ‘He that spared not His own Son, but freely delivered Him up to the death for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?’ Abraham’s gift of his son to God was but a feeble shadow of God’s gift of His Son to men. And if the surrender on the part of the human friend was the infallible token of his love, surely the surrender on the part of the heavenly Friend is no less the infallible sign of His love to all the world. Generalise these thoughts and they come to this. If we are God’s lovers God will give us Himself, in so far as we can receive Him; and all other gifts in so far as they are good and needful. If we are God’s friends and lovers we shall give Him, in glad surrender, our whole selves. And, remember, if you feel that you have separate interests from Him, if you keep things and do not let Him say, ‘These are mine’; if you grudge sacrifice, and will not hear of self-surrender, and are living lives centred in, ruled by, devoted to, self, you have little reason to call yourself a Christian. ‘Ye are My friends if ye’ – not only ‘do whatsoever I command you,’ but ‘if you give yourself to Me.’ Yield yourselves to God, and in the giving of yourselves to Him, you will get back yourselves glorified and blessed by the gift. There is no friendship if self shuts out the friend from participation in what is the other’s. As long as ‘mine’ lies on this side of a high wall, and ‘thine’ on the other, there is but little friendship. Down with the wall, and say about everything ‘Ours’; and then you have a right to say ‘I am the friend of God.’
V. Lastly, and but a word. Friends stand up for each other.
‘I am thy shield; fear not, Abraham,’ said God, when His friend was in danger from the vengeance of the Eastern kings whom he had defeated; and all through life the same strong arm was cast around him. Abraham, on his part, had to stand up for God amidst his heathen neighbours.
If we are God’s ‘friends and lovers He will take up our cause. Be sure that if God be for us, it matters not who is against us. If we are God’s friends and lovers we have to take up His cause. What would you think of a man who, in going away to a far-off country, said to some friend, ‘I wish you would look after so and so for me as long as I am gone’; and the friend would say ‘Yes!’ and never give a thought nor lift a finger to discharge the obligation? God trusts His reputation to you Christian people; He has interests in this world that you have to look after. You have to defend Him as really as He has to defend you. And it is the dreadful contradiction of religious people’s profession of religion that they often care so little, and do so little to promote the cause, to defend the name, to adorn the reputation, and to further what I may venture to call the interests, of their heavenly Friend in the world.
Dear brother, looking at these things, can you venture to say that you are a friend of God? If you cannot, what are you? Our relations to men admit of our dividing them into three – friends, enemies, nothings. We may love, we may hate, we may be absolutely indifferent and ignorant. I am afraid the three states cannot be transferred exactly to our relations to God. If not His friend, what are you? Have you only a far-off, bowing acquaintance with Him? Well, then, that is because you have neglected, if you have not spurned, His offered friendship. And, oh! how much you have lost! No human heart is a millionth part so sweet, and so capable of satisfying you as God’s. All friendship here has its limits, its changes, its end. God’s is boundless, immutable, eternal All things are the friends of God’s friend; and all things are arrayed against him who rejects God’s friendship.
I beseech you, let Him woo you to love Him; and yield your hearts to Him. ‘If when we were “enemies,” we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son,’ much more, being friends, all the fulness of His love and the sweetness of His heart will be poured upon us through the living Christ.
Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren
fulfilled. App-125.
believed. App-150.
imputed = reckoned. Greek. logizomai. See Rom 2:3 (thinkest).
righteousness. App-191. Quoted from Gen 15:6, but it received a further fulfilment after Jam 22:10, which obtained the testimony of verses: Jam 2:15-18.
friend of God. See 2Ch 20:7. Isa 41:8.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
23.] and the Scripture was fulfilled which saith, But (, LXX) Abraham believed God, and it was reckoned unto him for righteousness (i. e. that saying of Scripture, which long preceded the offering of Isaac, received its realization, not, it may be, its only realization, but certainly its chief one, in this act of obedience. It was not, until this, fulfilled, in the sense of being entirely exemplified and filled up. Wiesinger combats this sense as an unworthy one, and follows Wolf and Knapp in understanding and not only cum illud ipsum quod prdictum erat evenit, sed etiam ubi tale quid accidit quo ejusmodi dicta. quoquo modo vel confirmantur et illustrantur. But this is not satisfactory, unless the case in point be such a prominent illustration as to constitute the main fulfilment; and then we come to much the same point. No such objection as that which Wiesinger brings (viz. that we make thus the truth of Gods saying depend on Abrahams subsequent conduct) lies against our view, that the saying received on and not till this occasion its entire and full realization. It was true, when uttered: but it became more and more gloriously true of Abrahams life and acts till it reached this its culminating point, in his chief act of self-denying obedience): and he was called (couple with not with ) Gods friend (amatus a Deo, not amans Deum. This appellation of Abraham is not found in the LXX. In ref. Gen., where they have , Philo, De Resip. No, 11, vol. i. p. 401, cites it . . And in Isa 41:8 the words are rendered by the vulg. semen Abraham amici mei, and by the E.V. the seed of Abraham my friend. So also in 2Ch 20:7).
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Jam 2:23. , the Scripture was fulfilled) The sense is here anticipated by Prolepsis,[28] for it was fulfilled before it was written: but at what part of Abrahams time was it fulfilled? When he first believed, or afterwards, when he offered his son? At both times: but James especially refers to the time of the offering, since he is speaking of the state of Abraham after his justification: and to this the expression, he was called the friend of God, has reference; but from this he proves justification by works; from the former expression, justification by faith.-) I have found this particle in two Latin MSS. I mention this circumstance, lest other versions should increase the doubt respecting the genuine reading of the word.- , and he was called the friend of God) This is the second part of the whole verse; for it has no reference in its connection to the verb was fulfilled. Abraham had already been the friend of God, before his death; and after his death he was so called by his posterity, 2Ch 20:7; and by God Himself, Isa 41:8. He was the friend, in an active sense, the lover of God, which has a reference to works; and in a passive sense, loved by God, which has a reference to justification by works. Both these senses, united together by the force of the relatives, are found also in Joh 15:14. In Hebrew it is , which, in the passages cited, has an active sound, but a passive signification. At least the parallel words in Isaiah are, servant, elect, and friend; and in the Septuagint, , whom I loved, as in the passage quoted from 2 Chron. it is , beloved by Thee. On which place also the Halle reviewers[29] remark, that Abraham is called by the Arabs as it were by a proper name, Alchalil, that is, the friend of God. So also Jdt 8:22, Abraham amicus Dei effectus est, though these words are not found in the Greek text.
[28] See, under the title AMPLIATIO, Append.
[29] Halle reviewers. The reference is to the Memoirs of a Library at Halle, a periodical publication under the superintendence of Baumgarten, printed in the years 1748-1751. It contains valuable information on the various editions of the New Testament. See Michaelis Introduction by Bp. Marsh.-T.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
imputation
Imputation is the act of God whereby He accounts righteousness to the believer in Christ, who has borne the believer’s sins in vindication of the law.
(See Scofield “Phm 1:18”).
righteousness (See Scofield “Rom 3:21”).
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
the scripture: Mar 12:10, Mar 15:28, Luk 4:21, Act 1:16, Rom 9:17, Rom 11:2, Gal 3:8-10, Gal 3:22, 2Ti 3:16, 1Pe 2:6
Abraham: Gen 15:6, Rom 4:3-6, Rom 4:10, Rom 4:11, Rom 4:22-24, Gal 3:6
the Friend: Exo 33:11, 2Ch 20:7, Job 16:21, *marg. Isa 41:8, Joh 15:13-15
Reciprocal: Gen 18:17 – General 1Ki 4:5 – the king’s Son 5:16 – friend Luk 12:4 – my Joh 11:11 – he saith Joh 14:21 – that hath Joh 15:14 – my Joh 15:15 – friends Rom 3:22 – unto all Rom 5:1 – being Heb 7:4 – Abraham
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Jas 2:23. Scripture was fulfilled or made good. This refers to Gen 15:6 where God had just assured Abraham that he would have a great many descendants. He knew that Abraham would finally prove his faith by his works, and hence he was regarded as a righteous man. Abraham is called the friend of God in 2Ch 20:7 and it is repeated by James. This is on the same principle that Jesus uses the word “friend” in Joh 15:14. He says they are His friends “if ye do whatsoever I command you.” There are people today who glory in calling themselves “friends,” yet they stoutly disobey and even resist many of the commands of Christ. According to Jesus they are not His friends; if not friends then they must be considered enemies.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Jas 2:23. And the scripture was fulfilled. The same expression which is employed with reference to prophetical declarations; hence the Scripture received its accomplishment. This great act of obedience on the part of Abraham was a proof of the fulfilment of the scriptural declaration made concerning him.
which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was imputed to him for righteousness; the scriptural statement. This remarkable declaration is also twice quoted by Paul (Rom 4:3; Gal 3:6). The words are by both apostles quoted from the Septuagint. In the Hebrew the verb imputed is in the active, and not in the passive voice: And he believed in the Lord, and He counted it to him for righteousness (Gen 15:6). This occurred long before Abraham offered up Isaac, indeed before the birth of Isaac. Abraham was at that early period in a justified state before God; the declaration was made concerning him; and by his offering of Isaac the scriptural declaration received its fulfilment and realization. It is therefore evident that this act of obedience was not the cause of Abrahams justification; but, because it proved that Abraham was possessed of a living faith, it fulfilled the words of Scripture.
and he was called the Friend of God; not adduced as a statement of Scripture which received its fulfilment, but an additional assertion of the favour in which Abraham stood with God. It is not directly stated that Abraham, in consequence of his offering up Isaac, received this honourable appellation, but the blessing which that name denotes is evidently presupposed: Abraham was the Beloved of God. The name is twice ascribed to Abraham in the Old Testament, according to our English version. Jehoshaphat, in his prayer, says: Thou gavest this land to the seed of Abraham thy friend (2Ch 20:7). And in the prophecies of Isaiah we read: Thou Israel art my servant, Jacob whom I have chosen, the seed of Abraham my friend (Isa 41:8). The term, however, is found neither in the Hebrew nor in the Septuagint, but is employed by Philo. And this is still the favourite description of Abraham, both by the Jews and by the Mahometans. By the Mahometans his proper name is often supplanted by the appellation El-Khalil-Allah, the Friend of God.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Jas 2:23-24. And the scripture Which was afterward written, was hereby eminently fulfilled. Abraham believed God, and it was imputed to him for righteousness. This was twice fulfilled, when Abraham first believed, and when he offered up Isaac. St. Paul speaks of the former fulfilling, and St. James of the latter. And he was called the friend of God Both by his posterity, (2Ch 20:7,) and by God himself, Isa 41:8. So pleasing to God were the works he wrought in faith! The passage of Scripture which St. James here says was fulfilled, contains two assertions: 1st, That Abraham believed God; 2d, That his believing God was counted to him for righteousness. By the offering of Isaac that scripture was confirmed or proved to be true in both its parts. For, 1st, By offering Isaac, in the firm expectation that God would raise him from the dead, and fulfil in him the promise of the numerous seed, Abraham showed that he believed God in the firmest manner. 2d, By offering Isaac, Abraham had the promise, that God would count his faith to him for righteousness, renewed and confirmed in a solemn manner with an oath. Macknight. Ye see then By this instance of the great father of the faithful, (for the characters of the children are to be estimated in the same manner as those of the father,) that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only It is by no means sufficient, in order to our salvation, that the great principles of religion be credited, if they have not their practical influence on the heart and life.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
And the scripture was fulfilled which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness: and he was called the Friend of God.
“And the scripture was fulfulled” refers to Gen 15:2 ff “And Abram said, Lord GOD, what wilt thou give me, seeing I go childless, and the steward of my house [is] this Eliezer of Damascus? 3 And Abram said, Behold, to me thou hast given no seed: and, lo, one born in my house is mine heir. 4 And, behold, the word of the LORD [came] unto him, saying, This shall not be thine heir; but he that shall come forth out of thine own bowels shall be thine heir. 5 And he brought him forth abroad, and said, Look now toward heaven, and tell the stars, if thou be able to number them: and he said unto him, So shall thy seed be. 6 And he believed in the LORD; and he counted it to him for righteousness.”
This sets Abram’s salvation as a done deal, long before he offered Isaac, thus proving that his offer of Isaac was a work unrelated to salvation, but a work proving his salvations existence. (Gen 22:9 ff is the account of Isaac being offered.) One might also call to attention that he was saved before he was circumcised. This might give the infant baptizers a slight problem because most of them relate baptism to circumcision in one way or another. Abraham was saved before his circumcision, thus anyone baptized should be saved before they get wet.
There seems to be a back side to this passage – it seems, that had Abraham not done works there would not have been that perfecting, and that Scripture would not have been fulfilled, and further that righteousness would not have been imputed, and he would not have been a friend of God.
If this be true, would not it also be true that he was not saved, because “imputed unto him for righteousness” is salvation according to many. Either we have a works salvation for Old Testament saints or we have to understand “imputed unto him for righteousness” in another way than salvation.
Rom 4:16 ff makes it clear that the righteousness was due to the faith/belief rather than any work. “Therefore [it is] of faith, that [it might be] by grace; to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed; not to that only which is of the law, but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham; who is the father of us all, 17 (As it is written, I have made thee a father of many nations,) before him whom he believed, [even] God, who quickeneth the dead, and calleth those things which be not as though they were. 18 Who against hope believed in hope, that he might become the father of many nations, according to that which was spoken, So shall thy seed be. 19 And being not weak in faith, he considered not his own body now dead, when he was about an hundred years old, neither yet the deadness of Sara’s womb: 20 He staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief; but was strong in faith, giving glory to God; 21 And being fully persuaded that, what he had promised, he was able also to perform. 22 And therefore it was imputed to him for righteousness.”
Given the Romans passage, we must understand the James text in its light. The James passage cannot contradict the Romans so they must be reconciled. Verse twenty three seems to be a separate thought from twenty-two. This would make it consistent with the Romans text. Faith is perfected or made complete by works, but works does not bring the faith, nor does it supplement faith in the area of salvation. Faith is sufficient to the salvation of man, but works are that completed picture of the faith that is present within.
Fuente: Mr. D’s Notes on Selected New Testament Books by Stanley Derickson
2:23 And the scripture was {n} fulfilled which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness: and he was called the Friend of God.
{n} Then the Scripture was fulfilled, when it appeared plainly how truly it was written about Abraham.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Gen 15:6 was "fulfilled" when Abraham offered Isaac in the sense that Abraham’s faith became abundantly clear on that occasion. What God had said about Abraham became obviously true when the patriarch trusted and obeyed God when tested.
"In the sacrifice of Isaac was shown the full meaning of the word (Gen 15:6) spoken . . . years before in commendation of Abraham’s belief in the promise of a child." [Note: Mayor, p. 104.]
James seems to have included the fact that God called Abraham His friend for the following reason. He wanted to show that continued obedient faith, not just initial saving faith, is what makes a person God’s intimate friend (cf. Jas 4:4; 2Ch 20:7; Isa 41:8; Joh 14:21; Joh 15:14).
"When a man is justified by faith he finds an unqualified acceptance before God . . . (Rom 4:6). But only God can see this spiritual transaction. When, however, a man is justified by works he achieves an intimacy with God that is manifest to men. He can then be called ’the friend of God,’ even as Jesus said, ’You are my friends if you do whatever I command you’ (Joh 15:14)." [Note: Hodges, The Gospel . . ., p. 31. See also Fanning, p. 429.]
Why did James bring Abraham into his argument? Abraham is a clear example that it is possible to be declared righteous by God but not to be declared righteous by one’s works. It was as Abraham continued to live by faith (continued to trust and obey God) that, about 20 years after his justification by faith in God, his works declared that he was righteous. By continuing to trust and obey God, as Abraham did, James’ Christian readers could also validate their justification by faith in God by their good works and become true friends of God.