Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of James 3:12
Can the fig tree, my brethren, bear olive berries? either a vine, figs? so [can] no fountain both yield salt water and fresh.
12. Can the fig tree, my brethren, bear olive berries? ] The comparison here also has an eminently local character. The court-yard of well-nigh every house had its vine and fig-tree (2Ki 18:31). The Mount of Olives supplied the other feature. The idea, as a whole, is parallel to that of Mat 7:16-17, and may well have been suggested by it.
so can no fountain both yield salt water and fresh ] The better MSS. give a somewhat briefer form, Neither can a salt (spring) yield sweet (the same adjective as in the preceding verse) water. The comparison seems at first to break down, as the fact which it was meant to illustrate was that “blessing and cursing” did issue from the same mouth. What is meant, however, is that in such a case, the “blessing” loses its character, and is tainted with the bitterness of the cursing. The prayers and praises of the hypocrite who cherishes hatred in his heart, are worse than worthless.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Can the fig-tree, my brethren, bear olive-berries? – Such a thing is impossible in nature, and equally absurd in morals. A fig-tree bears only figs; and so the tongue ought to give utterance only to one class of sentiments and emotions. These illustrations are very striking, and show the absurdity of that which the apostle reproves. At the same time, they accomplish the main purpose which he had in view, to repress the desire of becoming public teachers without suitable qualifications. They show the power of the tongue; they show what a dangerous power it is for a man to wield who has not the proper qualifications; they show that no one should put himself in the position where he may wield this power without such a degree of tried prudence, wisdom, discretion, and piety, that there shall be a moral certainty that he will use it aright.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Jam 3:9; Jam 3:12
Therewith bless we God
The moral contradictions in the reckless talker
In these concluding sentences of the paragraph respecting sins of the tongue St.
James does two things–he shows the moral chaos to which the Christian who fails to control his tongue is reduced, and he thereby shows such a man how vain it is for him to hope that the worship which he offers to Almighty God can be pure and acceptable. He has made himself the channel of hellish influences. He cannot at pleasure make himself the channel of heavenly influences, or become the offerer of holy sacrifices. A man who curses his fellow-men, and then blesses God, is like one who professes the profoundest respect for his sovereign, while he insults the royal family, throws mud at the royal portraits, and ostentatiously disregards the royal wishes. It is further proof of the evil character of the tongue that it is capable of lending itself to such chaotic activity. Therewith bless we the Lord and Father, i.e., God in His might and in His love; and therewith curse we men, which are made after the likeness of God. The heathen fable tells us the apparent contradiction of being able to blow both hot and cold with the same breath; and the son of Sirach points out that if thou blow the spark, it shall burn; if thou Spit upon it, it shall be quenched; and both these come out of thy mouth (Sir 28:12). St. James, who may have had this passage in his mind, shows us that there is a real and a moral contradiction which goes far beyond either of these: Out of the same mouth cometh forth blessing and cursing. Well may he add, with affectionate earnestness, My brethren, these things ought not so to be. Assuredly they ought not; and yet how common the contradiction has been, and still is, among those who seem to be, and who think themselves to be, religious people! There is perhaps no particular in which persons professing to have a desire to serve God are more ready to invade His prerogatives than in venturing to denounce those who differ from themselves, and are supposed to be therefore under the ban of Heaven. There are many questions which have to be carefully considered and answered before a Christian mouth, which has been consecrated to the praise of our Lord and Father, ought to venture to utter denunciations against others who worship the same God and are also His offspring and His image. Is it quite certain that the supposed evil is something which God abhors; that those whom we would denounce are responsible for it; that denunciation of them will do any good; that this is the proper time for such denunciation; that we are the proper persons to utter it? The illustrations of the fountain and the fig-tree are among the touches which, if they do not indicate one who is familiar with Palestine, at any rate agree well with the fact that the writer of this Epistle was such. Springs tainted with salt or with sulphur are not rare, and it is stated that most of those on the eastern slope of the hill-country of Judaea are brackish. The fig-tree, the vine, and the olive were abundant throughout the whole country; and St. James, if he looked out of the window as he was writing, would be likely enough to see all three. It is not improbable that in one or more of the illustrations he is following some ancient saying or proverb. Thus, Arrian, the pupil of Epictetus, writing less than a century later, asks, How can a vine grow, not vinewise, but olivewise, or an olive, on the other hand, not olivewise, but vinewise? It is impossible, inconceivable. It is possible that our Lord Himself, when He used a similar illustration in connection with the worst of all sins of the tongue, was adapting a proverb already in use (Mat 12:33-36). And previously, in the Sermon on the Mount, where He is speaking of deeds rather than of Mat 7:16-18). Can it be the case that while physical contradictions are not permitted in the lower classes of unconscious objects, moral contradictions of a very monstrous kind are allowed in the highest of all earthly creatures? Just as the double-minded man is judged by his doubts, and not by his forms of prayer, so the double-tongued man is judged by his curses, and not by his forms of praise. In each case one or the other of the two contradictories is not real. If there is prayer, there are no doubts; and if there are doubts, there is no prayer–no prayer that will avail with God. So also in the other case: if God is sincerely and heartily blessed, there will be no cursing of His children; and if there is such cursing, God cannot acceptably be blessed; the very words of praise, coming from such lips, will be an offence to Him. But it may be urged, our Lord Himself has set us an example of strong denunciation in the woes which He pronounced upon the scribes and Pharisees; and again, St. Paul cursed Hymensaeus and Alexander (1Ti 1:20), the incestuous person at Corinth (1Co 5:5), and Elymas the sorcerer Act 13:10). Most true. But firstly, these curses were uttered by those who could not err in such things. Christ knew what was in man, and could read the hearts of all; and the fact that St. Pauls curses were supernaturally fulfilled proves that he was acting under Divine guidance in what he said. And secondly, these stern utterances had their source in love; not, as human curses commonly have, in hate. And let us remember the proportion which such things bear to the rest of Christs words and of St. Pauls words, so far as they have been preserved for us. All this applies with much force to those who believe themselves to be called upon to denounce and curse all such as seem to them to be enemies of God and His truth: but with how much more force to those who in moments of anger and irritation deal in execrations on their own account, and curse a fellow-Christian, not because he seems to them to have offended God, but because he has offended themselves! That such persons should suppose that their polluted mouths can offer acceptable praises to the Lord and Father, is indeed a moral contradiction of the most startling kind. The writer of this Epistle has been accused of exaggeration. It has been urged that in this strongly worded paragraph he himself is guilty of that unchastened language which he is so eager to condemn; that the case is over-stated, and that the highly-coloured picture is a caricature. Is there any thoughtful person of large experience that can honestly assent to this verdict? Who has not seen what mischief may be done by a single utterance of mockery, or enmity, or bravado; what confusion is wrought by exaggeration, innuendo, and falsehood; what suffering is inflicted by slanderous suggestions and statements; what careers of sin have been begun by impure stories and filthy jests? All these effects may follow, be it remembered, from a single utterance in each case, may spread to multitudes, may last for years. One reckless word may blight whole life. And there are persons who habitually pour forth such things, who never pass a day without uttering what is unkind, or false, or impure. (A. Plummer, D. D.)
The tongue–its blessing and cursing
I. THE INCONSISTENCY OF THE TONGUE.
1. Its blessing of God. This is the great end for which the human tongue exists–this the highest employment in which it can be engaged. We do this in various ways. We thus bless Him in our praises. These are sung either more privately in our own dwellings or more publicly in the sanctuary. He requires, above everything, the soul, but He will have the body also; the members and organs of the one, not less than the faculties and affections of the other. We thus bless God also in our prayers, whether these be secret, domestic, or public. In them adoring and thankful praises constitute no small or subordinate element. We extol the Lord for His infinite perfections, we give Him the glory due unto His great and holy name. We testify our obligations to Him for His mercies without number, and lay offerings of grateful homage on His altar.
2. Its cursing of men. Even the most orthodox and charitable Christians are not wholly exempt from this tendency. We are far too ready to pass sentence on our brethren, and in effect, if not in form, to curse such as do not happen to agree with us in some respects, and these, it may be, of quite secondary importance. Everything of this sort is of the nature of cursing–it partakes in one degree or another of that character. And mark the aggravating circumstance, that which involves the frightful inconsistency charged against the tongue–men, which are made after the similitude of God. We were at first created in His image, stamped with His moral lineaments in knowledge, righteousness, and true holiness. And in a sense too, as the, language here obviously implies, we still bear that likeness. Such cursing is in reality a cursing of God Himself whom we yet bless–a cursing of Him in man, who is not only His workmanship, but His reflection, His image–not merely a being formed by His hand, but formed after His likeness. We cannot keep the first table of the law, and at the same time set at nought the second. The strangely, outrageously inconsistent nature of the whole proceeding is still more forcibly exhibited by bringing the two contrary things together, placing them side by side, presenting them in sharpest contrast (Jam 3:10). There it is that the flagrant, shocking contradiction appears.
II. THE UNNATURALNESS OF THIS INCONSISTENCY (Jam 3:11-12). Doth a fountain send forth at the same place–the same hole, chink, or fissure, as in the rock whence it issues–sweet water and bitter? No–nothing of this kind is ever witnessed. The water which flows from the spring may have either, but it cannot have both of these qualities. It may indeed afterwards undergo a change, it may lose its original properties, and be turned into the opposite of what it was, by reason of the soil through which it runs, or the purposes to which it is applied. What was sweet may by certain mixtures become bitter. But at first, in its own nature, and apart from all foreign ingredients, it is wholly the one or the other. There is no inconsistency in the material region. He passes to a higher department, the vegetable kingdom, and shows that there too plants and trees bring forth a single kind of fruit, and that which is suited to the order, the species to which they belong. Can the fig-tree, my brethren, bear olive-berries, either a vine figs? Of course it cannot. Any such thing would be a monstrosity. Titan, returning to the spring, not without reference to the internal, hidden source from which all our words proceed, be adds, So can no fountain both yield salt water and fresh. He wishes to fix attention on the inconsistency manifested in the use of the tongue, and lead them to the right explanation of its origin. This anomaly does seem to be exhibited in the moral world, if not in the material. But it is so more in appearance than in reality. That water is often the same which looks different. What to some tastes and tests is fresh, when thoroughly examined, is found to be salt as the ocean. Much that to our earthly senses is sweet, to the spiritually-discerning is bitter indeed. Thus the blessing of many is formal, if not even false, having nothing gracious in it, no love or homage of the heart, no element or quality fitted to render it acceptable to the great object of worship. In its origin and essence it is not opposed to, nor, indeed, different from the cursing of man, with which it is associated. The latter reveals the true nature of the common source, or there may be two fountains where only one is perceptible. The former supposition applies to nominal and hypocritical Christians–this latter to living, genuine believers. They have an old man and a new, corruption and grace both existing and working within them; and as the one or the other gains the ascendancy, and, for the time, governs the tongue, the stream of discourse that issues from it is wholesome or deleterious–fresh as that of the bubbling spring, or salt as that of the briny deep. (John Adam.)
The evil tongue
St. James uses three special arguments to restrain Christians from the unruly use of the tongue: the first is the inconsistency of the thing–that the heart touched by the Holy Spirit should do the works of the flesh–that the fountain which hath been purified should again flow with bitter waters and the servants of Christ should serve Belial We have promised to study the strains of angels, and become familiar with and adopt them as our own; so that instead of being now a Babel of confusion, the Church may utter but one language in the presence of the Lamb; and how very inconsistent that from such lips cursing should proceed–how very inconsistent if any of you who have been now repeating Davids psalms, the notes of heaven, should to-morrow be found uttering an oath, or even using a passionate expression. It is bad enough for one who only professes Christianity to use the language of the devil, but it is a greater inconsistency when out of the same mouth proceeds blessing and cursing–when you, the same person, bless God, yet curse His image. Let the wicked do it; the heathen who is without God, and without Christ, if it must be. He that is unjust, &c. But a Christian man–a man who has been baptized into the Holy Trinity; a man who readsthe Bible, and comes into Gods house and worships there: a man who joins himself to the company of the saints, dead and living, and takes into his mouth the same words, the same prayers, the same Scripture passages with them;–nay, the man who perhaps approaches the awful mystery of the Body and Blood of His Lord;-that from such a mouth should proceed the gibes and imprecations of lost spirits, is it not shockingly inconsistent? Next, St. James reminds us of the consequences both to others and ourselves. Behold how great a matter a little fire kindleth, awed the tongue is a fire. How far may a single spark dropped among stubble reach! Bow does it steal along the floor, creep up the wall, envelop the roof, spread from house to house, and seize churches and noble buildings, till it wrap a whole city in conflagration! So does a single word dropped unadvisedly. If a soft answer turneth away wrath, on the other hand grievous words stir up anger. If you reply quietly to a provocation, or refuse to answer, the quarrel dies; but one word draws on another, and wrath kindleth wrath; and that is made eternal which might have been extinguished if only one had been a Christian. You see, then, how great a matter a little fire kindleth. Is it surprising if of every idle word we shall give an account at the judgment? But again, you say something injurious of your neighbour. There is a little truth in it, but much more falsehood. It has been added to, and enlarged, and swollen into a crime. But you repeat it. The story spreads. It is told everywhere, and though it wounds your neighbour to death, and from the calumny he loses all acquaintances and friends, yet you cannot recall it now. See how great a matter a little fire kindleth. Again, you utter impure words before a child, the child treasures them up all through his life; though he lives sixty or seventy years, unhappy being, his thoughts and language take their complexion from your words; but besides, to how many has lie communicated what he first heard from you! Mark again, how great a little fire kindleth. Surely the tongue is a fire, a world of iniquity, and setteth on fire the course of nature. To conclude: if we will not restrain our members by the aid of Gods Spirit, and especially that member which St. Peter calls an unruly evil, full of deadly poison; if we will, in the indulgence of a wilful spirit, scatter firebrands about, unkind, malicious, polluting, or injurious words, wide-spread as the evil may be, will it stop short with others? No, it will return upon ourselves; which setteth on fire the course of nature, and it is set on fire of hell. The fire which hath gone forth spreading and consuming, at the judgment hour is stopped in its course, and rolling back again is concentrated on the tongue which gave it existence. You who uttered the word, which has done such mischief to thousands, and ruined so many souls, now feel its burning effects in your own person. Ought not this to make you careful of your words, those winged words, which once launched forth take a flight you know not whither? (J. M. Chaunter, M. A.)
Made after the similitude of God
Man made after Gods image
This image of God consisteth in three things–
1. In His nature, which was intellectual. God gave him a rational soul, spiritual, simple, immortal, free in its choice; yea, in the body there were some rays and strictures of the Divine glory and majesty.
2. In those qualities of knowledge (Col 3:10); righteousness Ecc 7:29); and true holiness (Eph 4:24).
3. In his state, in a happy confluence of all inward and outward blessings, as the enjoyment of God, power over the creatures, &c. But now this image is in a great part defaced and lost, and can only be restored in Christ. Well, then, this was the g, eat privilege of our creation, to be made like God: the more we resemble Him the more happy. Oh! remember the height of your original. We press men to walk worthy of their extraction. Those potters that were of a servile spirit disgraced the kingly family and line of which they came (1Ch 4:22). Plutarch saith of Alexander, that he was wont to heighten his courage by remembering he came of the gods. Remember you were made after the image of God; do not deface it in yourselves, or render it liable to contempt, by giving others occasion to revile you. (T. Manton.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 12. So can no fountain both yield salt water and fresh.] For the reading of the common text, which is , so no fountain can produce salt water and sweet, there are various other readings in the MSS. and versions. The word , so, which makes this a continuation of the comparison in Jas 3:11, is wanting in ABC, one other, with the Armenian and ancient Syriac; the later Syriac has it in the margin with an asterisk. ABC, five others, with the Coptic, Vulgate, one copy of the Itala, and Cyril, have , neither can salt water produce sweet. In the Syriac and the Arabic of Erpen, it is, So, likewise, sweet water cannot become bitter; and bitter water cannot become sweet. The true reading appears to be, Neither can salt water produce sweet, or, Neither can the sea produce fresh water; and this is a new comparison, and not an inference from that in Jas 3:11. This reading Griesbach has admitted into the text; and of it Professor White, in his Crisews, says, Lectio indubie genuina, “a reading undoubtedly genuine.” There are therefore, four distinct comparisons here:
1. A fountain cannot produce sweet water and bitter.
2. A fig tree cannot produce olive berries.
3. A vine cannot produce figs.
4. Salt water cannot be made sweet. That is, according to the ordinary operations of nature, these things are impossible. Chemical analysis is out of the question.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Can the tree, my brethren, bear olive berries? either a vine, figs? The same tree cannot ordinarily bring forth fruit of different kinds, (on the same branch, whatever it may on different, by ingrafting), much less contrary natures: see Mat 7:16-18.
So can no fountain both yield salt water and fresh; or, neither can a salt fountain yield fresh water; but the scope is still the same as in our reading. The apostle argues from what is impossible, or monstrous, in naturals, to what is absurd in manners: q.d. It is as absurd in religion, for the tongue of a regenerate man, which is used to bless God, to take a liberty at other times to curse man, as it would be strange in nature for the same tree, on the same branch, to bear fruits of different kinds; or the same fountain at the same place to send forth bitter water and sweet.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
12. Transition from the mouth tothe heart.
Can the fig tree,c.implying that it is an impossibility: as before in Jas3:10 he had said it “ought not so to be.” Jamesdoes not, as Matthew (Mat 7:16Mat 7:17), make the question, “Domen gather figs of thistles?” His argument is, No tree”can” bring forth fruit inconsistent with its nature,as for example, the fig tree, olive berries: so if a man speaksbitterly, and afterwards speaks good words, the latter must be soonly seemingly, and in hypocrisy, they cannot be real.
so can no fountain . . . salt. . . and freshThe oldest authorities read, “Neither cana salt (water spring) yield fresh.” So the mouth that emitscursing, cannot really emit also blessing.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Can the fig tree, my brethren, bear olive berries?…. Every tree bears fruit, according to its kind; a fig tree produces figs, and an olive tree olive berries; a fig tree does not produce olive berries, or an olive tree figs; and neither of them both:
either a vine, figs? or fig trees, grapes; or either of them, figs and grapes:
so can no fountain both yield salt water and fresh. The Alexandrian copy reads, “neither can the salt water yield sweet water”; that is, the sea cannot yield sweet or fresh water: the Syriac version renders it, “neither can salt water be made sweet”: but naturalists say, it may be made sweet, by being strained through sand: the design of these similes is to observe how absurd a thing it is that a man should both bless and curse with his tongue.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Can? ( ;). Negative answer expected. See the same metaphor in Mt 7:16f.
Fig-tree (). Old and common word (Mt 21:19f.).
Figs (). Ripe fruit of .
Olives (). Elsewhere in the N.T. for olive-trees as Mt 21:1.
Vine (). Old word (Mt 26:29).
Salt water (). Old adjective from ( salt), here only in N.T.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
So can no fountain both yield salt water and fresh. The best texts omit so can no fountain, and the and between salt and fresh. Thus the text reads, oute aJlukon gluku poihsai udwr. Render, as Rev., neither can salt water yield sweet. Another of James’ local allusions, salt waters. The Great Salt Sea was but sixteen miles from Jerusalem. Its shores were lined with salt – pits, to be filled when the spring freshets should raise the waters of the lake. A salt marsh also terminated the valley through which the Jordan flows from the Lake of Tiberias to the Dead Sea, and the adjoining, plain was covered with salt streams and brackish springs. Warm springs impregnated with sulfur abound in the volcanic valley of the Jordan. ‘Alukon, salt, occurs only here in the New Testament.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) A fig cannot produce an olive, nor a vine bear a fig. Mat 7:16-20. Salt water cannot make sweet or fresh water. The “everything-after-its-kind”, law-of-nature prevails in man as well as in plant, bird, and beast. If a man has a “new” nature, faith, hope and love should be prevalent fruit of that nature, 1Co 13:13.
2) The new nature should be seen in his conduct and heard in his language. A child of God, governed or controlled by the Spirit of God, should be able to control or bridle not only his tongue but also the passions of his whole body.
3) It is said that biologically the chameleon has a nimble tongue, but it feeds only on air. Let every child of God avoid the two-face, double-tongue, forked-tongue, conversation of the hypocrite, 1Co 9:27; Gal 5:25; Pro 21:23; Psa 34:13.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
(12) Can the fig-tree, my brethren, bear olive berries? either a vine, figs?Read, Can a fig-tree bear olives, or a vine, figs? The inquiry sounds like a memory of our Lords, Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? (Mat. 7:16.)
So can no fountain . . .This, the last clause of the sentence above in the Authorised version is very confused in the original, but seems to be merely this, Neither can salt (water) bring forth fresh; or, as Wordsworth renders it, Nor can water that is salt produce what is sweet. And such in effect is Alfords comment: If the mouth emit cursing, thereby making itself a brackish spring, it cannot to any purpose also emit the sweet stream of praise and good words; if it appear to do so, all must be hypocrisy and mere seeming. Every blessing is, in fact, tainted by the tongue which has uttered curses; and even Praise is not seemly in the mouth of a sinner (Sir. 15:9).
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
‘Can a fig tree, my brothers, yield olives, or a vine figs? Neither can salt water yield sweet.’
And he closes off the series with an illustration. Each thing in nature produces according to it nature. The fig tree produces figs, the olive tree olives. (Compare here Mat 7:16). And salt water cannot produce sweet without treatment. So should the Christian from his mouth produce the good fruit of the Spirit (Gal 5:22) and not the inedible and poisonous fruit of the flesh. The salt water probably has in mind the salt water springs around the Dead Sea which were unusable to man. Note that here the contrasts have ceased. The final word is intended to bring out the bitter saltiness of the tongue
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Jam 3:12. So can no fountain both yield, &c. “Full as inconsistent is it to suppose, that a man’s heart, the fountain whence all his words proceed, should habitually vent itself in ways of talking, which are of as directly contrary a nature, as the salt water of the sea, and the sweet water of the finest spring, are one to the other.”
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Jas 3:12 . This verse shows, by examples taken from nature, that from one principle opposite things cannot be produced, but that any cause can only bring forth that which corresponds to its nature. Semler incorrectly paraphrases the first question: : an fieri potest, ut ficus, cujus est dulcis natura, producat amaras oleas; for that here the contrast of sweet and bitter (which only the last clause of the verse resumes) is not designed to be expressed, is evident from what immediately follows: , where James would otherwise have mentioned the olive instead of the vine. The idea is rather that nothing can bring forth that which is not corresponding to its nature. [179] Consequently the opinion of de Wette, that here thistles (according to Mat 7:16 ), or something similar, instead of would be more appropriate, is incorrect.
To the question follows as its conclusion the negative clause: , which is so construed as if the former sentence, not only in meaning, but also in form, was a negative one; ( : ) and the omission of are thus to be explained. [180]
is the subject, and the object; is used in the same signification as before; thus: Nor can bitter bring forth sweet water. The opposite ideas and are emphatically placed beside each other. James hereby indicates, that if from one month the bitter (namely, the ) and also the sweet (namely, the ) proceed, this is not only morally reprehensible, to which Jas 3:10 points, but is something impossible; accordingly, the person who curses man, who is made after the image of God, cannot also bless (praise) God, and that thus if the mouth yet express both, the can only be mere seeming and hypocrisy (Lange). [181]
[179] Comp. Arrian, Epikt. ii. 20: , ; , ; comp. also Plut. de tranq. an. p. 472 E.
[180] Buttmann (p. 315 [E. T. 367]), following Lachmann, praef. p. xliv., assumes a corruption of the passage.
[181] Gunkel incorrectly thinks that ver. 12 only discloses the unnaturalness of the conduct denounced in ver. 10, for evidently expresses impossibility. It is also to be observed, that in the last clause of ver. 12 ( ) is considered as the fountain which cannot bring forth , and accordingly points to the bitter disposition, from which only that which is bitter (namely, the bitter ), but not that which is sweet (namely, the ), can proceed. Lange correctly observes, “that the multiplying of examples has the effect of illustrating the general application of the law of life here laid down;” but he strangely supposes that “the individual examples have a symbolical meaning;” the fig-tree, the symbol of a luxurious natural life; the olives, the symbols of spiritual life, etc.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
12 Can the fig tree, my brethren, bear olive berries? either a vine, figs? so can no fountain both yield salt water and fresh.
Ver. 12. Both yield salt water and fresh ] That is strange that is reported of the rivers of Peru, that after they have run into the main sea, yea, some write 20 or 30 miles, they keep themselves unmixed with the salt water; so that a very great way within the sea men may take up as fresh water as if they were near the land. (Abbot’s Geog.) But that is as sure as strange, that an eyewitness reporteth of the Danube and Sara (two great rivers in Hungary), that their waters meeting mingle no more than water and oil; so that near the middle of the river I have gone in a boat (saith mine author) and tasted of the Danube, as clear and pure as a well; then putting my hand not an inch farther, I have taken of the Sava, as troubled as a street channel, tasting the gravel in my teeth. Thus they run 60 miles together. (Blount’s Voyage.)
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
12 .] Shews further that natural organizations do not bring forth things opposite to or inconsistent with their usual fruits , but each one has one result, and that always. Can, my brethren, a figtree bring forth (see on the whole, and on in this sense, Mat 7:16 ff. But De Wette is wrong, when he says that thistles or the like would be here, as there, more agreeable to the similitude. For the reasoning is not here, that we must not look for good fruit from a bad tree: but that no tree can bring forth fruit inconsistent with its own nature: as in Arrian, Epict. ii. 20, , ; ; , ) olives, or a vine figs? Nor (as if the former sentence had been a negative one) can salt ( water ) bring forth sweet water (i. e. if the mouth emit cursing, thereby making itself a brackish spring, it cannot to any purpose also emit the sweet stream of praise and good words: if it appear to do so, all must be hypocrisy and mere seeming).
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Jas 3:12 . With the whole verse cf. Mat 7:16-17 ; for the use of see Mat 3:10 , ; does not occur elsewhere in the N.T. or Septuagint, though in Num 3:12 , Deu 3:17 , etc., we have the phrase = the Dead Sea. “There is great harshness in the construction ; . If the government of is continued, we ought to have for followed by a question; otherwise we should have expected an entirely independent clause, reading for ” (Mayor).
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
Can, &c. Question preceded by me.
olive berries = olives.
so, &c. The texts read “neither (Greek. oute) can salt water bring forth, or produce, sweet”.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
12.] Shews further that natural organizations do not bring forth things opposite to or inconsistent with their usual fruits, but each one has one result, and that always. Can, my brethren, a figtree bring forth (see on the whole, and on in this sense, Mat 7:16 ff. But De Wette is wrong, when he says that thistles or the like would be here, as there, more agreeable to the similitude. For the reasoning is not here, that we must not look for good fruit from a bad tree: but that no tree can bring forth fruit inconsistent with its own nature: as in Arrian, Epict. ii. 20, , ; ; , ) olives, or a vine figs? Nor (as if the former sentence had been a negative one) can salt (water) bring forth sweet water (i. e. if the mouth emit cursing, thereby making itself a brackish spring, it cannot to any purpose also emit the sweet stream of praise and good words: if it appear to do so, all must be hypocrisy and mere seeming).
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Jam 3:12. , is it possible?) He now prepares a transition from the mouth to the heart. He had said with regard to the former, There is no need [it is not becoming]; he says respecting the latter, it is impossible.- , so neither can a salt spring produce sweet water) viz. (to be supplied). Thus the most weighty authorities, Colbert. 7; Cov. 4; Gen.; th.; Copt.; Lat., and the Syr[41], The Alexand. reads . Baumgarten has a long dissertation in favour of the more generally received reading: Exam., p. xxxii. You will see my reply in App. Crit., Ed. ii., on this passage.[42] The apostle had said in Jam 3:11, that it is not befitting that two contraries should proceed from one source; he now says, that nothing can proceed from any source whatever, unless it be of the same kind. Salt (water), in the nominative case, has the force of a substantive, as just before, sweet and bitter. In Hesychius , , the sea. In James, has a wider meaning, a lake or spring of salt, pouring forth water.-, thus, is used before the word salt, now in particular, because this resemblance, already represented in the 11th verse, puts on here a more strict propriety,[43] and in this place contains the Apodosis itself, which is about to be added immediately, in plain (unfigurative) words.
[41] yr. the Peschito Syriac Version: second cent.: publ. and corrected by Cureton, from MS. of fifth cent.
[42] ABC corrected and later Syr. omit , which Rec. Text prefixes without very old authority. ABC Vulg. Memph. Syr. read . But Rec. Text without any old authority except later Syr., reads .-E.
[43] i.e. It is more strictly in accordance with the simile that should be supposed to send forth , sweet water, than that a , as in ver. 11, should send it forth.-E.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
the fig tree: Isa 5:2-4, Jer 2:21, Mat 7:16-20, Mat 12:33, Luk 6:43, Luk 6:44, Rom 11:16-18
so: Exo 15:23-25, 2Ki 2:19-22, Eze 47:8-11
Reciprocal: Gen 1:11 – fruit Rev 3:10 – to try
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Jas 3:12. Can the fig tree, my brethren, bear olive berries? either a vine, figs? that is, no tree can bring forth fruits inconsistent with its nature. The illustration here is not, that we must not expect bad fruits from a good tree, or conversely, good fruits from a bad tree, according to our Lords illustration: Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?(Mat 7:16); but only that we must not expect different fruits from the same treefigs and olives from the fig tree, or figs and grapes from the vine.
so can no fountain yield salt water and fresh; or, as other manuscripts have it, so neither can salt water bring forth sweet; the salt water referring to the cursing, and the sweet or fresh water to the blessing. That cursing and blessing should proceed from the same mouth is as great an incongruity as that salt and fresh water should flow from the same spring. In the natural world no such incongruity exists, as does in the moral world. Man is a self-contradiction, acting continually inconsistently with his nature.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Can the fig tree, my brethren, bear olive berries? either a vine, figs? so [can] no fountain both yield salt water and fresh.
Just as a water source can give only one type of water, so a fig tree can only give one type of fruit and the olive vine only one type of fruit. It is against nature to expect anything else from a fig tree than a fig. What mentally delinquent person would look for an apple on a fig tree? Yet, we see blessing and cursing from the same tongue.
Jam 3:13
Who [is] a wise man and endued with knowledge among you? let him shew out of a good conversation his works with meekness of wisdom.
OHHH, ouch. I can just feel the pain for politicians when they read this passage. It must cut to the quick and deeper if that is possible.
Those in the political realm can switch from the sweets and cream to the fire and ranker in the twist of a tongue. They can greet someone in the media with the velvet of quality chocolate and before their mouth closes begin to tear and mangle the opposition. James says, “these things ought not so to be.”
Imagine that glorious day when the politician spoke sweetness of all men that he works with no matter they be Democrat or Republican. Ah, there are dreams but alas, little hope.