Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of James 3:7
For every kind of beasts, and of birds, and of serpents, and of things in the sea, is tamed, and hath been tamed of mankind:
7. every kind of beasts ] Better, Every nature. This was, probably, intended by the translators, as being the old meaning of the word “kind,” as in the “kindly fruits” (= “natural products”) of the Litany. So Chaucer, “A beautie that cometh not of kinde,” Rom. of Rose, 2288, i. e. that is not natural. It may be noted that the Authorised Version in this instance returns to Wycliffe, who used the word in its old sense, and that all the intermediate versions give “nature.” The fourfold classification is obviously intended to be exhaustive and “beasts” must therefore be taken in its common familiar meaning of “quadruped.”
serpents ] is too specific for the third word, and it would be better to give the rendering which it commonly has elsewhere, of “creeping things.”
is tamed, and hath been tamed of mankind ] Better, the word being the same as in the first clause, “ by the nature of man.” The tense of the first verb implies “is continually being tamed.” The assertion may seem at first somewhat hyperbolical, but the well-known cases of tame rats and tame wasps, the lion of Androcles and the white fawn of Sertorius, furnish what may well be termed “crucial instances” in support of it. The story related by Cassian ( Coll. xxiv. 2), that St John in his old age kept a tame partridge, makes it probable that St James may have seen, among his fellow-teachers, such an instance of the power of man to tame the varied forms of animal life around him.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
For every kind of beasts – The apostle proceeds to state another thing showing the power of the tongue, the fact that it is ungovernable, and that there is no power of man to keep it under control. Everything else but this has been tamed. It is unnecessary to refine on the expressions used here, by attempting to prove that it is literally true that every species of beasts, and birds, and fishes has been tamed. The apostle is to be understood as speaking in a general and popular sense, showing the remarkable power of man over those things which are by nature savage and wild. The power of man in taming wild beasts is wonderful. Indeed, it is to be remembered that nearly all those beasts which we now speak of as domestic animals, and which we are accustomed to see only when they are tame, were once fierce and savage races. This is the case with the horse, the ox, the ass, (see the notes at Job 11:12; Job 39:5), the swine, the dog, the cat, etc. The editor of the Pictorial Bible well remarks, There is perhaps no kind of creature, to which man has access, which might not be tamed by him with proper perseverance. The ancients seem to have made more exertions to this end, and with much better success, than ourselves. The examples given by Pliny, of creatures tamed by men, relate to elephants, lions, and tigers, among beasts; to the eagle, among birds; to asps, and other serpents; and to crocodiles, and various fishes, among the inhabitants of the water. Natural History viii. 9, 16, 17; x. 5, 44. The lion was very commonly tamed by the ancient Egyptians, and trained to assist both in hunting and in war. Notes in loc. The only animal which it has been supposed has defied the power of man to tame it, is the hyena, and even this, it is said, has been subdued, in modern times. There is a passage in Euripides which has a strong resemblance to this of James:
,
.
Brachu toi sthenos aneros
Alla poikiliais prapidon
Dama phula pontou,
Chthonion t’ aerion te paideumata.
Small is the power which nature has given to man; but, by various acts of his superior understanding, he has subdued the tribes of the sea, the earth, and the air. Compare on this subject, the passages quoted by Pricaeus in the Critici Sacri, in loc.
And of birds – It is a common thing to tame birds, and even the most wild are susceptible of being tamed. A portion of the leathered race, as the hen, the goose, the duck, is thoroughly domesticated. The pigeon, the martin, the hawk, the eagle, may be; and perhaps there are none of that race which might not be made subject to the will of man.
And of serpents – The ancients showed great skill in this art, in reference to asps and other venomous serpents, and it is common now in India. In many instances, indeed, it is known that the fangs of the serpents are extracted; but even when this is not done, they who practice the art learn to handle them with impunity.
And of things in the sea – As the crocodile mentioned by Pliny. It may be affirmed with confidence that there is no animal which might not, by proper skill and perseverance, be rendered tame, or made obedient to the will of man. It is not necessary, however, to understand the apostle as affirming that literally every animal has been tamed, or ever can be. He evidently speaks in a popular sense of the great power which man undeniably has over all kinds of wild animals – over the creation beneath him.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Jam 3:7-8
The tongue can no man tame
The taming of the tongue
The intense practicalness of James as a religious teacher leads him directly to this topic of the taming of the tongue.
Here he sees, what every man to whom behaviour is a chief concern must see, one of the pivotal points of character. The religion that does not rule the speech is a failure and a fraud. The tongue, in the figure of James, is a wild beast that needs taming–fierce, reasonless, uncontrollable. A good part of the evils of life arise from its depredations.
1. First, of course, is the lying tongue. Of all the evils of speech falsehood is central and seminal.
2. Next to the lying tongue we must put the reviling tongue.
3. After the reviling tongue the foul tongue must be reckoned–the tongue that is the channel through which the impurities of a bad heart discharge themselves; the tongue that deals in indecent speech.
4. Next we think of the passionate tongue; the tongue that hastens to give voice to the anger and the hate that arise within. Anger, the Latin poet said, is a brief insanity; and when it begins to rage within the breast it needs to be chained and kept under till its paroxysm is past. But the mischievous tongue sometimes sets it loose and becomes its servitor–to hurl missiles of hot and stinging words right and left, doing damage that it is hard to repair.
5. The sarcastic tongue is another kind that needs taming. Sarcasm has its uses, no doubt; in our warfare with incorrigible evil-doers we must sometimes resort to it; but in the common intercourse of life it is scarcely more legitimate than the cudgel or the rapier. The arrows of sarcasm are barbed with contempt; that is what makes them rankle so; and contempt is a feeling that a good man cannot afford to indulge.
6. The scolding tongue is another kind that calls for a curb. Reproofs must be spoken, but sometimes there are too many of them, and their tone is too impatient, or too harsh, or too loud. Reproof must sometimes be severe, but it may be severe without being petulant.
7. The flattering tongue is a tongue that needs the bit. Honest and hearty praise is not to be avoided; we do not have half enough of it. Many are toiling on, heartsick and hopeless, to whom such a word of recognition would be as cold water to a thirsty soul. But this is not flattery. Flattery is either false praise, or praise addressed, not to the quality of our actions so much as to our excellences of person or that which is external to us. To praise your childs looks, and so stimulate his vanity, that is flattery, a most nauseous exhibition of it; and the tongue that indulges in it ought to be bridled. But the worst kind of flattery is that which seeks to please, and so to entice, by artful and insincere praises. This is a species of lying, of course; but it is a species so mean and dangerous that it needs to be singled out and denounced.
8. The chattering tongue is another kind that needs restraint and discipline. A few people are too taciturn; a great many are too talkative. Such endless prattle is an encroachment on other peoples rights. How much time is consumed in attending to words that are utterly destitute of thought, that convey no ideas and impart no benefits! How many things we might have done that were worth doing, how many things we might have thought of that were worth thinking of, while we were listening! But what is worse, it is debilitating to the one who indulges in it. He talks so much that he has no time to think. Set a watch, C God, prayed the psalmist, before my mouth; keep the door of my lips. The trouble with some of these constant talkers-seems to be that there is no door to their lips, nothing but a doorway.
9. The last kind of tongue I shall mention that needs taming is the slanderous tongue. To speak evil of their neighbours is to some men and women a positive luxury. You would use harsh words about a man who got his living by retailing scandal, orally, for five cents a customer; what have you to say about the man who spices his newspaper with such items to make it sell? But the tongue can no man tame. So much the more need, then, that a power stronger than mans should be invoked to subdue its unruliness and mitigate its fierceness. Such a Divine power the fables of all the peoples have celebrated; the power that tames the wildest beasts, and makes the tiger as gentle and docile as a lamb. The mythic song of Amphion is but a prelude of the triumph of the Prince of Peace, under whose blessed reign all savage and noxious creatures shall learn obedience and service. He at whose word the demoniac ceased his ravings, and the savage seas hushed their tumult–He who has the power and the purpose to subdue all things unto Himself–can cause the lying tongue to speak verities, and the reviling tongue to praise and bless, and the passionate tongue to be silent when the anger rises, and the foul tongue to utter purity, and the sarcastic tongue to temper its severities, and the scolding tongue to learn gentleness, and the flattering tongue to speak with sincerity, and the chattering tongue to be more discreet, and the talebearing tongue to be still. (W. Gladden, D. D.)
Taming the tongue
1. The tractableness of the beasts to man, and the disobedience of man to Isa 1:3). Fallen man may go to school to the beasts to learn mildness and obedience; and yet God hath more power to subdue, and we have more reason to obey,
2. The greatness of mans folly and impotency in governing his own soul. Though he tameth other things, he doth not tame himself.
3. The deepness of mans misery. Our own art and skill is able to tame the fiercest beasts, and make them serviceable; beasts as strong as lions and elephants; fishes that do, as it were, inhabit another world; birds as swift almost as a thought; serpents hurtful and noxious. But, alas! there is more rebellion in our affections; sin is stronger, all our art will not tame it.
4. Art and skill to subdue creatures is a relic and argument of our old superiority. The heathens discerned we had once a dominion, and the Scriptures plainly assert it (Gen 1:26). (T. Manton.)
The taming of the tongue
Here is a single proposition, guarded with a double reason. The proposition is, No man can tame the tongue. The reasons–
1. It is unruly.
2. Full of deadly poison. As the proposition is backed with two reasons, so each reason hath a terrible second. The evil hath for its second unruliness; the poisonfulness being deadly.
It is evil, yea, unruly evil; it is poison, yea, deadly poison.
1. In the proposition we will observe–
(1) The nature of the thing to be tamed.
(2) The difficulty of accomplishing it.
2. The insubjectable subject is the tongue, which is–
(1) A member; and–
(2) An excellent, necessary, little, singular member.
1. It is a member. He that made all made the tongue; he that craves all must have the tongue. It is an instrument; let it give music to Him that made it. All creatures in their kind bless God (Psa 148:1-14). They that want tongues, as the heavens, sun, stars, meteors, orbs, elements, praise Him with such obedient testimonies as their insensible natures can afford. They that have tongues, though they want reason, praise Him with those natural organs. Man, then, that hath a tongue, and a reason to guide it, and more, a religion to direct his reason, should much more bless Him. Not that praise can add to Gods glory, nor blasphemies detract from it. As the sun is neither bettered by birds singing, nor battered by dogs barking. Yet we that cannot make His name greater can make it seem greater; and though we cannot enlarge His glory, we may enlarge the manifestation of His glory. This both in words praising and in works practising. They that before little regarded Him may thus be brought to esteem Him greatly; giving Him the honour due to His name, and glorifying Him, after our example. This is the tongues office. Every member, without arrogating any merit, or boasting the beholdenness of the rest unto it, is to do that duty which is assigned to it. The tongue is mans clapper, and is given him that he may sound out the praise of his Maker. Infinite causes draw deservingly from mans lips a devout acknowledgment of Gods praise.
2. It is a member you hear; we must take it with all its properties; excellent, necessary, little, singular.
(1) Excellent. First, for the majesty of it. It carries an imperious speech, wherein it hath the pre-eminence of all mortal creatures. Secondly, for the pleasantness of the tongue, No instruments are so ravishing, or prevail over mans heart with so powerful complacency, as the tongue and voice of man. If the tongue be so excellent, how, then, doth this text censure it for being so evil? I take the philosophers old and trite answer, Than a good tongue, there is nothing better; than an evil, nothing worse. It hath no mean; it is either exceedingly good or excessively evil. If it be good, it is a walking garden, that scatters in every place a sweet flower, an herb of grace to the hearers. If it be evil, it is a wild bedlam, full of madding mischiefs. So the tongue is every mans best or worst movable. A good tongue is a special dish for Gods public service. The best part of a man, and most worthy the honour of sacrifice. This only when it is well seasoned. Seasoned, I say, with salt, as the apostle admenisheth; not with Col 4:6). But an evil tongue is meat for the devil, according to the Italian proverb: The devil makes his Christmas pie of lewd tongues.
(2) It is necessary; so necessary that without a tongue I could not declare the necessity of it. It converseth with man, conveying to others by this organ that experimental knowledge which must else live and die in himself. It imparts secrets, communicates joys, which would be less happy suppressed than they are expressed. Lastly, it speaks our devotions to heaven, and hath the honour to confer with God. It is that instrument which the Holy Ghost useth in us to cry, Abba, Father. It is our spokesman; and he that can hear the heart without a tongue, regardeth the devotions of the heart better, when they are sent up by a diligent messenger, a faithful tongue.
(3) It is little. As man is a little world in the great, so is his tongue a great world in the little. It is a little member, saith the apostle (verse 5), yet it is a world; yea, a world of iniquity (verse 6). It is little in quantity, but great in iniquity. What it hath lost in the thickness it hath gotten in the quickness; and the defect of magnitude is recompensed in the agility. If it be a talking tongue it is a world of prating. If it be a wrangling tongue it is a world of babbling. If it be a learned tongue it is, as Erasmus said of Bishop Tonstal, a world of learning. If it be a petulant tongue it is a world of wantonness. If it be a poisonous tongue, saith our apostle, it defileth the whole body (verse 6). It is little. So little that it will scarce give a kite her breakfast, yet it can discourse of the sun and stars, of orbs and elements, of angels and devils, of nature and arts, and hath no straighter limits than the whole world to walk through. It is a little member, yet boasteth great things (verse 5). Though it be little, yet if good, it is of great use. A little bit guideth a great horse to the riders pleasure. A little helm ruleth a great vessel, though the winds blow and the floods oppose, yet the helm steers the ship. Though little, yet if evil, it is of great mischief. A little sickness distempereth the whole body. A little fire setteth a whole city on combustion. Behold how great a matter a little fire kindleth (verse 5). It is little in substance, yet great to provoke passion, to produce action. It either prevails to good, or perverts to evil; purifieth or putrefieth the whole carcase, the whole conscience. It betrayeth the heart when the heart would betray God; and the Lord lets it double treason on itself when it prevaricates with Him. It is a little leak that drowneth a ship, a little breach that loseth an army, a little spring that pours forth an ocean. Little; yet the lion is more troubled with the little wasp than with the great elephant. Many have dealt better with the greater members of the body than with this little one.
(4) It is a singular member. God hath given man two ears; one to hear instructions of human knowledge, the other to hearken to His Divine precepts; the former to conserve his body, the latter to save his soul. Two eyes, that with the one he might see to his own way, with the other pity and commiserate his distressed brethren. Two hands, that with the one he might work for his own living, with the other give and relieve his brothers wants. Two feet, one to walk on common days to his ordinary labour Psa 104:23); the other, on sacred days to visit and frequent the temple and the congregation of saints. But among all, He hath given him but one tongue, which may instruct him to hear twice so much as he speaks; to work and walk twice so much as he speaks (Psa 139:14). Stay and wonder at the wonderful wisdom of God! First, to create so little a piece of flesh, and to put such vigour into it; to give it neither bones nor nerves, yet to make it stronger than arms and legs, and those most able and serviceable parts of the body. Secondly, because it is so forcible, therefore hath the most wise God ordained that it shall be but little, that it shall be but one. That so the parvity and singularity may abate the vigour of it. Thirdly, because it is so unruly, the Lord hath hedged it in, as a man will not trust a wild horse in an open pasture, but prison him in a close pound. A double fence hath the Creator given to confine it, the lips and the teeth; that through these mounds it might not break. And hence a threefold instruction for the use of the tongue is insinuated to us. First, let us not dare to pull up Gods mounds; nor, like wild beasts, break through the circular limits wherein He hath cooped us. Weigh thy words in a balance, and make a door and bar for thy mouth. Let this be the possession thou so hedgest in, and thy precious gold thou so bindest up. Beware thou slide not by it, lest thou fall before him that lieth in wait. Commit not burglary by breaking the doors and pulling down the bars of thy mouth. Much more, when the Lord hath hung a lock on it, do not pick it with a false key. Rather pray with David (Psa 51:15). It is absurd in building to make the porch bigger than the house; it is as monstrous in nature when a mans words are too many, too mighty. Let thy words be few, true, weighty, that thou mayest not speak much, not falsely, not vainly. Remember the bounds, and keep the non ultra. Secondly, since God hath made the tongue one, have not thou a tongue and a tongue. It is made simple; let it; not be double. Thirdly, this convinceth them of preposterous folly, that put all their malice into their tongue, as the serpent all her poison in her tail; and as it were by a chemical power, attract all vigour thither, to the weakening and enervation of the other parts.
3. We see the nature of the thing to be tamed, the tongue; let us consider the difficulty of this enterprise. No man can do it. Which we shall best find if we compare it–
(1) With other members of the body.
(2) With other creatures of the world.
1. With other members of the body, which are various in their faculties and offices; none of them idle.
(1) The eye sees far, and beholdeth the creatures in the heavens–sun, and stars; on the earth–birds, beasts, plants, and minerals; in the sea–fishes and serpents. That it is an unruly member, let our grandmother speak, whose roving eye lost us all. Yet this eye, as unruly as it is, hath been tamed. Did not Job make a covenant with his eyes, that he would not look upon a maid (Job 31:1)? The eye hath been tamed, but the tongue can no man tame; it is an unruly evil.
(2) The ear yet hears more than ever the eye saw; and by reason of its patulous admission, derives that to the understanding whereof the sight never had a glance. It can listen to the whisperings of a Doeg, to the susurrations of a devil, to the noise of a Siren, to the voice of a Delilah. The ear hath been tamed, but the tongue can no man tame, &c.
(3) The foot is an unhappy member, and carries a man to much wickedness. It is often swift to the shedding of blood; and runneth away from God, Jonahs pace. There is a foot of pride (Psa 36:11), a saucy foot, that dares presumptuously enter upon Gods freehold. There is a foot of rebellion, that with an apostate malice kicks at God. There is a dancing foot, that paceth the measures of circular wickedness. Yet, as unruly as this foot is, it hath been tamed. David got the victory over it Psa 119:59). But the tongue can no man tame, &c.
(4) The hand rageth and rangeth with violence, to take the bread it never sweat for, to enclose fields, to depopulate towns, to lay waste whole countries. Yet it hath been tamed; not by washing it in Pilates basin, but in Davids holy water–innocence. I will wash my hands in innocency, and then, O Lord, will I compass Thine altar.
2. With other creatures of the world, whether we find them in the earth, air, or water.
(1) On the earth there is the man-hating tiger, yet man hath subdued him; and (they write) a little boy hath led him in a string. There is the flock-devouring wolf, that stands at grinning defiance with the shepherd; mad to have his prey, or lose himself; yet he hath been tamed. The roaring lion, whose voice is a terror to man, by man hath been subdued. Yea, serpents that have to their strength two shrewd additions, subtlety and malice; that carry venom in their mouths, or a sting in their tails, or are all over poisonous; the very basilisk, that kills with his eyes (as they write) three furlongs off. Yea, all these savage, furious, malicious natures have been tamed.
(2) In the sea there be great wonders (Psa 107:23-24). Yet those natural wonders have been tamed by our artificial wonders–ships.
(3) In the air, the birds fly high above our reach, yet we have gins to fetch them down. Snares, lime-twigs, nets, tame them all; even the pelican in the desert, and the eagle amongst the cedars. Thus far, then, St. Jamess proposition passeth without opposition. The tongue can no man tame; the tongue is too wild for any mans taming. It would be foolish to infer that, though no man can tame the tongue, yet a woman may. Woman, for the most part, hath the glibbest tongue; and if ever this impossibility preclude men, it shall much more annihilate the power of the weaker sex Pro 7:11; Pro 9:13). The tongue can no man tame. Let us listen to some weightier exceptions. The prophets spake the oracles of life, and the apostles the words of salvation; and many mens speech ministers grace to the hearers. Yield it; yet this general rule will have no exceptions: no man can tame it; man hath no stern for this ship, no bridle for this colt. How then? God tamed it. God must lay a coal of His own altar upon our tongues, or they cannot be tamed. And when they are tamed, yet they often have an unruly trick. Abraham lies; Moses murmurs. Peter forswears his Master, his Saviour. If the tongues of the just have thus tripped, how should the profane go upright? The tongue can no man tame. The instruction hence ariseth in full strength; that God only can tame mans tongue. First, to open our lips when they should speak is the sole work of Psa 51:15). God must open with His golden key of grace, or else our tongues will arrogate a licentious passage. We had better hold our peace, and let our tongues lie still, than set them a-running till God bids them go. Secondly, to shut our lips when they should not speak, is only the Lords work also. It is Christ that casts out the talking devil; He shuts the wicket of our mouth against unsavoury speeches. Thus all is from God. Man is but a lock; Gods Spirit the key that openeth, and no man shutteth; that shutteth, and no man openeth (Rev 3:7). Away, then, with arrogation of works, if not of words. When a man hath a good thought it is gratia infusa, when a good work it is gratia diffusa. If, then, man cannot produce words to praise God, much less can he procure his works to please God. If he cannot tune his tongue, he can never turn his heart. Two useful benefits may be made hereof. First, it is taught us, whither we have recourse to tame our tongues. He that gave man a tongue can tame the tongue. Let us move our tongues to entreat help for our tongues; and, according to their office, let us set them on work to speak for themselves. Secondly, we must not be idle ourselves; the difficulty must spur us to more earnest contention. As thou wouldest keep thy house from thieves, thy garments from moths, thy gold from rust, so carefully preserve thy tongue from unruliness. Look how far the heart is good, so far the tongue. If the heart believe, the tongue will confess; if the heart be meek, the tongue will be gentle; if the heart be angry, the tongue will be bitter.
The tongue is but the hand without, to show how the clock goes within.
1. It is an unruly evil. The difficulty of taming the tongue, one would think, were sufficiently expressed in the evil of it; but the apostle seconds it with another obstacle, signifying the wild nature of it–unruly. It is not only an evil, but an unruly evil.
(1) To ourselves; it is so placed among the members that it defileth all (verse 6). A wild cannibal in a prison may only exercise his savage cruelty upon the stone walls or iron grates. But the tongue is so placed that, being evil and unruly, it hurts all the members.
(2) To our neighbours. Some iniquities are swords to the country, as oppression, rapine, circumvention; some incendiaries to the whole land, as evil and unruly tongues.
(3) To the whole world. If the vast ruins of ancient monuments, if the depopulation of countries, if the consuming fires of contention, if the land manured with blood, had a tongue to speak, they would all accuse the tongue for the original cause of their woe. Slaughter is a lamp, and blood the oil; and this is set on fire by the tongue. You see the latitude and extension of this unruly evil, more unruly than the hand. Slaughters, massacres, oppressions, are done by the hand; the tongue doth more. The hand spares to hurt the absent, the tongue hurts all. One may avoid the sword by running from it; not the tongue, though he run to the Indies. The hand reacheth but a small compass; the tongue goes through the world. If a man wore coat of armour, or mail of brass, yet the darts of the tongue will pierce it. It is evil, and doth much harm; it is unruly, and doth sudden harm. Saint James here calls it fire. Now you know fire is an ill master; but this is unruly fire. Nay, he calls it the fire of hell, blown with the bellows of malice, kindled with the breath of the devil. Nay, Stella hath a conceit, that it is worse than the fire of hell; for that torments only the wicked; this all, both good and bad. Swearers, railers, scolds, have hell-fire in their tongues.
2. Full of deadly poison. Poison is loathsomely contrary to mans nature; but there is a poison not mortal, the venom whereof may be expelled; that is deadly poison. Yet if there was but a little of this resident in the wicked tongue, the danger were less; nay, it is full of it, full of deadly poison. It is observable that which way soever a wicked man useth his tongue, he cannot use it well. He bites by detraction, licks by flattery: and either of these touches rankle; he doth no less hurt by licking than by biting. All the parts of his mouth are instruments of wickedness. Logicians, in the difference betwixt vocem and sonum, say that a voice is made by the tips, teeth, throat, tongue. The lips are the porter, and that is fraud; the porch, the teeth, and there is malice; the entertainer, the tongue, and there is lying; the receiver, the throat, and there is devouring. I cannot omit the moral of that old fable. Three children call one man father, who brought them up. Dying, he bequeaths all his estate only to one of them, as his true natural son; but which that one was left uncertain. Hereupon every one claims it. The wise magistrate, for speedy decision of so great an ambiguity, causeth the dead father to be set up as a mark, promising the challengers that which of them could shoot next his heart, should enjoy the patrimony. The elder shoots, so doth the second; both hit. But when it came to the youngers turn, he utterly refused to shoot; good nature would not let him wound that man dead, that bred and fed him living. Therefore the judge gave all to this son, reputing the former bastards. The scope of it is plain, but significant. God will never give them the legacy of glory, given by His Sons will to children, that like bastards shoot through, and wound His blessed name. Think of this, ye swearing and cursing tongues! To conclude, God shall punish such tongues in their own kind; they were full of poison, and the poison of another stench shall swell them. They have been inflamed, and shall be tormented with the fire of hell. Burning shall be added to burning, save that the first was active, this passive. But blessed is the sanctified tongue. God doth now choose it as an instrument of music to sing His praise; He doth water it with the saving dews of His mercy, and will at last advance it to glory. (T. Adams.)
The tongue hardly tamed
1. The tongue is hardly tamed and subdued to any right use. No human art and power can ever find a remedy and curb for it.
(1) Come before God humbly; bewail the depravation of your nature, manifested in this untamed member.
(2) Come earnestly.
2. There is an unbridled license and violence in the tongue (Job 32:19). When the mind is big with the conception, the tongue is earnest to utter it Psa 39:3). Meeken the heart into a sweet submission, lest discontent seek the vent of murmuring.
3. A wicked tongue is venomous and hurtful; us Bernard observeth, it killeth three at once–him that is slandered, his fame by ill report; him to whom it is told, his belief with a lie; and himself with the sin of detraction. Bless God when you escape those deadly bites, the fangs of detraction. (T. Manton.)
All kinds of creatures tamed by man
The assertion may seem at first somewhat hyperbolical, but the well-known cases of tame rats and tame wasps, the lion of Androcles, and the white fawn of Sertorius, furnish what may well be termed crucial instances in support of it. The story related by Cassian, that St. John in his old age kept a tame partridge, makes it probable that St. James may have seen, among his fellow-teachers, such an instance of the power of man to tame the varied forms of animal life around him. (Dean Plumptre.)
The tongue untamable
Men have gained the ascendancy over many evils which it has pleased God should be intermingled with the course of earthly things; they have been able to encounter and overcome them. Many poisons in minerals, plants, or animals, have been rendered harmless, or turned to beneficial purposes. But to tame the tongue, this most unruly of all evils, to neutralise this deadliest of poisons, to regulate this most refractory agent, has surpassed the power of mortals. The laws of nature have been partially ascertained, and are becoming every day more fully known to us, in proportion as the human mind succeeds in diving into the depths of nature, and investigating her counsels and mysteries. Hence there is a gradual development of intelligence and power, of patient and persevering investigation; hence each generation avails itself of the experience of the preceding; one nation extends the hand of brotherly union to another, and even inquiries apparently unsuccessful at the time, have in the end led to beneficial results. Oh, why has the result been so very different when attempts have been made to gain the supremacy over sin, and to bring under the law of the Spirit only a single member of our frame, that has been under the domination of sin! Oh, here are more profound depths, more hidden mysteries, than in all the nature of beasts, and of birds, and of serpents. Here are greater wonders than in all the wonders of the deep! This baffles the most acute understanding, the most powerful will, the most determined industry of man! (B. Jacobi.)
A not-under-control signal
When anything goes wrong with a ship at sea which prevents her from being moved or answering the helm, she is bound to put up a signal, so that other ships may keep at a safe distance. This, which is called the not-under-control signal, consists of three iron balls. It would be well if some of us could put up not-under-control signals at times when our tempers are not what they should be. Indeed, we know of one man who used to do this. He was an eccentric author, and when, owing to preoccupation of mind, or any ether circumstance, he was likely to be peevish and snappish to his family, he would stick on his forehead a red wafer. This was a danger signal, telling every one to keep out of his way. (Quiver.)
The malignant propensity of the tongue
It is an untamable, venomous beast. It combines the ferocity of the tiger and the mockery of the ape with the subtlety and venom of the serpent. (A. Plummer, D. D.)
Scandal a poison
Scandal, hydra-headed, poison-ranged, lives on the garbage of the world, and slays even after it is seemingly killed. There is a story of a cobra which got into a West Indian church during service. Some one saw it, went quietly out, procured a weapon, and coming back, cut off the snakes head. After the service the people went to look at the animal, and a native touched the dead head with his foot. He drew it back with a cry of pain, and in an hour he was dead. The poison-fangs had power to kill, though their owner was dead. (Christian Age.)
An unruly evil
In the Shepherd of Hermas (ii. 2), calumny is described as a restless demon. (Cambridge Bible for Schools.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 7. Every kind of beasts] That is, every species of wild beasts, , is tamed, i.e. brought under man’s power and dominion. Beasts, birds, serpents, and some kinds of fishes have been tamed so as to be domesticated; but every kind, particularly , of sea monsters, has not been thus tamed; but all have been subjected to the power of man; both the shark and whale become an easy prey to the skill and influence of the human being. I have had the most credible information, when in the Zetland Isles, of the seals being domesticated, and of one that would pass part of his time on shore, receive his allowance of milk, &c., from the servants, go again to sea, and return, and so on.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Every kind; some of every kind.
Of beasts; wild beasts, such as are most fierce and untractable.
And of birds; though so movable and wandering, the very vagabonds of nature.
And of serpents; which are such enemies to mankind.
And of things in the sea; the inhabitants, as it were, of another world, really of another element.
Is tamed, and hath been tamed of mankind; either made gentle, or at least, brought into subjection to man by one means or other. He useth both tenses, the present and the past perfect, to note that such things not only have been, but still are; and that not as the effects of some miraculous providence, as in the case of Daniel, Dan 6:1-28, and Paul, Act 28:1-31, but as that which is usually experienced, and in mans power still to do.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
7. every kindrather, “everynature” (that is, natural disposition and characteristic power).
of beaststhat is,quadrupeds of every disposition; as distinguished from the threeother classes of creation, “birds, creeping things (the Greekincludes not merely ‘serpents,’ as English Version), andthings in the sea.”
is tamed, and hath beeniscontinually being tamed, and hath been so long ago.
of mankindrather, “bythe nature of man”: man’s characteristic power taming that ofthe inferior animals. The dative in the Greek may imply, “Hathsuffered itself to be brought into tame subjection TO the nature ofmen.” So it shall be in the millennial world; even now man, bygentle firmness, may tame the inferior animal, and even elevate itsnature.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
For every kind of beasts, and of birds,…. Or the “nature” of them, as it is in the Greek text; however fierce, as beasts of prey are, or shy, as the fowls of the air be:
and of serpents and things in the sea; the fishes there:
is tamed, and hath been tamed of mankind, or “by human nature”: by the wit and industry of man; by the various ways, means, and methods devised by man. So Pliny l relates, that elephants lions and tigers among beasts, and the eagle among birds, and crocodiles, asps, and other serpents, and fishes of the sea, have been tamed: though some think this is only to be understood of their being mastered and subdued, by one means or another; or of their being despoiled of their power, or of their poison: and the Syriac and Ethiopic versions render it, “subjected to human nature”.
l Nat. Hist. l. 8. c. 9. 16, 17. & 10. 5, 44.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Kind (). Old word from , order of nature (Ro 1:26), here of all animals and man, in 2Pe 1:4 of God and redeemed men.
Of beasts (). Old word diminutive from and so “little beasts” originally, then wild animals in general (Mr 1:13), or quadrupeds as here. These four classes of animals come from Ge 9:2f.
Birds (). Old word for flying animals (from , to word from , to crawl (Latin serpo), hence serpents.
Things in the sea (). Old adjective (, , sea, salt) in the sea, here only in N.T. The four groups are put in two pairs here by the use of with the first two and the second two. See a different classification in Acts 10:12; Acts 11:6.
Is tamed (). Present passive indicative of , old verb kin to Latin dominus and English tame, in N.T. only in this passage and Mr 5:4. The present tense gives the general picture of the continuous process through the ages of man’s lordship over the animals as stated in Ge 1:28.
Hath been tamed (). Perfect passive indicative of the same verb, repeated to present the state of conquest in some cases (domestic animals, for instance).
By mankind ( ). Instrumental case with repeated article and repetition also of , “by the nature the human.” For see Ac 17:25.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Kind [] . Wrong. Jas. is not speaking of the relation between individual men and individual beasts, but of the relation between the nature of man and that of beasts, which may be different in different beasts. Hence, as Rev., in margin, nature.
Beasts [] . Quadrupeds. Not beasts generally, nor wild beasts only. In Act 28:4, 5, the word is used of the viper which fastened on Paul ‘s hand. In Peter’s vision (Act 10:12; Act 11:6) there is a different classification from the one here; quadrupeds being denoted by a specific term, tetrapoda, four – footed creatures. There qhria includes fishes, which in this passage are classed as ejnaliwn, things in the sea.
By mankind [ ] . Rather, by the nature of man, fusiv, as before, denoting the generic character. Every nature of beasts is tamed by the nature of man. Compare the fine chorus in the “Antigone” of Sophocles, 343 – 352 :
“The thoughtless tribe of birds, The beasts that roam the fields, The brood in sea – depths born, He takes them all in nets, Knotted in snaring mesh, Man, wonderful in skill. And by his subtle arts He holds in sway the beasts That roam the fields or tread the mountain ‘s height; And brings the binding yoke Upon the neck of horse with shaggy mane, Or bull on mountain crest, Untamable in strength.”
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
Beasts, birds, fishes, serpents, and creeping things of the earth are tamed, and able to be tamed, James affirms. But the tongue of man no one has been powerful to restrain, with proper limits, to tame or subdue.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
7 For every kind of beasts. This is a confirmation of the last clause; for that Satan by the tongue rules most effectively he proves by this — that it can by no means be brought to due order; and he amplifies this by comparisons. For he says that there is no animal so savage or fierce, which is not tamed by the skill of man, — that fishes, which in a manner inhabit another world, — that birds, which are so quick and roving — and that serpents, which are so inimical to mankind, are sometimes tamed. Since then the tongue cannot be restrained, there must be some secret fire of hell hidden in it.
What he says of wild beasts, of serpents, and of other animals, is not to be understood of them all; it is enough that the skill of man should subdue and tame some of the most ferocious of them, and also that serpents are sometimes tamed. He refers to present and to past time: the present regards power and capacity, and the past, usage or experience. He hence justly concludes that the tongue is full of deadly poison.
Though all these things most suitably refer in the first place to the subject of this passage — that they claim an unreasonable command over others, who labor under a worse vice; yet a universal doctrine may be understood as taught here, — that if we desire to form our life aright, we must especially strive to restrain the tongue, for no part of man does more harm.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(7) For every kind of beasts . . .Compare the margin, and read more exactly, thus: Every nature of beasts and birds, and creeping things, and things of the sea, is tamed, and hath been tamed, by the nature of man. All kinds have been mastered by mankind, as promised at creation (Gen. 1:26-28). There lives no creature which may not be won by kindness and gratitude; and
He prayeth best who loveth best
All things both great and small;
For the dear God Who loveth us,
He made and loveth all.
The four-fold division of animal life above is curiously like and unlike that in Act. 10:17, where we read of four-footed beasts of the earth, wild beasts, creeping things, and fowls of the air.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
7. Every kind Literally, every nature; where, as Huther well remarks, not the taming of individuals is meant, but of the brutal natures. The natures of the four great orders here enumerated have been brought under control by the nature and genius of man.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘For every kind of beasts and birds, of creeping things and things in the sea, is tamed, and has been tamed by mankind.’
This verse would favour interpreting ‘the round of existence’ in terms of the living creatures mentioned, for ‘every kind of beasts and birds, of creeping things and things in the sea’ is the key phrase looking back to the previous thought of the wheel of nature, just as ‘tamed’ looks forward to the next thought (see analysis above). Otherwise this verse is breaking the chain of connected ideas and forming a new one, which is unlikely.
But the writer draws the lesson from it that all these creatures are tameable in the end, and indeed have at times been tamed, whereas man’s tongue appears to be untameable, and can turn men, and even those creatures, wild again.
‘Every kind’ simply means many different kinds, whether large or small animals; differing kinds of birds, such especially as hawks and pigeons, or parrots; creeping things like snakes under their charmers and tamed snakes kept in Temples; and fish such as dolphins and porpoises and in ancient times even wider varieties, both sacred and otherwise. And even the wilder ones have been kept in place and restrained
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Warning against the abuse of the tongue:
v. 7. For every kind of beasts, and of birds, and of serpents, and of things in the sea is tamed and hath been tamed of mankind;
v. 8. but the tongue can no man tame; it is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison.
v. 9. Therewith bless we God, even the Father, and therewith curse we men, which are made after the similitude of God.
v. 10. Out of the same mouth proceedeth blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not so to be
v. 11. Doth a fountain send forth at the same place sweet water and bitter?
v. 12. Can the fig-tree, my brethren, bear olive-berries? either a vine, figs? So can no fountain both yield salt water and fresh. It may seem, perhaps, that the orator is here carried away by his subject; but any one that has observed the terrible effect of slandering and defaming which is done in our days, as it was hundreds of years ago, will say only that the apostle speaks by way of comparison. In holy indignation he cries out: For every kind of beast and bird, of reptiles and of marine animals, is tamed and has been tamed by mankind, but the tongue can no one of men tame; that restless evil, full of death-bringing poison. The patience and the ingenuity of man has worked effects approaching the miraculous in taming and in training animals of every description, mammals, birds, reptiles, and various animals that live in the sea. Though the divine promise of the dominion of man, Gen 1:28, has suffered somewhat in consequence of sin, yet the mastery of human beings over the animals cannot be questioned, the latter being kept in subjection both by subtlety and by force. But the tongue seems to be beyond the ability of man, to keep in subjection and to tame; all the immeasurable evil that it has caused since the fall of Adam, all the innumerable warnings that have been uttered by the servants of God since that time, have not yet succeeded in curbing its pernicious activity. An unruly, a restless evil, the apostle calls it, one that causes restlessness and disorder, that, upsets all established rules for its control. It is full of death-bringing poison, Rom 3:13; the evil which it causes has the same effect as the venom of asps, corroding and killing.
In what way this is true, the apostle shows by citing one single instance: With it we bless the Lord and Father, and with it we curse men who are made in the likeness of God; out of the same mouth comes forth blessing and cursing. Matters are here represented as they are found in the world and, sad to say, also in the midst of those that bear the name of Christ and confess His holy name. The tongue being the instrument of speech, it is used by believers and even by others for the praise of God, who is our Lord and Father in Christ Jesus. That is as it should be; for we can never adequately sing the praises of Him who has brought us out of the darkness of spiritual death into the marvelous light of His grace. But the sad side of the picture is this, that the same mouth is also used in personal abuse, in cursing a fellow-man, who was created originally in the likeness of God. For God made Adam in His image, and although the spiritual part of this likeness has been lost as a consequence of the Fall, certain external characteristics still proclaim that man is the crown of created beings. Thus the tongue is made an instrument of evil in calling down God’s wrath and punishment upon a fellow-man. There is no excuse for this, neither loss of temper nor heated controversy. It is a vile transgression, an evil habit, aggravated by the fact that blessing and cursing come forth out of the same mouth. Surely the contradiction should at once strike every man that is guilty of such behavior; he ought to feel that such a condition of affairs cannot possibly be reconciled even with common decency. Solemnly, therefore, the apostle adds: It should not be, my brethren, that these things happen; the mouth which blesses God in fervent prayer should not heap curses upon men at other times; such behavior cannot be reconciled with the Christian profession.
How utterly unreasonable and contradictory the attitude of men is that still are guilty in the manner described, the apostle shows by a few examples: Surely a spring out of the same opening does not send forth sweet and bitter water! A fig-tree, my brethren, surely cannot bring forth olives, or a grape-vine, figs! Neither can salt water yield fresh. Nature itself teaches that the behavior of men as just characterized by the apostle is unnatural, unreasonable. For the same fissure, the same opening of a spring or fountain, cannot bubble up sweet, fresh water, and bitter, brackish water at the same time. A fig-tree will not bear olives, nor a vine, figs, neither can a sweet-water fountain yield salt water and a saltwater spring, or the salty sea, sweet water. How much more does it behoove. Christians to watch over their tongues, lest the good and the evil, the wholesome and the foul, be poured forth from the same mouth!
Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann
Jam 3:7-8. For every kind of beasts, &c. Instead of serpents, in this verse, some read creeping things. Dr. Doddridge renders it reptiles. Good men have through Divine grace governed their own tongues: otherwise their religion would have been in vain; ch. Jam 1:26. The comparisons mentioned in the context have led some to interpret the words thus: “That it is difficult for one man to subdue the tongue of another; more difficult than it would be for him to subdue a wild beast.” But the apostle seems rather to speak of every man’s governing his own tongue; and he could not look upon that as utterly impossible; for his whole design was to persuade Christians to govern their tongues. He does indeed represent it as a very difficult thing, in order to stir them up to a greater care and diligence: but if men could not possibly govern their tongues through the power of Divine grace, the evils which should arise from thence could not be their faults. The word ‘, rendered unruly, is a metaphor taken from beasts that are with difficulty kept within bounds, by wall, or by hedges, or ditches.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Jas 3:7-8 . In these verses the untameable power of the tongue is adduced. The particle here indicates neither simply the transition (Pott), nor is it to be referred to (Wiesinger), separated from it by Jas 3:5-6 , nor only to the last thought, . . . (Lange); but it is used as a logical particle, whilst the truth expressed in these verses substantiates the judgment contained in Jas 3:5-6 . The relation of these two verses to each other is, that Jas 3:8 contains the principal thought, and Jas 3:7 , on the other hand, a thought subordinate to it, which is only added in order to make that thought more emphatic. The meaning is: Whereas man tames all animals, yet he cannot tame the tongue. By is to be understood not the genus (Augusti, Gebser, Bretschneider, Schneckenburger), but the qualitas naturalis, and in such a manner that James has in view not the relation of the individual man to the individual beast, but the relation of human nature to animal nature in general, however this may differ in the different kinds of animals. The totality of beasts is expressed by four classes, which are arranged in pairs, namely, quadrupeds and birds, creeping beasts and fishes.
] are not “beasts generally” (Pott), nor specially “ wild beasts” (Erasmus, Vatablus, Piscator, Baumgarten, Theile, Bouman).
] are neither terrestrial animals generally (Pott, Hottinger), nor only serpents (Luther, Calvin, Grotius, and others), but it is used here in the same meaning as in Gen 1:24-25 (LXX. , as the translation of ); see Act 10:12 ; Rom 1:23 .
] ( . .) denotes either fish simply, or likewise all worms living in the water; Luther incorrectly translates it “sea wonders,” and Stier “sea monsters.” There is here the same classification as in Gen 9:2 in the LXX. (which may have been before the mind of James): , , , . The dominion of human nature over the brute creation is expressed by the verb (i.e. so to subdue, that what is subdued submits to the will of the subduer), because it supposes the subjection of something resisting (see Mar 5:4 ). That James only thought on wild animals does not follow from this. The perfect is added to the present in order to represent the present taming as that which had already taken place in the past. It is incorrect to resolve into (Hottinger, Schneckenburger), for it treats not only of the possibility, but of the actuality.
. .] is not the dat. commodi, but the dative used with the passive, instead of the construction with . has the same meaning as before; accordingly not ingenii solertia (Hornejus, Hottinger, Schneckenburger).
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
7 For every kind of beasts, and of birds, and of serpents, and of things in the sea, is tamed, and hath been tamed of mankind:
Ver. 7. For every kind of beasts, &c. ] See Trapp on “ Heb 2:7 “ Some creatures indeed may be taken, but not tamed, as the tiger, panther, monoceros, of which last it is testified, quod interimi potest, capi non potest; slain he may be, but not taken. Such unruly talkers and deceivers the Church is pestered with, Tit 1:10 ; 1Th 5:14 ; sons of Belial, untamable, untractable, untouchable, unteachable, 2Sa 23:6-7 1Sa 25:17 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
7, 8 .] The untameableness of the tongue . The thought in Jas 3:3 , though not directly leading on to this, yet is a hint tending towards it.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
7 .] For (a fresh fact is adduced, substantiating the strong terms used of the mischief of the tongue) every nature (natural generic disposition and character; and so below, when joined to : not, “ kind ,” “genus,” as E. V. and many Commentators) of beasts (quadrupeds, see below) and winged things, of creeping things and things in the sea (creation is divided into four classes: , , , and . The first then is not to be taken in its wide sense, as Act 28:4-5 , but as distinguished from the other three, i. e. as = quadrupeds, beasts of the earth, proper. The classification in Peter’s vision, ref. Acts, is different: . . , there at least including the fishes) is (habitually, pres.) tamed and hath been tamed (has long ago been reduced into subjection: such taming has become (perf.) an enduring fact in the world’s history, exemplified (pres.) every day) by (not, ‘ to ,’ as a ‘dativus commodi:’ it is the dat. of the agent, after a passive verb, = the construction with and a gen., as is shewn by the following active construction with ) the nature (not, “ingenii sollertia,” as Schneckenb., al.; but as before, natural generic character) of man:
Jas 3:7-8 . These verses, are, of course, not to be taken literally; their exaggerative character rather reminds one of the orator carried away by his subject. But it must be remembered that to the Oriental the language of exaggeration is quite normal. Moreover, this enumeration of various classes of animals was familiar from the O.T., and would be uttered as stereotyped phrases often are, it being well understood that the words are not to be taken au pied de la lettre; e.g. , a very familiar passage from the Torah runs: (Gen 9:2 ); and one who shows so much familiarity with the Wisdom literature would be well acquainted with what tradition had imputed to Solomon; (1Ki 4:33 ), cf. Gen 1:26 (Jas 1:27 is quoted in the next verse); Deu 4:17-18 ; Act 10:12 .
kind = nature. Greek. phusis. See Rom 1:26.
beasts = wild beasts.
things in the sea. Greek. enalios. Only here.
tamed. Greek. damazo. Only here, Jam 3:8, and Mar 5:4.
of = by. No preposition. Dative case.
mankind = human (Greek. anthropinos. See Rom 6:19) nature (Greek. phusis, above).
7, 8.] The untameableness of the tongue. The thought in Jam 3:3, though not directly leading on to this, yet is a hint tending towards it.
Jam 3:7. , for) Nothing is more violent than fire.- , the nature of beasts) A Periphrasis, for , beasts.- , is tamed, in a passive sense; and has been tamed [has suffered itself to be tamed], in a middle sense.- [in obedience] to the nature of man) The dative case denotes the obedience of those things which are tamed.
kind: Gr. nature
is tamed: Mar 5:4, Gr
mankind: Gr. the nature of man
Reciprocal: Gen 1:26 – have dominion Gen 9:2 – General
Jas 3:7. The facts of controlling a horse with a bit, guiding a ship with a rudder or training a beast by man all have one thing in common, namely, the feat is accomplished by another party; the things controlled are acted upon by an outside force.
Jas 3:7. For every kind: literally, every nature or disposition.
of beasts, and of birds, and of serpents, and of things in the sea: the inferior creation arranged under its usual fourfold classificationbeasts of the earth, fowls of heaven, creeping things, and fish of the sea.
is tamedbetter, is subdued, as we can hardly say that all the inferior animals are tamed, many of them being incapable of being so; but they may all be subdued.
and hath been tamed, subdued.
of mankind: literally, by the nature of men, answering to the nature of the inferior animals mentioned above; hence by human nature.
Our apostle here goes on in shewing how difficult it is to govern the tongue; it is wilder than the wildest beasts, they are more tractable, and may be sooner tamed than a tongue be governed: it is an unruly evil, that will not be held in.
Nature has set a double guard about the tongue, namely, the teeth and the lips, and grace has laid many restraints upon it, and yet it breaks out full of deadly poison, intimating, that the tongue is as deadly as a venomous beast.
In the wild desert there are lions, bears, and tigers, but they assault us but now and then, and can only rend the skin, but a contentious tongue is always troublesome to the soul and spirit: man tameth the beast, and God tameth man: and the apostle’s calling the tongue an unruly evil, full of deadly poison, plainly imports, that a wicked tongue is venomous and hurtful; a slanderous tongue is a deadly poison, nothing can secure against it but innocency and a good conscience; if we fall by it, let this comfort us, that there will be a resurrection of our names, as well as of our persons, let us always then keep in the way of our duty, and commit our good name to God’s care and keeping.
No One Can Tame the Tongue
Man uses the tongue to praise and speak highly of God ( Eph 5:19 ; Heb 13:15 ; Rom 10:9-10 ). Yet, the same tongue is used to “regularly pronounce curses upon other men” (Woods). It is actually a prayer to God to cause evil to fall down upon a man. We need to remember that one who truly loves God must show it through his true display of love for his fellow man ( 1Jn 4:20-21 ; Mat 25:31-46 ). For, man is made in the image of God ( Jas 3:9 ; Gen 1:26 ).
Jas 3:10-12 comments on and illustrates the ridiculous nature of the action described in verse 9. Woods says the force of the verb makes it mean, “These things ought not to begin to be.” Obviously, calling down the curse of God upon men will not cause God to act. It is as contradictory to use the same tongue to bless God and curse men as it is for a fountain to give forth sweet and bitter water. It is as absurd as a fig tree bearing olive berries, a vine producing figs, or a fountain producing fresh and salt water.
Actually, the problem with the mouth stems from the heart. Solomon said, “Keep your heart with all diligence, for out of it spring the issues of life” ( Pro 4:23 ; Mat 15:18 ). If we can get our heart right with God, our mouth will not be used to curse man.
Jas 3:7-8. For every kind of beasts , every nature of wild beasts. The phrase signifies the strength and fierceness of wild beasts, the swiftness of birds, the poison of serpents, the exceeding great force of sea-monsters; is tamed , is subdued, or is capable of being subdued; by mankind , by the human nature; every sort of these has been overcome by the art and ingenuity of man; so that they have been made subservient to his use and pleasure. The apostle cannot mean that such creatures as sharks and whales have been tamed, according to the general import of that term, or made harmless and familiar with man, as some beasts, naturally savage, have been; but of which large fishes are in their nature incapable. But even they have been conquered, and brought entirely under the power of man, so that he could use them as he would. But the tongue can no man tame Namely, the tongue of another; no, nor his own, without peculiar help from God. Macknight reads, The tongue of men no one can subdue; observing, that this transaction arises from the right construction of the original, and that it gives a more just sense than the common translation. Some read the clause interrogatively, thus, And can no man subdue the tongue? It is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison Mischievous wickedness.
For every kind of beasts, and of birds, and of serpents, and of things in the sea, is tamed, and hath been tamed of mankind:
This is illustration that man can tame anything except his tongue. I could note that wives are not included here, but I won’t put myself in jeopardy. We can control the animal world as a whole, but cannot control such a small thing as our tongue. It doesn’t say much for man does it?
The term translated “every” is that word that means most – it is a generic “every” saying that all are controlled but not every single one. The Gospels use the term of John the Baptist when it says that “all Judea” went out to him. We know that not every single person went out.
As a result, not every single creature is controlled. For example a hungry tiger may or may not be controlled by man. A shark that is on a feeding frenzy may not be controlled by man, but most animals are controlled by man and his actions, even the tigers and sharks are now controlled fairly well now that we have guns, repellants and understanding of their habits.
If you think about this, you will note that man has a special relationship to the animals in nature. We have control over them. Can you imagine a world where we had no control over the animal, bird and fish worlds? That would be a rather scary thing. We would not have the freedoms that we have today, and they would probably be much more prevalent in number.
4. The uncontrollable nature of the tongue 3:7-8
Human beings have brought all the major forms of animal life under control. For example, people have taught lions, tigers, and monkeys to jump through hoops. They have taught parrots and canaries to speak and sing. They have charmed snakes. They have trained dolphins and whales to perform various tricks and tasks. The ancients took pride in the ability of humans to tame and control the animal kingdom. [Note: Ibid., p. 116.] "Tamed" is perhaps too strong a word. "Subdued" might be a better translation of the Greek word (damazo).
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Fuente: Gary Hampton Commentary on Selected Books
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Fuente: Mr. D’s Notes on Selected New Testament Books by Stanley Derickson
Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)
Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)