Everything about The Epistle Of James totally explained
The
Epistle of James is a book in the
Christian New Testament. The author identifies himself as "James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ", traditionally understood as
James the Just, the brother of
Jesus (see
Authorship and Composition).
Framed within an overall theme of patient perseverance during trials and temptations, the text condemns various
sins and calls on Christians to be patient while awaiting the
Second Coming.
The
epistle has caused controversy:
Protestant reformer Martin Luther argued that it wasn't the work of an
apostle.
Roman Catholicism,
Eastern Orthodoxy and
Mormonism claim it contradicts Luther's doctrine of
justification through faith alone (
Sola fide), which Luther derived from his translation of . The Christian debate over
Justification is still unsettled, see also
Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification and
Biblical law in Christianity.
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia:
» "The subjects treated of in the Epistle are many and various; moreover, St. James not infrequently, whilst elucidating a certain point, passes abruptly to another, and presently resumes once more his former argument; hence it's difficult to give a precise division of the Epistle."
Content
The
United Bible Societies's
Greek New Testament divides the letter into the following sections:
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- Salutation (1:1)
- Faith and Wisdom (1:2-8)
- Poverty and Riches (1:9-11)
- Trial and Temptation (1:12-18)
- Hearing and Doing the Word (1:19-27)
- Warning against Partiality (2:1-13)
- Faith and Works (2:14-26)
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The Tongue (3:1-12)
The Wisdom from Above (3:13-18)
Friendship with the World (4:1-10)
Judging a Brother (4:11-12)
Warning against Boasting (4:13-17)
Warning to the Rich (5:1-6)
Patience and Prayer (5:7-20)
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The epistle was addressed to "the
twelve tribes scattered abroad" (James 1:1), which is generally taken to mean a
Jewish Christian audience.
The object of the writer was to enforce the practical duties of the
Christian life. The vices against which he warns them are:
formalism, which made the service of God consist in washings and outward ceremonies, whereas he reminds them (1:27) that it consists rather in active love and purity; fanaticism, which, under the cloak of
religious zeal, was tearing Jerusalem in pieces (1:20); fatalism, which threw its sins on God (1:13); meanness, which crouched before the rich (2:2); falsehood, which had made words and oaths play-things (3:2-12); partisanship (3:14); evil speaking (4:11); boasting (4:16); oppression (5:4). The great lesson which he teaches them as Christians is patience, patience in trial (1:2), patience in good works (1:22-25), patience under provocation (3:17), patience under oppression (5:7), patience under persecution (5:10); and the ground of their patience is that the
coming of the Lord drawing nigh, which is to right all wrong (5:8).
Authorship and composition
The author identifies himself in the opening verse as "James, a servant of
God and of the Lord
Jesus Christ". From the middle of the third century,
patristic authors cited the
Epistle as written by
James the Just, a
relation of Jesus and first
Bishop of Jerusalem. Not numbered among the
Twelve Apostles, unless he's identified as
James the Less, James was nonetheless a very important figure: Paul described him as "the brother of the Lord" in
Galatians 1:19 and as one of the three "pillars of the Church" in 2:9. He is traditionally considered the first of the
Seventy Disciples.
John Calvin and others suggested that the author was the Apostle
James, son of Alphaeus, who was often identified with James the Just. If written by James the Just, the place and time of the writing of the epistle would be
Jerusalem, where James was residing before his martyrdom in
62.
Authorship has also occasionally been attributed to the apostle
James the Great, brother of
John the Evangelist and son of
Zebedee. The letter does mention persecutions in the present tense (2:6), and this is consistent with the
persecution in Jerusalem during which James the Great was martyred (Acts 12:1). However, some challenge the early date on the basis of some of the letter’s content, which they interpret to be a clarification of St. Paul’s teachings on
justification found in his
Epistle to the Romans, written
c. 54. If written by James the Great, the location would have also been Jerusalem, sometime before
45.
In addition to its Greek style, they observe further that (a) the prestige that the writer is assumed to enjoy points to the later legendary reputation of James; (b) the discussion of the importance of good works seems to presuppose a debate subsequent to that in Paul's own day; (c) the author doesn't rely upon prescriptions of the Mosaic law, as we'd expect from the historical James; (d) the letter contains no allusions to James's own history and to his relationship with Jesus or to the early Christian community of Jerusalem. For these reasons, many recent interpreters assign James to the period A.D. 90-100.
.
Lastly, many scholars consider the epistle to be written in the late first or early second centuries, after the death of James the Just. Among the reasons for this are:
the author introduces himself merely as "a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ", without invoking any special family relationship to Jesus.
the cultured Greek language of the Epistle, it's contended, couldn't have been written by a Jerusalemite Jew (though there were many Greek-speakers in Jerusalem and a Greek-speaking scribe could have taken dictation).
the author fails to mention Jewish ritual requirements such as circumcision, whereas James the Just is known from Galatians and the Acts of the Apostles to have been particularly concerned with ministering to the Jewish and circumcised (however, since it's addressed to a Jewish audience, such requirements would naturally be taken for granted; moreover, the Epistle could have been written before the end of Paul's First Missionary Journey (46-48 AD), when the inclusion of gentiles first became an issue).
the author fails to mention any details of Jesus's life (however, the doctrines resemble Jesus's own doctrines as recorded in the Gospels, more than Paul's doctrines).
the epistle was only gradually accepted into the (non-Jewish) canon of the New Testament.
The Epistle was first definitely quoted by Origen, and possibly a bit earlier
by Irenaeus of Lyons as well as Clement of Alexandria in a lost work according to Eusebius.
Canonicity
The Epistle of James was included among the 27 New Testament books first listed by Athanasius of Alexandria and was confirmed as a canonical epistle of the New Testament by a series of councils in the fourth century. Today, virtually all denominations of Christianity consider this book to be a canonical epistle of the New Testament. See Biblical canon
In the first centuries of the Church the authenticity of the Epistle was doubted by some, and amongst others by Theodore, Bishop of Mopsuestia in Cilicia; it's therefore deuterocanonical. It is missing in the Muratorian fragment, and because of the silence of several of the western churches regarding it, Eusebius classes it amongst the Antilegomena or contested writings (Historia ecclesiae, 3.25; 2.23). St. Jerome gives a similar appraisal but adds that with time it had been universally admitted. Gaius Marius Victorinus, in his commentary on the Epistle to the Galatians, openly questioned whether the teachings of James were heretical.
Its late recognition in the Church, especially in the West, may be explained by the fact that it was written for or by Jewish Christians, and therefore not widely circulated among the Gentile Churches. There is some indication that a few groups distrusted the book because of its doctrine. In Reformation times a few theologians, most notably Martin Luther, argued that this epistle was too defective to be part of the canonical New Testament. This is probably due to the book's specific teaching that faith alone isn't enough for salvation, which seemed to contradict Luther's doctrine of sola fide (faith alone).
Doctrine
Justification
The letter contains the following famous passage concerning salvation and justification: » “What does it profit, my brethren, if someone says he's faith but doesn't have works? Can faith save him? …You see then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only…? For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also.” (James 2:14, 24, 26)
This passage has been cited in Christian theological debates, especially against the Protestant doctrine of Justification by faith alone. Gaius Marius Victorinus (4th century) associated James' teaching on works with the heretical Symmachian sect, followers of Symmachus the Ebionite, and openly questioned whether James' teachings were heretical. This passage has also been contrasted with the teachings of Paul of Tarsus, especially in his Epistle to the Romans (see Romans 3:28). One issue in the debate is the proper rendering of the Greek δικαιωθηναι (dikaiōthēnai). But see also New Perspective on Paul.
Anointing of the Sick
James' epistle is also the chief Biblical text for the Anointing of the Sick. James wrote: » "Are any among you sick? They should call for the elders of the church and have them pray over them, anointing them with oil in the name of the Lord. And their prayer offered in faith will heal the sick, and the Lord will make them well. And anyone who has committed sins will be forgiven." (5:14,15).
Further Information
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