|
James 3
Taming the Tongue
1Not many of you should presume to be teachers, my brothers, because
you know that we who teach will be judged more strictly. 2We all
stumble in many ways. If anyone is never at fault in what he says,
he is a perfect man, able to keep his whole body in check.
Explanation:
The General Theme: Humility
With his now familiar and kind address my brothers, James begins
with a specific instruction that not many should become teachers.
His concern is not to give career counseling. Rather, he is addressing
those who aspire to positions of authority in the church. Church
leaders are his primary focus now. And what is on his heart is a
sin to which leaders are vulnerable--the sin of pride. The NIV reflects
this emphasis by rendering the words "become teachers"
as "presume to be teachers." James's point in the last
half of 3:1 (that teachers will be judged more strictly) is driven
home in the first part of 3:2 (reminding them that everyone is vulnerable
because we all stumble in many ways). It is a warning not to think
one has attained an unassailable spirituality. It is a serious reminder
to be humble.
Further discussion of the role of teachers in the church will begin
in 3:13. The fact that James mentions teachers here but does not
specifically return to the topic until so much later does not have
to mean this is a later addition to the text, as Davids allows (1982:135).
A continuing flow of thought makes sense here. James has been prescribing
humility implicitly and explicitly in 1:5, 1:9-11, 1:13-15, 1:16-18,
1:19, 1:21, 1:26 and 2:13. Nor is this to be the end of the matter.
The reader can glance over chapters 3--5 and find, in the diverse
applications, the unifying intent to warn against arrogance and
instruct in humility. James evidently saw those in authority to
teach as being particularly in danger of spiritual arrogance, which
would be expressed in impure speech. He therefore introduces his
address to teachers and then proceeds to develop his message with
care and detail.
All of this is immediate confirmation that in his emphasis on deeds
in the preceding passage James is still realistic about the persistence
of sin and is not expecting perfection in holiness. It is also confirmation
that the theme of humility, especially as expressed in speech, is
fundamental to James's teaching about Christian living. Humility
is a trait we must examine, search out and cultivate if we claim
to take this book of God's word seriously.
As the foundation for this particular character development, James
confronts us with two inescapable facts of life: judgment and failure.
These are the two facts, therefore, that an expositor of this passage
should establish in order to disciple young Christians in humility.
James has already warned that we are not to judge (2:4) and that
we will be judged (2:12). Now he adds these two points.
First, there is a greater strictness of judgment for ones who teach.
This could be based upon Jesus' statement in Matthew 7:2. It means
that a teacher is obligated to teach what is true and then to live
up to what is taught. God expects more from church leaders and holds
them accountable for what they teach his people. This biblical principle
is exemplified in Ezekiel 34:1-10, where the unfaithful leaders
of the nation are condemned for being neglectful and abusive shepherds
of God's people, and God declares that he will "hold them accountable."
See it again in Matthew 5:19 and 18:6, where Jesus gives warning
to anyone who teaches others to sin. See it repeated in Luke 12:42-48,
where Jesus' parable is about a manager "whom the master puts
in charge of his servants to give them their food allowance at the
proper time." The Lord's instruction culminates in this principle:
"From everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded;
and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will
be asked."
Second, there is failure by all of us. This failure James describes
with the verb stumble (ptaio, used before in 2:10). This verb has
the literal meaning of "stumble" or "trip,"
but it is used as a figure for making a mistake or sinning. (James
will repeat the verb in the last half of 3:2; Romans 11:11 and 2
Peter 1:10 are the only other New Testament uses of this verb.)
James is saying, "Remember, you are subject to judgment even
more if you try to teach others; and you are highly vulnerable in
that judgment because we all sin in many ways."
3-5
3When we put bits into the mouths of horses to make them obey us,
we can turn the whole animal. 4Or take ships as an example. Although
they are so large and are driven by strong winds, they are steered
by a very small rudder wherever the pilot wants to go. 5Likewise
the tongue is a small part of the body, but it makes great boasts.
Consider what a great forest is set on fire by a small spark.
Explanation:
The Focused Theme: Decisive Influence of
the Tongue
Now James applies the broad theme of humility to the specific theme
of the tongue. The unity of these verses as a paragraph is supported
by stylistic features reminiscent of other passages in the letter.
The paragraph is introduced with if anyone (as in 1:5). It is tied
to the preceding verse with repetition of the verb stumble (is at
fault in NIV). And it concludes with the likewise statement in 3:5
(houtos as in 2:17, 2:26). James makes application specifically
to the tongue because he sees the controlling of one's tongue as
a decisive matter, influencing the entirety of one's life. He explains
this fact first, before instructing his readers in the specific
errors of an uncontrolled tongue.
To explain this, first James states his basic principle: If you
control what you say, you can control the rest of what you do. The
intent seems twofold: to prove that we all stumble in many ways
(for we fail even in the simple everyday matter of speaking) and
to motivate us to diligence in speech (because it is so influential
over the rest of our lives).
Second, James illustrates his principle with two analogies--the
horse's bit and the ship's rudder. Both images have to do with steering,
and so refer to the directing of one's whole life. Both images emphasize
the size of the accomplishment (the whole animal and the ships so
large . . . driven by strong winds) and so emphasize the magnitude
of the tongue's influence.
Third, James concludes the analogies with the summarizing principle
in 3:5. Thus far his emphasis is largely positive, describing the
tongue's potential for good, in keeping with his intent to motivate
us to diligence in this matter of speech. Positive application should
be made: that learning godly ways of speaking will help us learn
godliness in other ways. Therefore the issue of speech should not
be put off while one works on other areas of behavior. If you want
purity and Christlikeness to characterize your life, here is a valuable
secret of strategy: start with your tongue!
6-12
6The tongue also is a fire, a world of evil among the parts of the
body. It corrupts the whole person, sets the whole course of his
life on fire, and is itself set on fire by hell.
7All kinds of animals, birds, reptiles and creatures of the sea
are being tamed and have been tamed by man, 8but no man can tame
the tongue. It is a restless evil, full of deadly poison.
9With the tongue we praise our Lord and Father, and with it we curse
men, who have been made in God's likeness. 10Out of the same mouth
come praise and cursing. My brothers, this should not be. 11Can
both fresh water and salt water flow from the same spring? 12My
brothers, can a fig tree bear olives, or a grapevine bear figs?
Neither can a salt spring produce fresh water.
Explanation:
The Specific Dangers of the Tongue
However, James's predominant emphasis in the passage is more negative:
warning that judgment is real and that we all stumble, intending
that we should humbly repent of our impure speech. He dwells then
on the potential for evil rather than the potential for good with
one's tongue. Three dangers are specified. The Tongue Spreads Evil
(3:5-6)
We have found James's style to be full of imagery, previously using
a wave of the sea (1:6), a wild flower (1:10), a crown (1:12), childbirth
(1:15), lights and shadows (1:17) and a mirror (1:23), and already
using a horse's bit and a ship's rudder in the current passage.
Now he adopts a new image appropriate for his topic: fire. The effect
of this choice of image can be shown by comparing it to another
possible image. If he had compared the tongue to an ax, he could
have portrayed quite vividly a destruction of a large tree by a
small tool. Instead of such an isolated act of destruction, however,
James chose to portray a spreading destruction. An ax destroys one
tree at a time; with our tongues, one act of evil starts a destructiveness
that spreads beyond the initial act.
What kind of spreading does James have in mind? It is easy to envision
the spreading of evil through a church family because of gossip,
slander and criticisms. If Paul had written this passage, we might
expect him to employ his image of the church as the body of Christ
to describe the injury done to other lives by one person's impure
speech. But James's reference to the body appears to be in the Jewish
sense of the whole person rather than a figure of speech for the
church. His focus is more on the destruction of the impure speaker's
own life.
We can envision how this might be so. Spread gossip, and people
will not trust you. Speak with sarcasm and insults, and people will
not follow you. Yet what is especially on James's mind is not the
reaction of others to your speech but the spreading of sin from
your speech to the rest of your life. Be hateful with your tongue,
and you will be hateful with other aspects of your behavior. If
you do not discipline and purify your speech, you will not discipline
or purify the rest of your life.
A true exposition of this text should be severe, uncompromising
and authoritative in its condemnation of this evil, faithful to
James's language, which is neither mild nor restrained. With a rapid
succession of images prompted by the devastation he sees, James
says the uncontrolled tongue
[] is a world of evil--a whole world of wrongdoing and wickedness,
"a vast system of iniquity" (Hiebert 1979:215). The phrase
implies a multitude of forms that our impure speech may take.
[] corrupts the whole person--an image of a staining and defiling
spread of sin from wicked speech into all other behavior. The contrasting
pattern, using the same term in the form of a negative adjective,
was in 1:27--keeping oneself unstained or unpolluted by the world.
[] sets on fire the course of one's life--now depicting the tongue's
wickedness as a conflagration spreading through the time span of
one's life as well as the diversity of one's behavior. But this
is more serious even than the length of time involved: the fundamental
direction of one's life is affected. James refers to this with a
phrase that is unique in all of biblical literature: ton trochon
tes geneseos. Its literal meaning would be "wheel of existence"
or "wheel of human origin." James uses it as a figurative
expression to mean the whole course of his life. The phrase emphasizes
the thorough and far-reaching destruction wrought by the uncontrolled
tongue.
[] is itself set on fire by hell--taking the same verb that described
the action by the tongue and now applying it to the tongue in passive
voice, to expose the true origin of the tongue's blazing power to
destroy. James picks up the term gehenna ("hell") which
Jesus often uses in the Synoptic Gospels. It is hard to imagine
a more condemning way to conclude this description of the uncontrolled
tongue.
The images thus build in a progression. The first phrase points
to the multitude of evils contained within and prompted by impure
speech. The second phrase warns that the whole person becomes corrupted
by the uncontrolled tongue. The third adds to corruption the picture
of destruction and extends it to the whole course of the person's
life. The fourth phrase provides the climax by exposing the tongue's
source of evil: hell itself. It is altogether a devastating denunciation.
The Tongue Is Impossible to
Tame (3:7-8)
The sight of a rapidly spreading fire is terrifying; James has used
the image to stir people to swift and radical action. If we come
to the realization that the fire's source is unquenchable, the effect
is more sobering; James now uses this fact to call for sustained
and disciplined action. For this second warning about the tongue,
James changes his imagery and speaks of wild animals. He repeats
the verb tame in present and perfect tenses so that we make no mistake
about how commonplace it is for human beings to tame wild animals.
Yet no human being can tame the tongue.
Why is that so? To explain, in quick succession James adds two phrases
referring to the tongue. First, the tongue is a restless evil, untamable
because it is inherently unstable and therefore, even when brought
under some control, always prone to further evil. This requires
that we be continually watchful over our tongues, never thinking
we have successfully altered the nature of our speech.
James used the same adjective akatastatos in 1:8 to describe the
"unstable" man; he will use the related noun akatastasia
in 3:16 to refer to the "disorder" that prevails where
humility and wisdom from above are missing. We are left with a picture
of this instability as characteristic of unspirituality; it stands
in contrast to the peace (eirene) emphasized in 3:17-18.
Second, with a sudden change in imagery, the tongue is full of deadly
poison. Again we are compelled to be continually watchful--to keep
the lid on the poison, to keep the discipline of our speech in place,
because we know the power to destroy with our tongues is present
as often as we speak.
From all three images--wild animals, restless evil and deadly poison--the
application is the same: discipline. Self-discipline is to be practiced
actively and diligently, in recognition of the constant danger.
It takes discipline to be "quick to listen, slow to speak and
slow to become angry" (1:19). And, looking ahead to the next
verse, it will mean controlling what one says to stop verbally abusing
people who are made in God's own image. The Tongue Makes Us Liable
to Judgment (3:9-12)
Judgment is not mentioned in 3:9-12, but it is the unspoken implication
still being explained from the beginning of the passage in 3:1.
What James does describe explicitly in 3:9-12 is the product of
one's tongue: the contradictory product of praise and cursing. If
we treat this as a relatively superficial matter which he wants
cleared up merely for the sake of consistency, we have dodged the
force of this paragraph. James's specific language drives us to
the serious issue of facing divine judgment. The three phases of
this paragraph make this evident.
First, the literal example he gives in 3:9 involves our relationship
with God himself. If we praise God and then curse our neighbors,
our praise to God is contradicted. James's logic is important to
trace.
1. The one we praise is no less than our Lord and Father. This is
a phrase not repeated anywhere else in the Bible; James is deliberately
bringing into focus the greatness of God with respect to these two
terms.
2. The one we curse is made in the likeness of that Lord and Father.
3. Therefore, to treat people with contempt is to treat God's own
greatness with contempt.
This principle has huge implications in our day, requiring just
and honorable treatment of the unborn, the poor, the sick and the
elderly. James's application here, however, is to our speech. He
refers to a praising or blessing (eulogeo) of God--a common Old
Testament theme with this same verb in the Septuagint (e.g., Ps
103:1-2). He is exposing the hypocrisy of speaking praise to God
with the worshiping church or in private prayer while abusing people
with ridicule, insults and attacks through the rest of the week.
Second, the effect of 3:10 is to declare such inconsistency unthinkable
for Christians. The tone of James's summary in the first part of
the verse is amazement that such praise and cursing should come
from the same mouth. This evokes immediately the negated verb in
the last part of the verse, as if to say: "Praise and cursing
from the same mouth? It can't be!" This also happens to be
the only New Testament instance of the impersonal verb chre; it
conveys the most earnest and blunt emphasis. Adamson describes James's
language as "the strongest possible Greek . . . spoken with
all the force of protesting condemnation" (1976:146-47). The
contradictory speech of praising and cursing "makes moral and
logical nonsense from James's theological standpoint" (Davids
1982:146).
Do we today have this same, intense reaction--this sense that praising
God and cursing people is utterly unthinkable, abhorrent nonsense?
Consider the habitual verbal abuse that occurs in our churches--how
commonplace it is for us to speak of others with ridicule or with
cutting remarks, how quickly we accuse others of evil motives when
they do things we don't like and how easily we can have angry fights
in our churches. Where is our biblical sense of shock at all of
this?
Third, the examples from nature in 3:11-12 are intended to describe
situations that never happen. These are not to be allegorized, and
oddities of nature do not negate James's point. He is stating the
obvious, normative facts that one spring does not pour forth two
kinds of water; a plant of one kind does not produce fruit of another
kind; a salt spring does not produce fresh water. The implication
is that a true Christian will not make a practice of unchristian
speech; and the practice of unchristian speech is evidence that
the speaker is not a Christian and is therefore in danger of hell.
This implication is reinforced when one considers James's possible
reliance on Jesus' teaching--for example, in Matthew 12:33-37, where
the image of a good tree bearing good fruit and a bad tree bearing
bad fruit is applied specifically to speech as the fruit of one's
inner character. "For out of the overflow of the heart the
mouth speaks." Jesus made the divine judgment explicit: "Men
will have to give account on the day of judgment for every careless
word they have spoken." Similarly in the Sermon on the Mount
in Matthew 7:15-23, the trees bearing bad fruit will be "cut
down and thrown into the fire" and the ones who praised Jesus
saying "Lord, Lord" will be sent away as impostors who
are not genuine Christians at all: "Then I will tell them plainly,
`I never knew you.' "
James insists on purity of speech if one's faith is genuine. He
recognizes that Christians fail in this; he is willing to identify
himself with sinful speech--it is something "we" do. But
to accept it or to tolerate it, instead of being horrified at it
and repenting of it--this must not be! For we, like springs and
plants, produce according to our true nature. The production of
good fruit is an evidence of genuine faith and therefore salvation
itself. James says to each one of us: Purify your speaking, or show
yourself to be an impostor and therefore under judgment.
He will not let us avoid this issue with excuses or delays. He writes
conscious that his readers worship together and then have fights
and quarrels among themselves (4:1). How often do Christians sing
"Praise to the Lord, the Almighty" and then leave the
worship service with angry complaints about others with whom they
have worshiped, or fight with each other at a church committee meeting
later in the week? James tells us this must not be! Remember, he
is writing to Christians who are facing trials of many kinds, including
unjust treatment from rich pagans. Nevertheless, James will not
condone participation in worship which is contradicted by a cursing
of people, even a cursing of persecutors. He would remember Jesus'
saying "Bless those who curse you" (Lk 6:28). People violate
this today by singing praise to God on Sunday and then complaining
and attacking neighbors, coworkers or employers on Monday.
To the person who speaks praise to God in the worship service and
then abuses people verbally at home or at work, James commands,
"Purify your speech through the week." With the person
who says, "Oh, I know I talk too much," and laughs it
off, James is not amused. He insists, "Be quick to listen,
slow to speak." By the person who boasts, "I always speak
my mind, no matter who gets hurt," James is not impressed.
He commands, "Discipline your speaking." Of the person
who says, "I know I gossip too much, but I just can't help
it," James still requires, "Control your tongue."
Of the person who is in the habit of speaking with insults, ridicule
or sarcasm, James demands, "Change your speech habits."
He expects discipline to be happening in the life of a Christian.
Any Christian can ask for the grace needed, for God gives good gifts
(1:17) and gives them generously (1:5). There is, then, no justification
for corrupt habits of speech in our churches today. We simply must
repent.
Two Kinds of Wisdom
13Who is wise and understanding among you? Let him show it by his
good life, by deeds done in the humility that comes from wisdom.
14But if you harbor bitter envy and selfish ambition in your hearts,
do not boast about it or deny the truth. 15Such “wisdom”
does not come down from heaven but is earthly, unspiritual, of the
devil. 16For where you have envy and selfish ambition, there you
find disorder and every evil practice.
17But the wisdom that comes from heaven is first of all pure; then
peace loving, considerate, submissive, full of mercy and good fruit,
impartial and sincere. 18Peacemakers who sow in peace raise a harvest
of righteousness.
Explanation:
Who Is Wise Among You?
When James invites people who are (supposedly) wise and understanding
to step forward and identify themselves, he is returning more explicitly
to the topic of "teachers" addressed in 3:1. Especially
for those who think they are wise enough to teach others, James
wants his readers to know what true wisdom means. What he gives
is more a description than a definition of wisdom. In fact, he has
been describing it all along, with his talk of believing God, relying
on God's goodness, doing what God's word says and living the righteous
life that God desires. Now he will label this as wisdom and describe
it further as a humble submissiveness to God which results in a
life of goodness, purity and peace toward other people. To explain
this, James analyzes three aspects of wisdom. The Nature of Wisdom
In regard to the nature of wisdom, first the impact of the question
in 3:13 must be faced: Who is wise and understanding among you?
For those who do not care about true wisdom but only want the status
of being thought wise, the question is a challenge; James's answer
will expose them for what they are. For those who honestly aspire
to being wise, the question is an invitation; James's answer will
divulge the way to attain their aspirations. James is saying, "I
am about to tell you the nature of true wisdom; treasure this."
Let all readers, then, first examine their own hearts before reading
beyond the question posed in 3:13. Do you really want to be wise?
Then we must submit to James's answer about the requirement of true
wisdom. Consistent with his previous instructions, James again requires
actions that authenticate words. Who claims to be wise? Let him
show it by his good life. Today the phrase good life has taken a
connotation of a prosperous, pleasurable life. James, of course,
is talking about quite another matter: moral goodness. His phrase
is kales anastrophes, "good conduct" or "good behavior."
He elaborates: Let him show it . . . by deeds. James is thinking
with the same verb deiknymi and noun ergon as in 2:18; his point
must be very close to that earlier verse. Genuine wisdom, like faith,
is a practical matter; it shows up in how one lives. Literally James
says, "Let him show by good behavior his deeds in the humility
of wisdom." Wisdom, then, is not something I will merely possess
in my head; if I am wise at all, it is something I will demonstrate
in my conduct.
Finally, the personality of wisdom should be taken to heart: the
wise deeds will be done in humility. Humility is the character trait
underlying the Christian behavior described in the entire letter;
this is the trait to cultivate if one would take James's teaching
deeply into one's life. James would have approved of what Calvin
wrote quoting Augustine, "When a certain rhetorician was asked
what was the chief rule in eloquence, he replied, `Delivery'; what
was the second rule, `Delivery'; what was the third rule, `Delivery';
so if you ask me concerning the precepts of the Christian religion,
first, second, third, and always I would answer, `Humility' "
(Institutes 2. 2. 11).
Therefore James's notion of humility is worth exploring. His term
praytes is variously translated as "meekness" (KJV) and
"gentleness" (NASB), but the NIV's "humility"
is much to be preferred. "Meekness" today connotes a touch
of weakness and passivity, which are not at all true in James's
requirement of active obedience. "Gentleness" is appropriate
in reference to our relationships with each other (and should be
brought out in an exposition of 3:17-18); but James has a larger
concept in mind as humility.
The terms prays and praytes ("humble" and "humility")
do not occur in the Gospel of Mark, in Luke's Gospel or Acts, in
Hebrews, or in the Johannine writings of the New Testament. This
reflects the Christology of those writers, who place their emphasis
on Christ as powerful Son and Lord. In Matthew the adjective prays
is used three times, as a significant, characteristic trait of Jesus
himself and of his followers. In Matthew 5:5, when Jesus pronounces
the "meek" to be blessed, he is calling people to enter
his kingdom with this stance of humility. In Matthew 11:29, Jesus
invites people to come and learn from him specifically because he
is himself "gentle." In Matthew 21:5, Matthew identifies
Jesus as the "gentle" messianic king promised in Zechariah
9:9. Paul uses the noun praytes several times, notably as a fruit
of the Spirit (Gal 5:23) and a trait of Christ (2 Cor 10:1) to be
exhibited by all Christians toward other people (Eph 4:2; Col 3:12;
Tit 3:2). This Christian virtue of humility is modeled after the
ministry of Christ, who served others, sacrificed himself and placed
himself wholly at the Father's disposal in perfect trust and obedience.
This seems to be very much James's own concept of humility, as observed
in three applications within his letter. Humility is, first, the
teachability by which we are to accept "humbly" the word
of God in 1:21. But James emphasizes there that humbly accepting
God's word entails doing the word. Therefore humility is, second,
a submissive readiness to do what the word says with deeds done
in . . . humility. Third, James shows in our current passage that
in humility toward God we will become humble (and gentle) to live
at peace with each other. The opposite of humility is an unwillingness
to learn and a refusal to yield: the bitter envy and selfish ambition
that will result in disorder. For James, humility is a yielding
of oneself in ready teachability and responsiveness to God's word,
resulting in a good and unselfish life of peace with other people.
Compare the two terms James employs when talking about humility.
In 1:9-10 he used tapeinos to refer to the poor person's "humble
circumstances" and tapeinosis to mention the rich person's
reduction to a "low position." James used that term when
thinking of circumstantial station in life. When speaking of the
spiritual stance of teachability before God (as in 1:21 and here
in 3:13), however, James uses praytes. Davids explains the awkwardness
of the phrase "in the humility that comes from wisdom"
as due to "a preference for the Semitic-influenced genitive
construction" (1982:150). But the phrase is prompted by more
than a grammatical preference. James is talking about a foundational
element in a person of faith.
The problem James is addressing, then, is not that there are teachers
spreading false doctrine (as would often be the concern in Paul's
letters). James is addressing the problem of arrogance, which can
be present even when correct doctrine is being taught. His warning
should bring all teachers to an abrupt halt for self-examination.
I can be correct in my doctrine down to the most esoteric details;
I can attain a consistency in my orthodoxy which surpasses others';
I can gain a reputation for my thorough grasp of theology and be
regarded as a protector of the faith; and my teaching may still
be earthly, unspiritual, of the devil, resulting in disorder and
every evil practice by stirring up suspicion, slander, distrust
and contention within the Christian community.
James puts the critical issue to me: Am I teaching from humility
or from selfish ambition? If it is the latter, then I am even failing
in the matter about which I am most proud: my grasp of truth. For
then my claim to be wise is itself a falsehood. That is the sense
of James's conclusion, Do not boast about it or deny the truth.
The Source of Wisdom
The wisdom James wants his readers to seek is said to come from
heaven (adverb anothen). The term can have a local sense ("from
above") or a temporal sense ("from the beginning"
or "for a long time"), and it is the term used in John
3 to describe being born "again" or born "anew."
In the present passage, the local sense is indicated by the verb
come down and by the contrast to the adjective earthly. This sense
is also consistent with James's use of the same term in 1:17, where
every good and perfect gift was stated to be from above and then
explicitly from the Father. Wisdom is now declared to be one of
those precious gifts that come from above.
But that divine origin makes the issue more important than mere
location. James explains this by the series of three adjectives
at the end of 3:15. The adjectives build upon each other in "an
ascending scale of wickedness" (Mitton 1966:139). Earthly origin,
in frequent New Testament usage, implies inferiority to heavenly
origin. James then makes this more specific: bitter envy and selfish
ambition are also unspiritual, denoting a natural source devoid
of the supernatural Spirit of God. Finally, to leave no doubt about
the evil source of the envy and ambition, James says they are literally
demonic: of the devil. His investigation of false wisdom uncovers
the same source as his investigation of the uncontrolled tongue
in 3:6--they are both from hell. This is evidently the reason for
the NIV's translation of anothen as from heaven in 3:15 and 3:17
rather than "from above" as in 1:17. James's intention
is to point us to a wisdom from heaven in contrast to the wisdom
from hell, a wisdom far superior to any wisdom we find in ourselves
naturally, and certainly superior to that which comes from demons.
Since true wisdom comes from outside ourselves and from God himself,
we have to examine where our reliance is placed. It makes sense
of what James has already prescribed for a life of faith. It requires
of us an active prayer life--to ask for wisdom as 1:5 commands.
It requires a conscious dependence on God--in the humility prescribed
in 3:13. True wisdom can be had only by people who live in active
reliance on God. The Expression of Wisdom
Here James gives particular content to the deeds done in the humility
that comes from wisdom. What will genuine wisdom look like in a
person's life? James describes both the false wisdom and the true,
and in each case he lists identifying attitudes and actions.
Regarding the false wisdom, we can understand why bitter envy and
selfish ambition are the characteristic attitudes: they are the
opposite of the humility entailed in admitting one's need and relying
on God for the wisdom one lacks. The adjective pikros ("bitter")
describes a harsh stance of demanding to be recognized as wise,
instead of being willing to learn. The noun zelos ("envy")
reveals the motivation as jealousy. The second noun, eritheia ("selfish
ambition"), exposes the sinful desire for personal glory--wanting
the status of a teacher so that others will have to learn from me.
At this point it is valuable to remember that James has been addressing
people who gather in Christian assemblies and who function as teachers
in the church. His words shine a spotlight on the craving for self-glorification
which moves even much of our work in "Christian ministry."
The resulting actions of false wisdom are also identified: disorder
and every evil practice. James ever sees the connection between
inward stance and outward practice. Genuine faith will manifest
itself in deeds, and the same principle holds true in the contrasting
demonic realm. The false wisdom that is of the devil will manifest
itself in practices of disorder and evil. This is simply the application
of the principle James learned from Jesus: by their fruit you will
recognize them. When self-glorification is at the heart of Christian
ministry by church members, those Christians will eventually become
sowers of disorder, contention and other evil practices in the church.
Finally, the expression of true wisdom in the church is presented
with the characteristic attitudes and resulting actions listed in
3:17-18. Three emphases stand out in the way James states this contrast
with false wisdom.
First, in 3:17, James is deliberate to state a foremost characteristic
of the wisdom from above: it is first of all pure and only then
the other qualities. His term pure speaks of holiness and provides
the immediate contrast to every evil practice. It reflects the high
moral sensibility that we have found in James all along; he does
not descend from it now. It is never a sentimental humanitarianism
or an amoral pragmatism that motivates James; it isn't just that
bitter envy hurts people or that selfish ambition does not work.
The first and foremost reason for valuing wisdom is that it will
lead people to do what is morally right. Today's popular relativism
makes it all the more urgent that Christians learn James's passion
for purity. Will we do what is wise first of all because it is right?
Second, in 3:17, James lists other attitudes and behavior of the
wisdom from above. Peace-loving, considerate, submissive, full of
mercy and good fruit, impartial and sincere fill out a picture of
humility put into practice. The first three of these traits are
terms that James uses only here in his letter; they describe people
who can yield status, who care for others and who are willing to
submit and learn from others--all in contrast to the bitterness,
envy and selfish ambition of false spirituality. The remaining traits
weave some of James's earlier instruction into this picture. Full
of . . . good fruit is reminiscent of the recent imagery in 3:12.
Full of mercy reminds James's readers of his urging to be merciful
in 2:13. The terms for impartial and sincere are both built upon
the root for judge (verb krino, noun krites)--an important concept
already in the epistle.
Third, James summarizes in 3:18 (literally): "The fruit of
righteousness is sown in peace by those who make peace." This
connects peacemaking and righteousness (cf. Jesus in Mt 5:9-10)
and suddenly reveals why the disorder in 3:16 is so abhorrent to
James. The opposite of the disorder is not a morally neutral order
but a morally significant peace. James wants peace for the church
because peace is the context in which righteousness can flourish.
This is the positive side of what James said in 1:20, that human
anger does not bring about the righteous life that God desires.
Again, James writes out of a passion for righteousness.
|