Loading…

The Letter of James is unavailable, but you can change that!

Few books in the New Testament are better known or more often quoted as the Letter of James. Because James is so concise, so intensely practical, and so filled with memorable metaphors and illustrations, it has become one of the two or three most popular New Testament books in the church. This highly original commentary seeks to make the Letter of James clear and applicable to Christian living...

is at the same time a point of temptation (see, e.g., Luke 4:13; 1 Cor. 10:13; Heb. 3:8). A combination of meanings of this kind may well be present in vv. 13–15. In v. 2, however, peirasmos means “trial.” The surrounding language makes this clear: believers run the risk of “falling into” (peripiptō; translated “face” in NIV) these trials, which have as their purpose the “testing” of faith and need to be “endured.” These same terms are used elsewhere in the NT when peirasmos has the meaning “trial” (see
Pages 54–55