Difference between revisions of "Epistle of James"

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The '''''Epistle of James''''' is a letter that was canonized into all Christian bibles. The author identifies himself simply as "James," but there are at least six people so named in the bible, two of which are described as apostles of Jesus, as well as any number of people named James not mentioned in the bible. Christians can't agree on which, but the most common line of thought comes from Catholic dogma which maintains that the author is James, son of Alphaeus who is the same person as James the Just. The document is dated by scholars anywhere between 60 CE and 125 CE. Those who believe that the author was a James from the bible have no choice but to believe an early date so that their James would still be alive. No authors write about the letter until around 180 CE. The letter wasn't unanimously agreed upon as canon until around 350 CE.  
 
The '''''Epistle of James''''' is a letter that was canonized into all Christian bibles. The author identifies himself simply as "James," but there are at least six people so named in the bible, two of which are described as apostles of Jesus, as well as any number of people named James not mentioned in the bible. Christians can't agree on which, but the most common line of thought comes from Catholic dogma which maintains that the author is James, son of Alphaeus who is the same person as James the Just. The document is dated by scholars anywhere between 60 CE and 125 CE. Those who believe that the author was a James from the bible have no choice but to believe an early date so that their James would still be alive. No authors write about the letter until around 180 CE. The letter wasn't unanimously agreed upon as canon until around 350 CE.  
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==Status==
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I have several translations of this book from various bibles, and have read it.
  
 
==Review==
 
==Review==

Revision as of 10:15, 4 October 2017

The Epistle of James is a letter that was canonized into all Christian bibles. The author identifies himself simply as "James," but there are at least six people so named in the bible, two of which are described as apostles of Jesus, as well as any number of people named James not mentioned in the bible. Christians can't agree on which, but the most common line of thought comes from Catholic dogma which maintains that the author is James, son of Alphaeus who is the same person as James the Just. The document is dated by scholars anywhere between 60 CE and 125 CE. Those who believe that the author was a James from the bible have no choice but to believe an early date so that their James would still be alive. No authors write about the letter until around 180 CE. The letter wasn't unanimously agreed upon as canon until around 350 CE.

Status

I have several translations of this book from various bibles, and have read it.

Review

  • More of the same from the previous epistles. Just a bunch of generic "don't do bad things, do good things." And the author repeats himself several times making for boring reading.
  • The author also makes everything out to be black and white. If you're humble, you're of God, but if you're selfish, you're of the devil (3:13). While I can understand this as a general rule, the author doesn't leave room for any nuance. Is it selfish to keep food for yourself or should you always humbly give it away to someone else, even if it means your own starvation?
  • The author says that "faith without deeds is useless," (2:20) which doesn't fit with Romans 4:5 which says that God counts faith as righteous even without works.
  • The author suggests that the most important thing for a Christian to do, even above not bragging, not oppressing, not playing favorites, and even more important than submitting yourself to God, is to not swear oaths! (4:12).
  • The letter is lacking in structure. Aside from the single-sentence introduction, the letter is a mishmash and ends abruptly.

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