James 5 - Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary on the Bible

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Holy conversation among the Gentiles directed.

Consider him that waits for a crop of corn; and will not you wait for a crown of glory? If you should be called to wait longer than the husbandman, is not there something more worth waiting for? In every sense the coming of the Lord drew nigh, and all his people's losses, hardships, and sufferings, would be repaid. Men count time long, because they measure it by their own lives; but all time is as nothing to God; it is as a moment. To short-lived creatures a few years seem an age;

but Scripture, measuring all things by the existence of God, reckons thousands of years but so many days. God brought about things in Job's case, so as plainly to prove that he is very pitiful and of tender mercy. This did not appear during his troubles, but was seen in the event, and believers now will find a happy end to their trials. Let us serve our God, and bear our trials, as those who believe that the end will crown all. Our eternal happiness is safe if we trust to him: all else is mere

vanity, which soon will be done with for ever. (Jam 5:12-18)

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A temper suitable to the Christian character as born again, is recommended.

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Subjects exhorted to pay all proper obedience to their civil governors.

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Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary on the Bible is available in the Public Domain.

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