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THE AUTHOR OF THE EPISTLE; JAMES THE BROTHER OF THE LORD.
WE have still to consider the second half of the question as to the
authenticity of this letter. Granting that it is a genuine Epistle
of
James, and a writing of the Apostolic age, to which of the persons
in
that age who are known to us as bearing the name of James is it to
be
attributed? The consensus of opinion on this point, though not so
great as that respecting the genuineness of the letter, is now very
considerable, and seems to be increasing. The name James is the English form of the Hebrew name Yacoob
(Jacob),
which in Greek became ιακωβος, in Latin Jacobus, and in English
James, a form which grievously blurs the history of the name. From
having been the name of the patriarch Jacob, the progenitor of the
Jewish race, it became one of the commonest of proper names among
the
Jews; and in the New Testament we find several persons bearing this
name among the followers of Jesus Christ. It would be possible to
make as many as six; but these must Certainly be reduced to four,
and
probably to three. These six are— 1. James the Apostle, the son of Zebedee and brother of John the
Apostle. {Mt 4:21 10:2 17:5 Mr 10:35 13:3 Lu 9:54 Ac 12:2} 2. James the Apostle, the son of Alphaeus. {Mt 10:3
Lu 6:15 Ac 1:13} 3. James the Little, the son of Mary the wife of
Clopas, {Joh 19:25} who had one other son, named Joses. {Mt
27:56 Mr 15:40} 4. James the brother of the Lord, {Ga 1:19} a
relationship which he shares with Joses, Simon, and Judas {Mt
13:55 Mr 6:3} and some unnamed sisters. 5. James the overseer of the Church of Jerusalem. {Ac 12:17
15:13 1Co 15:7 Ga 2:9,12} 6. James the brother of the Jude who wrote the Epistle. {Jude
1:1} Besides which, we have an unknown James, who was father of the
Apostle Judas, not Iscariot; {Lu 5:16} but we do not know that
this James ever became a disciple. Of these six we may safely identify the last three as being one and
the same person; and we may probably identify James the Apostle, the
son of Alphaeus, with James the Little, the son of Mary and Clopas;
in which case we may conjecture that the epithet of "the Little"
(ο μικρος) was given him to distinguish him from the other Apostle
James, the son of Zebedee. Clopas (not Cleophas, as in the A.V) may
be one Greek form of the Aramaic name Chalpai, of which Alphaeus may
be another Greek form; so that the father of this James may have
been
known both as Clopas and as Alphaeus. But this is by no means
certain. In the ancient Syraic Version we do not find both Alphaeus
and Clopas represented by Chalpai; but we find Alphaeus rendered
Chalpai, while Clopas reappears as Kleopha. And the same usage is
found in the Jerusalem Syraic. We have thus reduced the six to four or three and it is sometimes
proposed to reduce the three to two, by identifying James the Lord’s
brother with James the son of Alphaeus. But this identification is
attended by difficulties so serious as to seem to be quite fatal;
and
it would probably never have been made but for the wish to show that
"brother of the Lord" does not mean brother in the literal sense,
but may mean cousin. For the identification depends upon making Mary
the wife of Clopas (and mother of James the son of Alphaeus)
identical with the sister of Mary the mother of the Lord, in the
much-discussed passage Joh 19:25; so that Jesus and James would
be first cousins, being sons respectively of two sisters, each of
whom was called Mary. The difficulties under which this theory labors are mainly these:— 1. It depends on an identification of Clopas with Alphaeus,
which is uncertain, though not improbable. 2. It depends on a further identification of Christ’s
"mother’s sister" with "Mary the wife of Clopas" in Joh
19:25, which is both uncertain and highly improbable. In that verse
we almost certainly have four women, and not three, contrasted with
the four soldiers just mentioned (vers. 23, 24), and arranged in two
pairs: "His mother, and His mother’s sister; Mary the wife of
Clopas, and Mary Magdalene." 3. It assumes that two sisters were both called Mary. 4. No instance in Greek literature has been found in which
"brother" (αδελφος) means "cousin." The Greek language has a
word to express "cousin" (ανεψιος) which occurs Col 4:10;
and it is to be noted that the ancient tradition preserved by
Hegesippus (cir. A.D. 170) distinguishes James, the first overseer
of
the Church of Jerusalem, as the "brother of the Lord" (Eus.
"H.E.," 2. 23. 1), and his successor Symeon as the "cousin of the
Lord" (4. 22:4). Could Hegesippus have written thus if James were
really a cousin? If a vague term such as "kinsman" (συγγενης) was
wanted, that also might have been used, as in Lu 1:36,58 2:44. 5. In none of the four lists of the Apostles is there any
hint that any of them are the brethren of the Lord; and in Ac
1:13,14, and 1Co 9:5, "the brethren of the Lord" are
expressly distinguished from the Apostles. Moreover, the traditions
of the age subsequent to the New Testament sometimes make James the
Lord’s brother one of the Seventy, but never one of the Twelve, a
fact which can be explained only on the hypothesis that it was
notorious that he was not one of the Twelve. The reverence for this
James and for the title of Apostle was such that tradition would
eagerly have given him the title had there been any opening for
doing
so. 6. The "brethren of the Lord" appear in the Gospels almost
always with the mother of the Lord; {Mt 12:46 Mr 3:32 Lu 8:19 Joh
2:12} never with Mary the wife of Clopas; and popular knowledge of
them connects them with Christ’s mother, and not with any other
Mary. {Mr 6:3 Mt 13:55} "My brethren," in Mt 28:10, and
Joh 20:17, does not mean Christ’s earthly relations, but the
children of "My Father and your Father." 7. But the strongest objection of all is St. John’s express
statement {Joh 7:5} that "even His brethren did not believe on
Him"; a statement which he could not have made if one of the
brethren (James), and possibly two others (Simon and Judas), were
already Apostles. The identification of James the son of Alphaeus with James the
Lord’s
brother must therefore be abandoned, and we remain with three
disciples bearing the name of James from which to select the writer
of this Epistle—the son of Zebedee, the son of Alphaeus, and the
brother of the Lord. The father of Judas, not Iscariot, need not be
considered, for we do not even know that he ever became a believer. In our ignorance of the life, and thought, and language of the son
of
Zebedee and the son of Alphaeus, we cannot say that there is
anything
in the Epistle itself which forbids us to attribute it to either of
them; but there is nothing in it which leads us to do so. And there
are two considerations which, when combined, are strongly against
Apostolic authorship. The writer does not claim to be an Apostle;
and
the hesitation as to the reception of the Epistle in certain parts
of
the Christian Church would be extraordinary if the letter were
reputed to be of Apostolic authorship. When we take either of these
Apostles separately we become involved in further difficulties. It
is
not probable that any Apostolic literature existed in the lifetime
of
James the son of Zebedee, who was martyred, under Herod Agrippa I,
i.e., not later than the spring of A.D. 44, when Herod Agrippa died.
That any Apostle wrote an encyclical letter as early as A.D. 42 or
43
is so improbable that we ought to have strong evidence before
adopting it, and the only evidence worth considering is that
furnished by the Peshitto. The earliest MSS. of this ancient Syriac
Version, which date from the fifth to the eighth century, call it an
Epistle of James the Apostle; but evidence which cannot be traced
higher than the fifth century respecting an improbable occurrence
alleged to have taken place in the first century is not worth very
much. Moreover, the scribes who put this heading and subscription to
the Epistle may have meant no more than that it was by a person of
Apostolic: rank, or they may have shared the common Western error of
identifying the brother of the Lord with the son of Alphaeus.
Editors
of the Syriac Version in a much later age certainly do attribute the
Epistle to the son of Zebedee, for they state that the three
Catholic
Epistles admitted to that version—James, 1 Peter, and 1 John—are by
the three Apostles who witnessed the Transfiguration. The statement
seems to be a blundering misinterpretation of the earlier title,
which assigned it to James the Apostle. And if we attribute the
letter to the son of Alphaeus we get rid of one difficulty, only to
fall into another; we are no longer compelled to give the Epistle so
improbably early a date as A.D. 43, but we are left absolutely
without any evidence to connect it with the son of Alphaeus, unless
we identify this Apostle with the brother of the Lord, an
identification which has already been shown to be untenable. Therefore, without further hesitation, we may assign the Epistle to
one of the most striking and impressive figures in the Apostolic
age,
James the Just, the brother of the Lord, and the first overseer of
the Mother Church of Jerusalem. Whether James was the brother of the Lord as being the son of Joseph
by a former marriage, or as being the son of Joseph and Mary born
after the birth of Jesus, need not be argued in detail. All that
specially concerns us, for a right understanding of the Epistle, is
to remember that it was written by one who, although for some time
not a believer in the Messiahship of Jesus, was, through his near
relationship, constantly in His society, witnessing His acts and
hearing His words. This much, however, should be noted, that there
is
nothing in Scripture to warn us from understanding that Joseph and
Mary had other children, and that "firstborn" in Lu 2:7, and
"till" in Mt 1:25, appear to imply that they had; a
supposition confirmed by contemporary belief, {Mr 6:3 Mt 13:55}
and by the constant attendance of these "brethren" on the mother of
the Lord; {Mt 12:46 Mr 3:32 Lu 8:19 Joh 2:12} that, on the other
hand, the theory which gives Joseph children older than Jesus
deprives Him of His rights as the heir of Joseph and of the house of
David; seems to be of apocryphal origin (Gospel according to Peter,
or Book of James); and like Jerome’s theory of cousinship, appears
to
have been invented in the interests of ascetic views and of a priori
convictions as to the perpetual virginity of the Blessed Virgin. The
immense consensus of belief in the perpetual virginity does not
begin
until long after all historical evidence was lost. Tertullian
appears
to assume as a matter of course that the Lord’s brethren are the
children of Joseph and Mary, as if in his day no one had any other
view ("Adv. Marc.," 4. 19.; "De Carne Christi," 7.). According to either view, James was the son of Joseph, and almost
certainly was brought up with his Divine Brother in the humble home
at Nazareth. His father, as St. Matthew tells us {Mt 1:19} was a
just or righteous man, like the parents of the Baptist, {Lu 1:6}
and this was the title by which James was known during his lifetime,
and by which he is still constantly known. He is James "the Just"
(ο δικαιος). The epithet as used in Scripture of his father and
others, {Mt 1:19 Lu 1:6 2:25 23:50 Ac 10:20 2Pe 2:7} and in
history of him, must not be understood as implying precisely what
the
Athenians meant when they styled Aristides "the Just," or what we
mean by being "just" now. To a Jew the word implied not merely
being impartial and upright, but also having a studied and even
scrupulous reverence for everything prescribed by the Law. The
Sabbath, the synagogue worship, the feasts and fasts, purification,
tithes, all the moral and ceremonial ordinances of the Law of the
Lord—these were the things on which the just man bestowed a loving
care, and in which he preferred to do more than was required, rather
than the bare minimum insisted on by the Rabbis. It was in a home of which righteousness of this kind was the
characteristic that St. James was reared, and in which he became
imbued with that reverent love for the Law which makes him, even
more
than St. Paul, to be the ideal "Hebrew of Hebrews." For him Christ
came "not to destroy, but to fulfill." Christianity turns the Law
of Moses into a "royal law," {Jas 2:8} but it does not abrogate
it. The Judaism which had been his moral and spiritual atmosphere
during his youth and early manhood remained with him after he had
learned to see that there was no antagonism between the Law and the
Gospel. It would be part of his strict Jewish training that he should pay
the
prescribed visits to Jerusalem at the feasts; {Joh 7:10} and he
would there become familiar with the magnificent liturgy of the
Temple, and would lay the foundation for that love of public and
private prayer within its precincts which was one of his best-known
characteristics in after-life. A love of prayer, and a profound
belief in its efficacy, appear again and again in the pages of his
Epistle. {Jas 1:5 4:2,3,8 5:13-18} It was out of a strong
personal experience that the man who knelt in prayer until "his
knees became hard like a camel’s" declared that "the supplication
of a righteous man availeth much in its working." Strict Judaism has ever a tendency to narrowness, and we find this
tendency in the brethren of the Lord, in their attitude both towards
their Brother, and also towards Gentile converts after they had
accepted Him. {Ga 2:12} Of the long period of silence during
which Jesus was preparing Himself for His ministry we know nothing.
But immediately after His first miracle, which they probably
witnessed, they went down with Him, and His mother, and His
disciples
to Capernaum, {Joh 2:12} and very possibly accompanied Him to
Jerusalem for the Passover. They would be almost certain to go
thither to keep the feast. It was there that "many believed on His
Name, beholding His signs which He did. But Jesus did not trust
Himself unto them, for that He knew all men." He knew that when the
immediate effect of His miracles had passed off the faith of these
sudden converts would not endure. And this seems to have been the
case with His brethren. They were at first attracted by His
originality, and power, and holiness, then perplexed by methods
which
they could not understand, {Joh 7:3,4} then inclined to regard
Him as a dreamer and a fanatic, {Mr 3:21} and finally decided
against Him. {Joh 7:5} Like many other’s among His followers,
they were quite unable to reconcile His position with the
traditional
views respecting the Messiah; and instead of revising these views,
as
being possibly faulty, they held fast to them, and rejected Him. It
was not merely in reference to the people of Nazareth, who had tried
to kill Him, {Lu 4:29} but to those who were still closer to Him
by ties of blood and home, that He uttered the sad complaint, "A
prophet is not without honor, save in his own country, and among his
own kin, and in his own house". {Mr 6:4} The fact that our Lord committed His mother to the keeping of St.
John harmonizes with the supposition that at the time of the
Crucifixion His brethren were still unbelievers. The Resurrection
would be likely to open their eyes and dispel their doubts; {Ac
1:14} and a special revelation of the risen Lord seems to have been
granted to St. James, {1Co 15:7} as to St. Paul; in both cases
because behind the external opposition to Christ there were earnest
faith and devotion, which at once found their object, as soon as the
obstructing darkness was removed. After his conversion, St. James
speedily took the first place among the believers who constituted
the
original Church of Jerusalem. He takes the lead, even when the chief
of the Apostles are present. It is to him that St. Peter reports
himself, when he is miraculously freed from prison. {Ac 12:17}
It is he who presides at the so-called Council of Jerusalem Ac
15:13; (see esp. ver. 19). And it is to him that St. Paul specially
turns on his last visit to Jerusalem, to report his success among
the
Gentiles. {Ac 21:17} St. Paul places him before St. Peter and St.
John in mentioning those "who were reputed to be pillars" of the
Church, {Ga 2:9} and states that on his first visit to Jerusalem
after his own conversion he stayed fifteen days with Peter, but saw
no other of the Apostles, excepting James, the Lord’s brother; {Ga
1:18,19} a passage of disputed meaning, but which, if it does not
imply that James was in some sense an Apostle, at least suggests
that
he was a person of equal importance. {Comp. Ac 9:26-30}
Moreover, we find that at Antioch St. Peter himself allowed his
attitude towards the Gentiles to be changed in deference to the
representations of "certain that came from James," who had possibly
misunderstood or misused their commission; but the narrowness
already
alluded to may have made St. James himself unable to move as rapidly
as St. Peter and St. Paul in adopting a generous course with Gentile
converts. Unless there is a reference to St. James in Heb 13:7, as among
those who had once "had the lead over you," but are now no longer
alive to speak the word, we must go outside the New Testament for
further notices of him. They are to be found chiefly in Clement of
Alexandria, Hegesippus, and Josephus. Clement ("Hypotyp.," 4. ap.
Eus. "H.E.," 2. 1:3) records a tradition that Peter, James, and
John, after the
Ascension of the Savior, although they had been preferred by the
Lord, did not contend for distinction, but that James the Just
became
Bishop of Jerusalem. And again ("Hypotyp.," 7.), "To James the
Just, John, and Peter, the Lord, after the Resurrection, imparted
the
gift of knowledge (την γνωσιν); these imparted it to the rest of
the Apostles, and the rest of the Apostles to the Seventy, of whom
Barnabas was one. Now, there have been two Jameses—one the Just, who
was thrown from the gable [of the Temple], and beaten to death by a
fuller with a club, and another who was beheaded." The narrative of
Hegesippus is also preserved for us by Eusebius ("H.E.," 2.23.
4-18).
It is manifestly legendary, and possibly comes
from the Essene Ebionites, who appear to have been fond of religious
romances. It is sometimes accepted as historical, as by Clement in
the passage just quoted; but its internal improbabilities and its
divergencies from Josephus condemn it. It may, however, contain some
historical touches, especially in the general sketch of St. James;
just as the legends about our own King Alfred, although
untrustworthy
as to facts, nevertheless convey a true idea of the saintly and
scholarly king. It runs thus: "There succeeds to the charge of the
Church, James, the brother of the Lord, in conjunction with the
Apostles, the one who has been named Just by all, from the time of
our Lord to our own time, for there were many called James. Now, he
was holy from his mother’s womb. He drank neither wine nor strong
drink; nor did he eat animal food. No razor ever came upon his head;
he anointed not himself with oil; and he did not indulge in bathing.
To him alone was it lawful to go into the Holy Place; for he wore no
wool, but linen. And he would go into the Temple alone, and would be
found there kneeling on his knees and asking forgiveness for the
people, so that his knees became dry and hard as a camel’s, because
he was always on his knees worshipping God and asking forgiveness
for
the people. On account, therefore, of his exceeding justness, he was
called Just and Oblias, which is in Greek ‘bulwark of the people’
and
‘justness,’ as the prophets show concerning him. Some, then, of the
seven sects among the people, which have been mentioned before by me
in the ‘Memoirs,’ asked him, What is the Door of Jesus? And he said
that He was the Savior. From which some believed Jesus is the
Christ.
But the sects aforesaid did not believe, either in the Resurrection
or in One coming to recompense to each man according to his works.
But as many as believed did so through James. When many, therefore,
even of the rulers were believing, there was a tumult of the Jews
and
scribes and Pharisees, who said, It looks as if all the people would
be expecting Jesus as the Christ. They came together, therefore, and
said to James, We pray thee, restrain the people, for it has been
led
astray after Jesus, as though He were the Christ. We pray thee to
persuade all that come to the day of the Passover concerning Jesus;
for to thee we all give heed. For we bear witness to thee, and so do
all the people, that thou art just, and acceptest not the person of
any. Do thou, therefore, persuade the multitude not to be led astray
concerning Jesus; for all the people and all of us give heed to
thee.
Stand, therefore, upon the gable of the Temple, that thou mayest be
visible to those below, and that thy words may be readily heard by
all the people. For on account of the Passover there have come
together all the tribes, with the Gentiles also. Therefore the
aforesaid scribes and Pharisees placed James upon the gable of the
Temple, and cried to him and said, O just one, to whom we ought all
to give heed, seeing that the people is being led astray after
Jesus,
who was crucified, tell us what is the Door of Jesus. And he
answered
with a loud voice, Why ask ye me concerning Jesus the Son of man?
Even He sitteth in heaven, at the right of the Mighty Power, and He
is to come on the clouds of heaven. And when many were convinced,
and
gave glory on the witness of James, and said, Hosannah to the Son of
David, then again the same scribes and Pharisees said unto one
another, We have done ill in furnishing such witness to Jesus. But
let us go up and cast him down, that they may be terrified, and not
believe him. And they cried out, saying, Oh! oh! even the Just has
been led astray. And they fulfilled the Scripture, which is written
in Isaiah, Let us take away the Just One, for he is troublesome to
us; therefore shall they eat the fruit of their deeds. So they went
up, and cast down the Just, and said to one another, Let us stone
James the Just. And they began to stone him, seeing that he was not
dead from the fall, but turning round, knelt, and said, I pray Thee,
Lord God and Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.
But whilst they were thus stoning him, one of the priests of the
sons
of Rechab, son of Rechabim, to whom Jeremiah the prophet bears
testimony, cried, saying, Stop! what are ye doing? The Just One is
praying for you. And one of them, one of the fullers, took the club
with which clothes are pressed, and brought it down on the head of
the Just One. And in this way he bore witness. And they buried him
on
the spot by the Temple, and his monument still remains by the
Temple.
This man has become a true witness, to both Jews and Gentiles, that
Jesus is the Christ. And straightway Vespasian lays siege to them."
That is, Hegesippus regards the attack of the Romans as a speedy
judgment on the Jews for the murder of James the Just, and
consequently places it A.D. 69. This is probably several years too
late. Josephus places it A.D. 62 or 63. His account is as
follows:—"Now, the younger Ananus, whom we stated to have succeeded
to the high-priesthood, was precipitate in temper and exceedingly
audacious, and he followed the sect of the Sadducees, who are very
harsh in judging offenders, beyond all other Jews, as we have
already
shown. Ananus, therefore, as being a person of this character, and
thinking that he had a suitable opportunity, through Festus being
dead, and Albinus still on his journey (to Judea), assembles a
Sanhedrin of judges; and he brought before it the brother of Jesus
who was called Christ (his name was James) and some others, and
delivered them to be stoned, on a charge of being transgressors of
the law. But as many as seemed to be most equitable among those in
the city, and scrupulous as to all that concerned the laws, were
grievously affected by this; and they send to the king [Herod
Agrippa
II], secretly praying him to order Ananus to act in such a way no
more; for that not even his first action was lawfully done. And some
of them go to meet Albinus on his journey from Alexandria, and
inform
him that Ananus had no authority to assemble a Sanhedrin without his
leave. And Albinus, being convinced by what they said, wrote in
anger
to Ananus, threatening to punish him for this. And for this reason
King Agrippa took away the high-priesthood from him after he had
been
in office three months, and conferred it upon Jesus the son of
Damnaeus" ("Ant.," 20. 9:1). This account by Josephus contains no improbabilities, and should be
preferred to that of Hegesippus. It has been suspected of Christian
interpolation, because of the reference to Jesus Christ, whom
Josephus persistently ignores in his writings. But a Christian who
took the trouble to garble the narrative at all would probably have
done so to more purpose, both as regards Jesus and James. In any
case
Hegesippus and Josephus agree in confirming the impression produced
by the New Testament, that James the Just was a person held in the
greatest respect by all in Jerusalem, whether Jews or Christians,
and
one who exercised great influence in the East over the whole Jewish
race. We shall find that this fact harmonizes well with the
phenomena
of the Epistle, and it leads directly to the next question which
calls upon us for discussion |