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THE PERSONS ADDRESSED IN THE EPISTLE: THE JEWS OF THE
DISPERSION.
"James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ,
to the twelve tribes which are of the Dispersion, greeting."—
Jas 1:2 THESE words appear to be both simple and plain. At first sight there
would seem to be not much room for any serious difference of opinion
as to their meaning. The writer of the letter writes as "a servant
of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ," i.e., as a Christian, "to the
twelve tribes which are of the Dispersion," i.e., to the Jews who
are living away from Palestine. Almost the only point which seems to
be open to doubt is whether he addresses himself to all Jews,
believing and unbelieving, or, as one might presume from his
proclaiming himself at the outset to be a Christian, only to those
of
his fellow-countrymen who, like himself, have become "servants of
the Lord Jesus Christ." And this is a question which cannot be
determined without a careful examination of the contents of the
Epistle. And yet there has been very great difference of opinion as to the
persons whom St. James had in his mind when he wrote these words.
There is not only the triplet of opinions which easily grow out of
the question just indicated, viz., that the letter is addressed to
believing Jews only, to unbelieving Jews only, and to both: there
are
also the views of those who hold that it is addressed to Jewish and
Gentile Christians regarded separately, or to the same regarded as
one body, or to Jewish Christians primarily, with references to
Gentile Christians and unconverted Jews, or finally to Gentile
Christians primarily, seeing that they, since the rejection of Jesus
by the Jews, are the true sons of Abraham and the rightful
inheritors
of the privileges of the twelve tribes. In such a Babel of interpretations it will clear the ground somewhat
if we adopt once more as a guiding principle the common-sense
canon of interpretation laid down by Hooker ("Eccles. Pol.," 5.
59:2), that where a literal construction will stand, the farthest
from the letter is commonly the worst. A literal construction of the
expression "the twelve tribes of the Dispersion" will not only
stand, but make excellent sense. Had St. James meant to address all
Christians, regarded in their position as exiles from their heavenly
home, he would have found some much plainer way of expressing
himself. There is nothing improbable, but something quite the
reverse, in the supposition that the first overseer of the Church of
Jerusalem, who, as we have seen, was "a Hebrew of Hebrews," wrote a
letter to those of His fellow-countrymen who were far removed from
personal intercourse with him. So devoted a Jew, so devout a
Christian, as we know him to have been, could not but take the most
intense interest in all who were of Jewish blood, wherever they
might
dwell, especially such as had learned to believe in Christ, above
all
when he knew that they were suffering from habitual oppression and
ill-treatment. We may without hesitation decide that when St. James
says "the twelve tribes which are of the Dispersion" he means Jews
away from their home in Palestine, and not Christians away from
their
ηομε ιν ηεαςεν. Fορ ωηατ ποσσιβλε ποιντ ωουλδ τηε Dισπερσιον (ηη
διασπορα) have in such a metaphor? Separation from the heavenly
home
might be spoken of as banishment, or exile, or homelessness, but not
as "dispersion." Even if we confined ourselves to the opening words
we might safely adopt this conclusion, but we shall find that there
are numerous features in the letter itself which abundantly confirm
it. It is quite out of place to quote such passages as the sealing of
"the hundred and forty and four thousand out of every tribe of the
children of Israel," {Re 7:4-8} or the city with "twelve
gates, and names written thereon, which are the names of the
twelve tribes of the children of Israel". {Re 21:12} These
occur in a book which is symbolical from the first chapter to the
last, and therefore we know that the literal construction cannot
stand. The question throughout is not whether a given passage is to
be taken literally or symbolically, but what the passage in question
symbolizes. Nor, again, can St. Peter’s declaration that "ye are an
elect race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s
own
possession," {1Pe 2:9} be considered as at all parallel. There
the combination of expressions plainly shows that the language is
figurative; and there is no real analogy between an impassioned
exhortation, modeled on the addresses of the Hebrew prophets, and
the
matter-of-fact opening words of a letter. The words have the clear
ring of nationality, and there is nothing whatever added to them. to
turn the simple note into the complex sound of a doubtful metaphor.
As Davidson justly remarks, "The use of the phrase twelve tribes is
inexplicable if the writer intended all believers without
distinction. The author makes no allusion to Gentile converts, nor
to
the relation between Jew and Gentile incorporated into one spiritual
body." Let us look at some of the features which characterize the Epistle
itself, and see whether they bear out the view which is here
advocated, that the persons addressed are Israelites in the national
sense, and not as having been admitted into the spiritual "Israel of
God". {Ga 6:16} (1) The writer speaks of Abraham as "our father," without a
hint that this is to be understood in any but the literal sense.
"Was not Abraham. our father justified by works, in that he offered
up Isaac his son upon the altar?" {Jas 2:21} St. Paul, when he
speaks of Abraham as "the father of all them that believe," clearly
indicates this. {Ro 4:11} (2) The writer speaks of his readers as worshipping in a
"synagogue," {Jas 2:2} which may possibly mean that, just as
St. James and the Apostles continued to attend the Temple services
after the Ascension, so their readers are supposed to attend the
synagogue services after their conversion. But at least it shows
that
the writer, in speaking of the public worship of those whom he
addresses, naturally uses a word (συναγωγη) which had then, and
continues to have, specially Jewish associations, rather than one
(εκκλησια) which from the first beginnings of Christianity was
promoted from its old political sphere to indicate the
congregations,
and even the very being, of the Christian Church. (3) He assumes that his writers are familiar not only with the
life of Abraham, {Jas 2:21,23} but of Rahab, {Jas 2:25} the
prophets, {Jas 5:10} Job, {Jas 5:11} and Elijah. {Jas
5:17} These frequent appeals to the details of the Old Testament
would be quite out of place in a letter addressed to Gentile’
converts. (4) God is spoken of under the specially Hebrew title of "the
lord of Sabaoth"; {Jas 5:4} and the frequent recurrence of
"the Lord" throughout the Epistle {Jas 1:7 3:9 4:10,15
5:10,11,15} looks like the language of one who wished to recall the
name Jehovah to his readers. (5) In discountenancing swearing {Jas 5:12} Jewish forms of
oaths are taken as illustrations. (6) The vices which are condemned are such as were as common
among the Jews as among the Gentiles—reckless language, rash
swearing, oppression of the poor, covetousness. There is little or
nothing said about the gross immorality which was rare among the
Jews, but was almost a matter of course among the Gentiles. St.
James denounces faults into which Jewish converts would be likely
enough to lapse; he says nothing about the vices respecting which
heathen converts, such as those at Corinth, are constantly warned by
St. Paul. (7) But what is perhaps the most decisive feature of all is that
he assumes throughout that for those whom he addresses the Mosaic
Law
is a binding and final authority. "If ye have respect of persons, ye
commit sin, being convicted by the law as transgressors. If thou
dost
not commit adultery, but killest, thou art become a transgressor of
the law". {Jas 2:9-11} "He that speaketh against a brother, or
judgeth his brother, speaketh against the law and judgeth the
law". {Jas 4:11} Scarcely any of these seven points, taken singly, would be at all
decisive; but when we sum them up together, remembering in how short
a letter they occur, and when we add them to the very plain and
simple language of the address, we have an argument which will carry
conviction to most persons who have no preconceived theory of their
own to defend. And to this positive evidence derived from the
presence of so much material that indicates Jewish circles as the
destined recipients of the letter, we must add the strongly
confirmatory negative evidence derived from the absence of anything
which specially points either to Gentile converts or unconverted
heathen. We may therefore read the letter as having been written by
one who had been born and educated in a thoroughly Jewish
atmosphere,
who had accepted the Gospel, not as canceling the Law, but as
raising
it to a higher power; and we may read it also as addressed to men
who, like the writer, are by birth and education Jews, and, like
him,
have acknowledged Jesus as their Lord and the Christ. The difference
between writer and readers lies in this, that he is in Palestine,
and
they not; that he appears to be in a position of authority, whereas
they seem for the most part to be a humble and suffering folk. All
which fits in admirably with the hypothesis that we have before us
an
Epistle written by the austere and Judaic-minded James the Just,
written from Jerusalem, to comfort and warn those Jewish Christians
who lay remote from his personal influence. That it is Jewish Christians, and not unbelieving Jews, or Jews
whether believing or not, who are addressed, is not open to serious
doubt. There is not only the fact that St. James at the outset
proclaims himself to be a Christian, {Jas 1:1} but also the
statement that the wealthy oppressors of his poor readers "blaspheme
the honorable Name by which ye are called," or more literally "which
was called upon you," viz., the Name of Christ. Again, the famous
paragraph about faith and works assumes that the faith of the
readers
and the faith of the writer is identical. {Jas 2:7,14-20} Once
more, he expressly claims them as believers when he writes, "My
brethren, hold not the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Lord of
glory, with respect of persons." {Jas 2:1} And if more be
required, we have it in the concluding exhortations: "Be patient,
therefore, brethren, until the coming of the Lord…Stablish your
hearts: for the coming of the Lord is at hand." {Jas 5:7,8} Whether or no there are passages which glance aside at unbelieving
Jews, and perhaps even some which are directly addressed to them,
cannot be decided with so much certainty; but the balance of
probability appears to be. on the affirmative side in both cases.
There probably are places in which St. James is thinking of
unbelieving Israelites, and one or more passages in which he turns
aside and sternly rebukes them, much in the same way as the Old
Testament prophets sometimes turn aside to upbraid Tyre and Sidon
and
the heathen generally. "Do not the rich oppress you, and themselves
drag you before the judgment-seats?," {Jas 2:6} seems to refer
to rich unconverted Jews prosecuting their poor Christian brethren
before the synagogue courts, just as St. Paul did when he was Saul
the persecutor. {Ac 9:2} And "Do not they blaspheme the
honorable Name by which ye are called?" can scarcely be said of
Christians. If the blasphemers were Christians they would be said
rather to blaspheme the honorable Name by which they themselves were
called. There would lie the enormity—that the name of Jesus Christ
had been "called upon them," and yet they blasphemed it. And when
we come to look at the matter in detail we shall find reason for
believing that the stern words at the beginning of chap. 5. are
addressed to unbelieving Jews. There is not one word of Christian,
or
even moral, exhortation in it; it consists entirely of accusation
and
threatening, and in this respect is in marked contrast to the
equally
stern words at the beginning of chap. 4., which are addressed to
worldly and godless Christians. To suppose that the rich oppressors so often alluded to in the
Epistle are heathen, as Hilgenfeld does, confuses the whole picture,
and brings no compensating advantage. The heathen among whom the
Jews
of the Dispersion dwelt in Syria, Egypt,’ Rome, and elsewhere, were
of course, some of them rich, and some of them poor. But wealthy
Pagans were not more apt to persecute Jews, whether Christians or
not, than the needy Pagan populace. If there was any difference
between heathen rich and poor in this matter, it was the fanatical
and plunder-seeking mob, rather than the contemptuous and easy-going
rich, who were likely to begin a persecution of the Jews, just as in
Russia or Germany at the present time. And St. James would not be
likely to talk of "the Lord of Sabaot" in {Jas 5:4} addressing
wealthy Pagans. But the social antagonism so often alluded to in the
Epistle, when interpreted to mean an antagonism between Jew and Jew,
corresponds to a state of society which is known to have existed in
Palestine and the neighboring countries during the half-century
which
preceded the Jewish war of A.D. 66-70. {Comp. Mt 11:5 19:23 Lu
1:53 6:20,24 16:19,20} During that period the wealthy Jews allied
themselves with the Romans, in order more securely to oppress their
poorer fellow-countrymen. And seeing that the Gospel in the first
instance spread chiefly among the poor, this social antagonism
between rich and poor Jews frequently became an antagonism between
unbelieving and believing Jews. St. James, well aware of this state
of things, from personal experience in Judea, and hearing similar
things of the Jews of the Dispersion in Syria, reasonably supposes
that this unnatural tyranny of Jew over Jew prevails elsewhere also,
and addresses all "the twelve tribes which are of the Diaspora" on
the subject. In any case his opportunities of knowing a very great
deal respecting Jews in various parts of the world were large. Jews
from all regions were constantly visiting Jerusalem. But the
knowledge which he must have had respecting the condition of things
in Palestine and Syria would be quite sufficient to explain what is
said in this Epistle respecting the tyranny of the rich over the
poor. The Diaspora, or Dispersion of the Jews throughout the inhabited
world, had been brought about in various ways, and had continued
through many centuries. The two chief causes were forcible
deportation and voluntary emigration. It was a common policy of
Oriental conquerors to transport whole populations, in order more
completely to subjugate them; and hence the Assyrian and Babylonian
conquerors of Israel carried away great multitudes of Jews to the
East, sending Eastern populations to take their place. Pompey on a
much smaller scale transported Jewish captives to the West, carrying
hundreds of Jews to Rome. But disturbances in Palestine, and
opportunities of trade elsewhere, induced large multitudes of Jews
to
emigrate of their own accord, especially to the neighboring
countries
of Egypt and Syria: and the great commercial centers in Asia Minor,
Alexandria, Antioch,
Ephesus, Miletus, Pergamus, Cyprus, and Rhodes contained large
numbers of Jews. While Palestine was the battle-field of foreign
armies, and while newly founded towns were trying to attract
population by offering privileges to settlers, thousands of Jews
preferred the advantages of a secure home in exile to the risks
which
attended residence in their native country. At the time
when this Epistle was written three chief divisions of the
Dispersion were recognized the Babylonian, which ranked as the
first, the Syrian, and the Egyptian. But the Diaspora was by no
means confined to these three centers. About two hundred years
before this time the composer of one of the so-called Sibylline
Oracles could address the Jewish nation, and say, "But every land is
full of thee, -aye and every ocean." And there is abundance of
evidence, both in the Bible and outside it, especially in Josephus
and Philo, that such language does not go beyond the limits of
justifiable hyperbole. The list of peoples represented at Jerusalem
on the Day of Pentecost, "from every nation under heaven," tells one
a great deal. {Ac 2:5-11. Comp. 15:21, and RAPC 1Ma 15:15-24} Many
passages from Josephus might be quoted ("Ant.," 11. 5:2; 14. 7:2;
"Bell. Jud," 2 16:4 7 3:3), as stating in general terms the
same fact. But perhaps no original authority gives us more
information than Philo, in his famous treatise "On the Embassy to
the Emperor Caius," which went to Rome (cir. A.D. 40) to obtain the
revocation of a decree requiring the Jews to pay divine homage to
the
Emperor’s statue. In that treatise we read that "Jerusalem is the
metropolis, not of the single country of Judea, but of most
countries, because of the colonies which she has sent out, as
opportunity offered, into the neighboring lands of Egypt, Phoenicia,
Syria, and Coelesyria, and the more distant lands of Pamphylia and
Cilicia, most of Asia, as far as Bithynia and the utmost corners of
Pontus; likewise unto Europe, Thessaly, Boeotia, Macedonia, Aetolia,
Attica, Argos, Corinth, with the most parts and best parts of
Greece.
And not only are the continents full of Jewish colonies, but also
the
most notable of the islands
— Euboea, Cyprus, Crete—to say nothing of the lands beyond the
Euphrates. For all, excepting a small part of Babylon and those
satrapies which contain the excellent land around it, contain Jewish
inhabitants. So that if my country were to obtain a share in thy
clemency it would not be one city that would be benefited, but ten
thousand others, situated in every part of the inhabited
world—Europe, Asia, Libya, continental and insular, maritime and
inland" ("De Legat. ad Caium," 36., Gelen., pp. 1031-32). It was
therefore an enormous circle of readers that St. James addressed
when
he wrote "to the twelve tribes which are of the Dispersion,"
although it seems to have been a long time before his letter became
known to the most important of the divisions of the Diaspora, viz.,
the Jewish settlement in Egypt, which had its chief center in
Alexandria. We may reasonably suppose that it was the Syrian
division
which he had chiefly in view in writing, and it was to them, no
doubt, that the letter in the first instance was sent. It is of this
division that Josephus writes that, widely dispersed as the Jewish
race is over the whole of the inhabited world, it is most largely
mingled with Syria on account of its proximity, and especially in
Antioch, where the kings since Antiochus had afforded them
undisturbed tranquility and equal privileges with the heathen; so
that they multiplied exceedingly, and made many proselytes. {"Belt.
Jud," 7:3:3} The enormous significance of the Dispersion as a preparation for
Christianity must not be overlooked. It showed to both Jew and
Gentile alike that the barriers which had hedged in and isolated the
hermit nation had broken down, and that what had ceased to be thus
isolated had changed its character. A kingdom had become a religion.
What henceforth distinguished the Jews in the eyes of all the world
was not their country or their government, but their creed, and
through this they exercised upon those among whom they were
scattered
an influence which had been impossible under the old conditions of
exclusiveness. They themselves also were forced to understand their
own religion better. When the keeping of the letter of the Law
became
an impossibility, they were compelled to penetrate into its spirit;
and what they exhibited to the heathen was not a mere code of
burdensome rites and ceremonies, but a moral life and a worship in
spirit and truth. The universality of the services of the synagogue
taught the Jew that God’s worship was not confined to Jerusalem, and
their simplicity attracted proselytes who might have turned away
from
the complex and bloody liturgies of the Temple. Even in matters of
detail the services in the synagogue prepared the way for the
services of the Christian Church. The regular lessons—read from two
divisions of Scripture, the antiphonal singing, the turning towards
the east, the general Amen of the whole congregation, the observance
of the third, sixth, and ninth hours as hours of prayer, and of one
day in seven as specially holy—all these things, together with some
others which have since become obsolete, meet us in the synagogue
worship, as St. James knew it, and in the liturgies of the Christian
Church, which he and the Apostles and their successors helped to
frame. Thus justice once more became mercy, and a punishment was
turned into a blessing. The captivity of the Jew became the freedom
of both Jew and Gentile, and the scattering of Israel was the
gathering in of all nations unto God. "He hath scattered abroad; He
hath given to the poor: His righteousness abideth forever". {Ps
112:9 2Co 9:9} |