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GENERAL EDITOR:-J. J. S. PEROWNE, D.D.,
Hulsean Professor of Divinity, Canon of Llandaff.

THE GENERAL EPISTLE OF

ST. JAMES,

WITH NOTES AND INTRODUCTION

BY

E. H. PLUMPTRE, D.D.,

PROFESSOR OF NEW TESTAMENT EXEGESIS, KING'S COLLEGE,
LONDON; VICAR OF BICKLEY.

HECA

EDITED FOR THE SYNDICS OF THE

Cambridge:

UNIVERSITY PRESS.
MAY 1879

BODLEIANA

AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.

London: CAMBRIDGE WAREHOUSE, 17, PATERNOSTER Row.

Cambridge: DEIGHTON, BELL, AND CO.

1878

[All Rights reserved.]

Cambridge:

PRINTED BY C. J. CLAY, M. A.

AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.

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INTRODUCTION.

CHAPTER I.

DECA

THE AUTHOR OF THE EPISTLE.

I. THE name of Facôbus or Jacob-which, after passing through various chances and changes of form, Spanish Iago and Portuguese Xayme (pronounced "Hayme) and Italian Giacomo and French Jacques and Jamè, and Scotch Hamish, has at last dwindled into our monosyllabic James-was naturally, as having been borne by the great Patriarch whom Israel claimed as its progenitor, a favourite name among the later Jews1. In the New Testament we find two, or possibly three, persons who bore it: (1) James the son of Zebedee. (2) James the son of Alphæus. Both of these appear in all the lists of the Twelve Apostles. (3) There is a James described as the son of a Mary and the brother of a Joses or Joseph (Matt. xxvii. 56, Mark xv. 40), and a comparison of that passage with John xix. 25, defines this Mary as the wife of Clopas (not Cleophas as in the English Version) and possibly also (though the construction is not free from ambiguity) as the sister of our Lord's mother. To his name is attached the epithet, not of "the less" as in the English version, as though it indicated difference in age or position, but of the "little," as an

1 It is not without a feeling of regret, that I adopt in this volume the form in which the historical associations of the name have entirely disappeared. Usage, however, in such a matter, must be accepted as the jus et norma loquendi.

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