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Background on James
Guided Bible Study


Background on James

Elsa Tamez Commentary on James
The Scandal of James

Link to James as Wisdom
A Word for the Wise

Link to James and Eschatology
The End is at Hand

James and Spiritual Wholeness Not Yet Available
Finding Spiritual
Wholeness in James

James View of the World
James' View of
The World

Worship Resources Not Yet Available
Worship Resources
STILL TO COME

Have You Read the Letter from James?

James is a little letter tucked in the back of our New Testament. It isn't discussed often; some of us have only read it when we were looking for something short! Elsa Tamez calls her book The Scandalous Message of James. Is James' message scandalous? Or is it scandalous that we rarely read it?

If you are ready to study James, you can order Elsa Tamez' book: The Scandalous Message of James: Faith Without Works is Dead. The book includes a great study guide by Pamela Sparr, and provides a thematic approach to the Letter of James.

You might choose to follow our chapter by chapter guide through the book. It starts with an Introduction that includes background information on James, and then proceeds to read James from Chapter 1 to Chapter 5.

Guided Bible Study
Using the Guided Bible Study | Introduction
Chapter 1 | Chapter 2 | Chapter 3 | Chapter 4 | Chapter 5
I Artwork, Link to Introduction 1 Artwork Link to Chapter 1 Study 2 Artwork Link to Chapter 2 Study 3 Artwork Link to Chapter 3 Study 4 Artwork Link to Chapter 4 Study 5 Artwork Link to Chapter 5 Study

Background Pages
What's In A Word? | James uses Biblical Texts | Paul and James
Will the REAL James Stand Up? | When was James Written?
To Whom is James Sent? | Canon: Is James IN or OUT?
Read it Yourself: Comments on James in the Canon
Annotated Bibliography

Background on the Letter of James
The earliest traditions tell us that Jesus' brother, a leader in the church in Jerusalem, wrote it. And it includes texts that seem essential to all Christianity.

But be doers of the word, and not merely hearers who deceive themselves (1:22).

Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil and he will flee from you. Draw near to God and God will draw near to you (4:7-8).

Are any among you suffering? They should pray. Are any cheerful? They should sing songs of praise. Are any among you sick? They should call for the elders of the church and have them pray over them, anointing them with oil in the name of the Lord (5:13-14).

Despite such Christian wisdom, The Letter of James has been challenged from the beginning. Its journey into our canon is full of resistance to its authority. James did not appear in canonical lists until the year 340 and continued to be challenged long after that. Eusebius questioned the letter's authorship in 340. Jerome and Augustine did the same.

Twelve hundred years later the controversy continued. Luther called the text "an epistle of straw." Yet John Wesley preached and lived the model James offers to us as Christians.

Who wrote James and when create some of the controversy. If the author is James, Jesus brother, or another New Testament character, he must have written before the year 75. If James is a pseudonym the letter could be written as late as 125 CE.

But the message of James is part of the controversy. Is it scandalous? Take a look at how James uses some important New Testament words.

James uses much New Testament language, and includes large parts of the beatitudes. The letter includes extensive Old Testament imagery, some claiming the whole book is actually commentary on Leviticus 19 or Psalm 12.

Others think James is a commentary on Paul, an attempt to refute him and the concept of Justification by Faith alone. Should we compare or contrast these two early Christian leaders? At one time we believed that Paul was opposed to works, or that James was refuting Paul's faith alone theology. Is that a valid viewpoint today?

Background Pages
What's In A Word? | James uses Biblical Texts | Paul and James
Will the REAL James Stand Up? | When was James Written?
To Whom is James Sent? | Canon: Is James IN or OUT?
Read it Yourself: Comments on James in the Canon
Annotated Bibliography

 

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All material ©Women's Division, 2002. For permission to use, or to link to our site, contact J. Ann Craig. Unless otherwise noted, articles are by Elizabeth M. Magill, MDiv. 2002 Episcopal Divinity School.