Wednesday 14 May 2008

Come now, you rich...

Hey,

Read this bit of James in prep for SWOT. It's so hard hitting, I'd encourage you to read it a few times and dwell on each word, and then read the commentary below that really brings it home. The sword is sharp indeed...

Now listen, you rich people, weep and wail because of the misery that is coming upon you. Your wealth has rotted, and moths have eaten your clothes. Your gold and silver are corroded. Their corrosion will testify against you and eat your flesh like fire. You have hoarded wealth in the last days. James 5:1-3


The first half of the paragraph is a description of the awful misery that will come upon the rich. In the first place, they will lose their wealth. But that by itself is far too tame an exposition of James's words. The rich will find their hoarded wealth rotted, their fine clothes moth-eaten and their treasured gold and silver corroded (images that recall Jesus' words in Mt 6:20). James gives vivid and terrible images of the destruction of their wealth, indicating that the rich will experience horror and despair over their loss. They will weep and wail in misery. The verb wail is onomatopoeic--ololyzo--adding to the vividness of the imagery by sounding like the wailing it describes. It conveys the sounds of "weeping accompanied by recurring shouts of pain" (Kistemaker 1986:156), bringing to mind the experience of excruciating grief or anguish. The rich will lose everything they have devoted themselves to and everything they have relied upon. Theirs will be the despair of people who discover their dreams and treasures destroyed forever.

If the rich were only misguided in devoting themselves to their wealth, this first misery would be enough. But there is a second level to their misery: the destruction of the wealth will consume the rich people themselves. The imagery expresses forcefully that their sin has been a deliberate pursuit of evil. Literally, James says, the rust or corrosion on the gold and silver will be the active agent against the rich. The corrosive action will take two forms: first to testify against the rich (acting as evidence of their guilt) and then to eat their flesh like fire (acting as punishment for their sin).

There are, then, three miseries specified for the rich: despair from losing their wealth, guilt from the evidence against them and horrible pain from being devoured in the judgment upon them. (IVP Commentary)

3 comments:

yemsee said...

Isn't he talking about the rich in the visible church at least?

by which he means anyone who is saving up?

StooGe said...

As he goes onto to talk about being patient in the face of suffering because of this jugdment coming on the rich, I think he is perhaps referring to the rich of 1:9-11 and in chapter 2. That is the rich (unbelievers) who were oppressing the Christians.

We can not serve both God and money, and those who choose to serve money face the most aweful misery! What a dangerous place we are in if we begin looking to riches...

yemsee said...

yup but I'm pretty sure James is addressed to the visible church and accusing some of them of not being the church..

so this is addressed to the rich that call themselves 'Christian'
that they deny the missionaries that they are supposed to fund their very lives, since they use the wealth God has given them for the church for themselves - indeed therefore God or money, they have chosen money