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You ask, and don`t receive, because you ask amiss, so that you may spend it for your pleasures.
Verse Takeaways
1
Check Your Motives
Commentators unanimously agree that the reason for unanswered prayer in this verse is not a lack of asking, but asking with wrong motives. The Greek for "amiss" means asking "evilly." The goal is to use God's blessings for selfish gratification rather than to honor Him. As John Calvin puts it, this is like trying to make God a "minister of [our] own lusts."
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Book Overview
James
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8
18th Century
Theologian
You ask, and receive not. That is, some of you ask, or you ask on some occasions. Though generally seeking what you desire by strife and w…
Because ye ask amiss (διοτ κακως αιτεισθε). Here the indirect middle does make sense, "ye ask for yourselves" and that is "evilly"…
19th Century
Bishop
You lust, and have not . . .—It is better this way: You desire, and have not; you kill, and envy, and cannot obtain; …
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Preacher
The lusts of the flesh come in and put us on the wrong track; or if we take the right road, yet, if the lusts are there, God will not bless us beca…
Even when James’s readers did ask God for things, they did “not receive” what they requested. Why? They asked “with wrong motives.” Their purpose w…
16th Century
Ye seek and receive not. He goes further: though they sought, yet they were deservedly denied, because they wished to make God the ministe…
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17th Century
Pastor
You ask, and receive not Some there were that did ask of God the blessings of his goodness and providence, and yet t…
Minister
Since all wars and fighting come from the corruptions of our own hearts, it is right to mortify those lusts that war in our members. Worldly and fl…