James 2:11

11 The one who said, Don't commit adultery, also said, Don't commit murder.[a] So if you don't commit adultery but do commit murder, you are a lawbreaker.

James 2:11 Meaning and Commentary

James 2:11

For he that said, Do not commit adultery
That same lawgiver, who is but one, and is God, that gave out the seventh command, and forbids adultery,

said also, Do not kill;
delivered the sixth command, which forbids murder.

Now if thou commit no adultery;
do not break the seventh command;

yet if thou kill,
break the sixth command,

thou art become a transgressor of the law;
not of that particular precept of the law, the seventh command, for the contrary is supposed before, but of the sixth only; and yet by so doing, a man becomes a violator of the whole law; for the law is but one, though it consists of various precepts; and the breach of one precept, as well as of another, is the breach of the law: and besides, there is but one lawgiver, who has enjoined one command, as well as another, and whose legislative power and authority is despised and trampled upon by the violation of one command, as of another. This is the apostle's argument, and way of reasoning, proving the above assertion, that he that breaks the law in one particular instance, is guilty of the breach of the whole law.

James 2:11 In-Context

9 But when you show favoritism, you are committing a sin, and by that same law you are exposed as a lawbreaker.
10 Anyone who tries to keep all of the Law but fails at one point is guilty of failing to keep all of it.
11 The one who said, Don't commit adultery, also said, Don't commit murder. So if you don't commit adultery but do commit murder, you are a lawbreaker.
12 In every way, then, speak and act as people who will be judged by the law of freedom.
13 There will be no mercy in judgment for anyone who hasn't shown mercy. Mercy overrules judgment.

Footnotes 1

  • [a]. Exod 20:13, 15 LXX (English: 20:13-14); Deut 5:17–18
Copyright © 2011 Common English Bible