Re: James 2:9

George Athas (gathas@mail.usyd.edu.au)
Thu, 14 May 1998 09:12:57 +1000

It may be only coincidence, but quite often, the person(s) who ran
beside the chariot of the king in the ancient near east was a
'transgressing' monarch or chief of some kind. He was put there as a
punishment to humiliate him and show his real subordination to the king,
or he was sometimes lashed to the spokes or side of the chariot to die
as the chariot entered the battle. I don't know if this is what James
had in mind, though.

Best regards!
George Athas
PhD (Cand.), University of Sydney
Tutor of Hebrew, Moore Theological College
Phone: 0414 839 964 ICQ#: 5866591
Email: gathas@mail.usyd.edu.au
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