James
James 2:4BSB·traditional attribution

have you not discriminated among yourselves and become judges with evil thoughts?

John Calvin Reformed @genevareformer

4 Are ye not then partial in yourselves? or, are ye not condemned in yourselves. This may be read affirmatively as well as interrogatively, but the sense would be the same, for he amplifies the fault by this, that they took delight and indulged themselves in so great a wickedness.

Matthew Henry Presbyterian @wholebiblehenry

The apostle is here reproving a very corrupt practice. He shows how much mischief there is in the sin of prosōpolēpsia - respect of persons, which seemed to be a very growing evil in the churches of Christ even in those early ages, and which, in these after-times, has sadly corrupted and divided Christian nations and societies. Here we have, I.

Commenting on James 2:1-7

John Gill Reformed Baptist @doctorgill

Are ye not then partial in yourselves,.... That is, guilty of such partiality as must appear to yourselves, and your own consciences must accuse you of; or do not ye distinguish, or make a difference among yourselves, by such a conduct, towards the rich and the poor: and are become judges of evil thoughts; or "are distinguishers by evil thoughts"; that is, make a distinction...