Verse explainer

What does James 1:13 really mean?

James isn't saying God never tests anyone — he's cutting off a specific excuse: blaming God for your own pull toward sin.

KJV

Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God: for God cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth he any man:

BSB

When tempted, no one should say, "God is tempting me." For God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does He tempt anyone.

James has just praised enduring trials (v. 2–4, 12), using the same Greek word for "temptation" that can mean either an outward trial or an inward enticement to sin. Here he pivots sharply: when the temptation in view is a solicitation to do wrong, God is not the source. His reasoning is tight. God's own nature is untouched by evil — nothing in him is leveraged by it, attracted to it, or moved by it. And what cannot be tempted to evil will not tempt others toward it. The real engine of moral temptation, James goes on to say in v. 14–15, is desire arising from within the person — lust that conceives, then gives birth to sin, then death. The logic closes a door many people quietly leave open: the idea that God's providential arrangement of hard circumstances makes him responsible for the sinful choices those circumstances seem to produce. James says no. Trials are from God; sinful responses to trials are from us.

"God sent this hardship, so he's responsible for what I did under pressure." This is probably the oldest theological dodge in the Bible — James is essentially answering Adam's logic from Genesis 3, where the first man pointed back to God for giving him the woman who gave him the fruit. The move feels reasonable: if God arranged the circumstances, doesn't he own the outcome? James breaks the chain at a precise point. God does arrange hard circumstances — he said so in vv. 2–4 and will say so again in v. 17. But the mechanism that turns a hard circumstance into a sinful act is internal, not external. Verse 14 names it: each person is drawn away by their own desire and enticed. The combustible material is already in the person; the outward trial only reveals it. So the trial can be from God and the sinful response still be entirely ours. These are not competing claims — they operate at different levels. God is not implicated in the sin because his purpose for the trial was never the sin. Restoring this distinction defuses the excuse without denying that life is genuinely hard.
Adam Clarkeearly 19th c. · PD

Clarke highlights that James deliberately uses the word "temptation" in two senses across this passage and here pivots to the criminal sense — solicitation to sin. His point is that James is guarding his earlier statement: God sends trials that test and strengthen, but he is never the author of the inward pull toward evil. The two senses of the word must be kept clearly distinguished, or the whole passage is misread.

Matthew Henryearly 18th c. · PD

Henry notes the denial works on two levels: there is nothing in God's nature that evil can leverage (he is incapable of being tempted), and there is nothing in his providential dealings that obligates anyone to sin. He singles out Adam's pattern — blaming God for giving the woman — as the hereditary impulse James is cutting off. Afflictions are designed by God to draw out grace, not corruption; the corruption that surfaces is ours.

Jamieson, Fausset & Brown19th c. · PD

JFB presses on the Greek preposition: the charge James refutes is being tempted "from" God — indirect agency included. They also flag the deliberate contrast James sets up: God does not tempt "of his own will" (v. 13), but of his own will he begets us to holiness (v. 18). The same sovereign will that is innocent of our sin is active in our renewal.

ἀπείραστος apeirastos

"Incapable of being tempted" or "unversed in evil" — the only New Testament occurrence of this word. It is built from the negative prefix a- and peirazō (to test, to solicit to evil). The point is not merely that God resists temptation but that evil finds no purchase in him at all — nothing in his nature responds to it. This is why he cannot be the origin of moral enticement: a being whom evil cannot move has no motive to deploy it against others.