-
Verse Job 20:8. _HE SHALL FLY AWAY AS A DREAM_] Instead of rising
again from corruption, as thou hast asserted, (Job 19:26,) with a new
body, his flesh shall rot in the earth, and his spirit be dissi...
-
HE SHALL FLY AWAY AS A DREAM - As a dream wholly disappears or
vanishes. This comparison of man with a dream is not uncommon, and is
most impressive. See Psalms 73:20; see the notes at Isaiah 29:7.
AS...
-
CHAPTER 20 THE SECOND ADDRESS OF ZOPHAR
_ 1. Zophar's swift reply (Job 20:1)_
2. Another description of the life and fate of the wicked (Job 20:4)
Job 20:1. Zophar, the twitterer, begins his reply t...
-
JOB 20. SECOND SPEECH OF ZOPHAR. Zophar helps the return to the wider
problem by appearing once more with a strong doctrine as to the
shortness of the prosperity of the wicked. His theme is, Sin bring...
-
_as a dream_ Comp. Psalms 73:20, "As a dream when one awaketh; so, O
Lord, when thou awakest thou shalt despise their image"; Isaiah 29:8,
of the enemies of Israel....
-
The prosperity of the wicked is brief
4. _Knowest thou not this old_ i. e. knowest thou not this to be or to
have been of old, lit. _from for ever_. "This" which is from of old
and from the time man h...
-
E.
POWERLESSNESS OF PROSPERITYNO ULTIMATE SECURITYZOPHAR'S WARNING (Job
20:1-29)
TEXT 20:1-29
THEN ANSWERED ZOPHAR THE NAAMATHITE, AND SAID,
_2_ Therefore do my thoughts give answer to me,
Even b...
-
ZOPHAR'S SECOND SPEECH
Zophar ignores Job's conviction that God will one day establish his
innocence, and proceeds to describe the short triumph of the wicked
and his certain downfall and punishment...
-
JOB, A SERVANT OF GOD
Job
_KEITH SIMONS_
Words in boxes (except for words in brackets) are from the Bible.
This commentary has been through Advanced Checking.
CHAPTER 20
ZOPHAR’S LAST SPEECH
AN...
-
This wicked man may be powerful while he is alive. But when he dies,
nobody will even remember this man....
-
כַּ חֲלֹ֣ום יָ֭עוּף וְ לֹ֣א
יִמְצָא֑וּהוּ וְ֝
-
XVII.
IGNORANT CRITICISM OF LIFE
Job 20:1
ZOPHAR SPEAKS
THE great saying that quickens our faith and carries thought into a
higher world conveyed no Divine meaning to the man from Naamah. The
autho...
-
“THE TRIUMPHING OF THE WICKED”
Job 20:1
Zophar is the man who least of all understood Job. The rebuke which
Job had just administered, Job 19:28, has vexed him, so that he speaks
with impatience.
Th...
-
With evident haste, Zophar replied. His speech is introduced with an
apology for his haste and a confession of his anger. He had heard the
reproof, but he was not convinced; and the spirit of his unde...
-
_Fleeth. The poets assign wings to sleep and to dreams. (Homer, &c.)
Isaias (xxix. 7.) describes a man who dreams that he is eating, and
finds himself hungry when he awakes. Such is the live of the
av...
-
(4) Knowest thou not this of old, since man was placed upon earth, (5)
That the triumphing of the wicked is short, and the joy of the
hypocrite but for a moment? (6) Though his excellency mount up to...
-
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS CHAPTER S 4 THROUGH 31.
As to the friends of Job, they do not call for any extended remarks.
They urge the doctrine that God's earthly government is a full measure
and...
-
HE SHALL FLY AWAY AS A DREAM, AND SHALL NOT BE FOUND,.... Either as a
dream which is forgotten, as Nebuchadnezzar's was, and cannot be
recovered; or as the matter and substance of a dream, which, thou...
-
_He shall fly away as a dream, and shall not be found: yea, he shall
be chased away as a vision of the night._
Ver. 8. _He shall fly away as a dream, &c._] As a delightful dream is
soon forgotten, so...
-
_Though his excellency mount up to the heavens_ Though he be advanced
to great dignity and authority in the world. _He shall perish like his
own dung_ Which men cast away with contempt and abhorrence....
-
He shall fly away as a dream and shall not be found, just as fleeting,
just as perishable; YEA, HE SHALL BE CHASED AWAY AS A VISION OF THE
NIGHT, scared away like a phantom before God's mighty interve...
-
ZOPHAR PICTURES THE END OF THE UNGODLY...
-
THE WICKED MAN'S BRIEF TRIUMPH
(vv.1-5)
Zophar does not even consider the possibility that Job is not wicked,
but again strongly condemns the wicked, making it evident that he is
really speaking of...
-
1-9 Zophar's discourse is upon the certain misery of the wicked. The
triumph of the wicked and the joy of the hypocrite are fleeting. The
pleasures and gains of sin bring disease and pain; they end in...
-
AS A DREAM; which for the present makes a great show and noise, and
highly affects the fancy, but hath nothing solid nor permanent in it;
for as soon as the man awakes all vanisheth, and the remembran...
-
Job 20:8 away H5774 (H8799) dream H2472 found H4672 (H8799) away H5074
(H8714) vision H2384 night...
-
CONTENTS: Zophar's second discourse on Job's case.
CHARACTERS: God, Zophar, Job.
CONCLUSION: Though wicked men may sometimes prosper, their joy is but
for a moment and will quickly end in endless so...
-
Job 20:2. _I make haste_ to answer, for thou reproachest both God and
us. Zophar had felt the point of Job's sword, in the preseding
discourse; but the present chapter may well be considered as a most...
-
_He shall fly away as a dream._
THE DREAM OF LIFE
Job, in the text, speaks of life as a “dream,” a mere passing
phantom of the brain.
I. A dream implies a dormancy in certain faculties of our nature...
-
JOB—NOTE ON JOB 20:1 In his second response, Zophar expresses
frustration at Job’s continued belief that God has brought about his
suffering but will ultimately vindicate him (vv. Job 20:2). Zophar
th...
-
_ZOPHAR’S SECOND SPEECH_
Produces nothing new; much more outspoken than before. Enlarges on the
miseries overtaking the wicked, insinuating that Job was such. His
argument,—like in condition, like in...
-
EXPOSITION
JOB 20:1
Zophar's second speech is even more harsh than his first (Job 11:1.).
He adds coarseness and rudeness to his former vehement hostility (Job
20:7,...
-
So Zophar, the third of the speakers, gives his second discourse. And
again, he was the guy that was dealing with traditions earlier, and
with wisdom and all, so he said to Job,
Therefore do my thoug...
-
Isaiah 29:7; Isaiah 29:8; Psalms 18:10; Psalms 73:20; Psalms 90:5...