-
Verse Job 3:14. _WITH KINGS AND COUNSELLORS OF THE EARTH_] I believe
this translation to be perfectly correct. The _counsellors_, יעצי
yoatsey, I suppose to mean the privy council, or advisers of kin...
-
WITH KINGS - Reposing as they do. This is the language of calm
meditation on what would have been the consequence if he had died when
he was an infant. He seems to delight to dwell on it. He contrasts...
-
CHAPTER 3 JOB'S LAMENT
_ 1. Job curses the day of his birth (Job 3:1)_
2. He longs for death (Job 3:10)
3. The reason why (Job 3:24)
Job 3:1. The s
-
JOB'S LAMENTATION. Here the later poem begins, and at once we pass
into another world. The patient Job of the Volksbuch is gone, and we
have instead one who complains bitterly that ever he was born. T...
-
DESOLATE PLACES. ruins: i.e. places (tombs or monuments) already going
to ruins....
-
Would God I had died from my birth
If he must be born, Job asks, Why he did not die from the womb? his
eye turning to the next possibility and chance of escaping sorrow. Had
he died he would have bee...
-
_which built desolate places_ The expression seems to be that which
occurs several times in Scripture, e.g. Isaiah 58:12; Isaiah 61:4;
Ezekiel 36:10; E
-
WHICH BUILT DESOLATE PLACES— The Hebrew word חרבות _charaboth_
rendered _desolate places,_ comes from an Arabic root, denoting
buildings of the pompous kind; and so may signify apartments of great
ele...
-
2. Asks why he was born (Job 3:11-19)
TEXT 3:11-19
11 WHY DIED I NOT FROM THE WOMB?
Why did I not give up the ghost when my mother bare me?
12 Why did the knees receive me?
Or why the breasts, th...
-
_WITH KINGS AND COUNSELLORS OF THE EARTH, WHICH BUILT DESOLATE PLACES
FOR THEMSELVES;_
With kings ... which built desolate places for themselves - who built
up for themselves what proved to be (not p...
-
3:14 themselves, (d-13) Or 'who ruined buildings.'...
-
JOB CURSES HIS DAY
Job curses the day of his birth. He asks why he did not die at birth:
why should his wretched life be prolonged?
We are now confronted with a striking change in Job's frame of mind...
-
DESOLATE PLACES] RM 'solitary piles': cp. the pyramids of Egypt, which
were the royal burying-places.
15-19. In reading these verses, in spite of their great beauty, we
cannot help contrasting the vag...
-
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 3
JOB’S FIRST SPEECH
JOB R...
-
These men worked hard. They built palaces. They led great armies. They
achieved many things. But now, they must sleep. Their palaces are
heaps of stone. Someone else owns their gold and silver now. An...
-
DESOLATE PLACES — i.e., gorgeous tombs and splendid sepulchres,
which, being tenanted only by the dead, are desolate; or it may mean
that the places so built of old are now ruined and desolate. In the...
-
עִם ־מְ֭לָכִים וְ יֹ֣עֲצֵי אָ֑רֶץ הַ
בֹּנִ֖ים
-
VI.
THE CRY FROM THE DEPTH
Job 3:1
Job SPEAKS
WHILE the friends of Job sat beside him that dreary week of silence,
each of them was meditating in his own way the sudden calamities which
had brought...
-
IS LIFE WORTH LIVING?
Job 3:1
In the closing paragraphs of the previous chapter three friends
arrive. Teman is Edom; for Shuah see Genesis 25:2; Naamah is Arabia.
The group of spectators, gathered r...
-
Silent sympathy always creates an opportunity for grief to express
itself. Job's outcry was undoubtedly an answer to their sympathy. So
far, it was good, and they had helped him. It is always better t...
-
With kings and counsellors of the earth, which built (k) desolate
places for themselves;
(k) He notes the ambition of them who for their pleasure as it were
change the order of nature, and build in m...
-
(8) Let them curse it that curse the day, who are ready to raise up
their mourning. (9) Let the stars of the twilight thereof be dark; let
it look for light, but have none; neither let it see the dawn...
-
Job's Complaint
(Response to an insurance company) I am writing in response to your
request for additional information regarding my claim. In block #3 of
the accident form, I put "trying to do the job...
-
But the depths of Job's heart were not yet reached, and to do this was
the purpose of God, whatever Satan's thoughts may have been. Job did
not know himself, and up to this time, with all his piety, h...
-
WITH THE KINGS AND COUNSELLORS OF THE EARTH,.... From whom he might
descend, he being a person of great distinction and figure; and so,
had he died, he would have been buried in the sepulchres of his...
-
With kings and counsellors of the earth, which built desolate places
for themselves;
Ver. 14. _With kings and counsellors of the earth_] _q.d._ Those that
here have been most negotious, and (as the n...
-
_For_ now _should I have lain still, and been quiet_ Free from those
torments of body, and that anguish of mind, which now oppress me.
_With kings and counsellors of the earth_ I had then been as happ...
-
JOB LONGS FOR DEATH...
-
with kings and counselors of the earth, the highest officers of the
state, the royal advisers and ministers, WHICH BUILT DESOLATE PLACES
FOR THEMSELVES, who erected for themselves what proved to be, n...
-
JOB'S BITTER COMPLAINT
(vv.1-26)
Though Job would not dare to curse God for his trouble, yet it seems
that the presence of his friends only caused a stronger, gradual
build-up of bitter distress in...
-
"WITH KINGS AND WITH COUNSELORS OF THE EARTH": Clearly the realm of
the dead is not one of unconsciousness or annihilation, for Job sees
death as being. realm filled with great men of the past. He wou...
-
11-19 Job complained of those present at his birth, for their tender
attention to him. No creature comes into the world so helpless as man.
God's power and providence upheld our frail lives, and his...
-
WITH KINGS; I had then been as happy as the proudest monarchs, who
after all their great achievements and enjoyments go down into their
graves, where I also should have been sweetly reposed. WHICH BUI...
-
Job 3:14 kings H4428 counselors H3289 (H8802) earth H776 built H1129
(H8802) ruins H2723
kings -...
-
CONTENTS: Job tells his misery and despair.
CHARACTERS: God, Job.
CONCLUSION: «Pity thyself» is the devil's most popular sermon to one
who will listen to him, for he delights to embitter the saint b...
-
Job 3:1. _After this opened Job his mouth._ The Masoretic Jews, as
well as our modern divines, seem agreed that Job now began the
_drama,_ and spake in poetic effusions of _verse._ They say the same
o...
-
_After this opened Job his month, and cursed his day._
THE PERIL OF IMPULSIVE SPEECH
In regard to this chapter, containing the first speech of Job, we may
remark that it is impossible to approve the...
-
JOB—NOTE ON JOB 3:13 Job describes death as rest from the toil of
life. He pictures its effect on people both high and low in society.
He wishes he had joined those who were already in this state of r...
-
NOTES
Job 3:5. “_Let the blackness of the day terrify it_.” Margin,
“_Let them terrify it as those who have a bitter day_” The
expression כִּמרִירֵי־יוֹם (_chimrire-yom_) gives rise
to two classes of...
-
EXPOSITION
The "Historical Introduction" ended, we come upon a long colloquy, in
which the several _dramatis personae_ speak for themselves, the
writer, or compiler, only prefacing each speech with a...
-
And finally Job spoke up. Job begins to curse the day of his birth.
Job opened his mouth, and he cursed his day (Job 3:1).
Notice he didn't curse God; just the day in which he was born.
Let the day...
-
1 Kings 11:43; 1 Kings 2:10; Ecclesiastes 8:8; Ezekiel 26:20;...
-
JOB'S SORROWS AND SIGHS
Job 2:9; Job 3:1
INTRODUCTORY WORDS
In this study we will consider the verses which lie in the second
chapter of Job beginning with verse nine where we left off in the
forme...
-
Kings — I had then been as happy as the proudest monarchs, who after
all their great achievements and enjoyments, go down into their
graves. Built — Who to shew their wealth and power, or to leave
beh...