-
FOR HE HATH SAID, IT PROFITETH A MAN NOTHING THAT HE SHOULD DELIGHT
HIMSELF IN GOD - That is, there is no advantage in piety, and in
endeavoring to serve God. It will make no difference in the divine...
-
CHAPTER 34
_ 1. Hear my words ye wise men (Job 34:1)_
2. The refutation of Job's accusation of God (Job 34:5)
3. Job needs testing to the end (Job 34:31)...
-
Elihu summons the wise men who hear him to seek a right decision. Job
has accused God of injustice, when he is innocent. But in reality Job
is the worst of scorners, for he denies the profit of religi...
-
GOD. Hebrew. _Elohim._ App-4....
-
Elihu recites Job's statement of his cause against God, expressing his
abhorrence of Job's sentiments....
-
Job had nowhere used this precise language, though the idea is not an
unnatural inference from much that he had said; comp. ch. Job 9:12;
Job 21:7; Job 24:1, and ch. 21 throughout. This charge that a...
-
C.
THE SOURCE OF JUSTICE (Job 34:1-37)
1.
Job is walking with wicked men when he attributes injustice to God.
(Job 34:1-9)
TEXT 34:1-9
1 MOREOVER ELIHU ANSWERED AND SAID,
2 Hear my words, ye wis...
-
_FOR HE HATH SAID, IT PROFITETH A MAN NOTHING THAT HE SHOULD DELIGHT
HIMSELF WITH GOD._
With God - in intimacy (Psalms 50:18, "When thou sawest a thief, then
thou consentedst with him, and hast been...
-
THE SPEECHES OF ELIHU (CONTINUED)
1-9. Elihu appeals to his hearers to judge the matter. He protests
against the complaints of Job that he was treated unjustly by God, and
that it was no profit to be...
-
Cp. e.g. Job 9:21.
10-37. Elihu meets Job's doubts. The omnipotent God cannot commit
injustice: the idea is inconsistent with the conception of One who
creates and sustains and governs all mankind. I...
-
Elihu was saying that Job’s words sounded like the words of a wicked
man. Elihu was not saying that Job was evil. But evil men do say
things like those that we read in verses 5-6. Job seemed to copy a...
-
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 34
ELIHU DISCUSSES THE SPEE...
-
IT PROFITETH A MAN NOTHING. — Comp. what Job had said (Job 9:20; Job
9:30; Job 10:6; Job 10:14). Eliphaz had virtually said the same thing,
though the form in which he
-
כִּֽי ־אָ֭מַר לֹ֣א יִסְכָּן ־גָּ֑בֶר
בִּ֝ רְצ
-
XXV.
POST-EXILIC WISDOM
Job 32:1; Job 33:1; Job 34:1
A PERSONAGE hitherto unnamed in the course of the drama now assumes
the place of critic and judge between Job and his friends. Elihu, son
of Bara...
-
THE ALMIGHTY MUST BE JUST
Job 34:1
Elihu stands in Job 34:10 as God's apologist. God's absolute and
impartial justice is at all times a matter of untold comfort. There
will be no cause of ultimate co...
-
Job gave no answer to the challenge, and Elihu proceeded. He first
appealed to the wise men, asked that they would listen in order to try
his words. He then made two quotations from the things Job had...
-
For he hath said, (h) It profiteth a man nothing that he should (i)
delight himself with God.
(h) He wrests Job's words who said that God's children are often
punished in this world, and the wicked g...
-
(1) В¶ Furthermore Elihu answered and said, (2) Hear my words, O ye
wise men; and give ear unto me, ye that have knowledge. (3) For the
ear trieth words, as the mouth tasteth meat. (4) Let us choose t...
-
3. NOW ON TO CHAPTER 34
H. Job 34:1-9 (NKJV) Elihu further answered and said:
2 "Hear my words, you wise [men]; Give ear to me, you who have
knowledge.
3 For the ear tests words As the palate taste...
-
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS CHAPTER S 32 THROUGH 37.
But these spiritual affections of Job did not prevent his turning this
consciousness of integrity into a robe of self-righteousness which hid
G...
-
FOR HE HATH SAID,.... Not plainly and expressly, but consequentially;
what it was thought might be inferred from what he had said,
particularly in Job 9:22;
IT PROFITETH A MAN NOTHING THAT HE SHOULD...
-
For he hath said, It profiteth a man nothing that he should delight
himself with God.
Ver. 9. _For he hath said, It profiteth a man not_] Did Job ever say
so or think so? where? and when? He said ind...
-
_Who drinketh up scorning like water_ That is, abundantly and
greedily: who doth so break forth into scornful expressions, not only
against his friends, but, in some sort, even against God himself. Th...
-
For he hath said, It profiteth a man nothing that he should delight
himself with God, by living in friendship and fellowship with God,
this sentiment having frequently been uttered by Job as his impat...
-
JOB ACCUSED OF FALSEHOOD AND BLASPHEMY...
-
HIS APPEAL AS TO WISE MEN
(vv.1-4)
Since Job had wisely refrained from speaking, Elihu makes an appeal to
all his hearers, as to wise men (v.2). This reminds us of1 Corinthians
10:15, "I speak as to...
-
Elihu is also horrified by the argument that it profits man nothing to
serve God faithfully, compare with Job 9:30-31. "To say that. person
is no better off for having served God is. complaint Elihu a...
-
1-9 Elihu calls upon those present to decide with him upon Job's
words. The plainest Christian, whose mind is enlightened, whose heart
is sanctified by the Spirit of God, and who is versed in the
Scr...
-
HE HATH SAID; not absolutely and in express terms, but by unforced
consequence, and as concerning this life, and with reference to
himself; because he said that good men were no less, nay, sometimes
m...
-
Job 34:9 said H559 (H8804) profits H5532 (H8799) man H1397 delight
H7521 (H8800) God H430
It -...
-
Job 34:1. _Furthermore Elihu answered and said, Hear my words, O ye
wise men; and give ear unto me, ye that have knowledge. For the ear
trieth words, as the mouth tasteth meat._
I wish that verse was...
-
CONTENTS: Elihu's discourse continued. He magnifies God's holiness.
CHARACTERS: God, Elihu, Job, friends.
CONCLUSION: It is absurd and unreasonable to multiply words in
complaint against God's ways....
-
Job 34:5. _Job hath said God hath taken away my judgment._ See on Job
27:2. Elihu, in every accusation, takes or turns Job's words in a
wrong sense. Job meant that God had varied, in regard of him, th...
-
_What man is like Job?_
ELIHU’S ESTIMATE OF JOB
It was natural that, with all his reverence for Job, Elihu should be
offended by the heat and passion of his words, by the absence of
moderation and se...
-
JOB—NOTE ON JOB 34:1 Elihu calls on “wise men” to hear Job’s
contention that he is in the right (vv. Job 34:2) and “men of
understanding” to hear Elihu’s argument against this claim (vv....
-
JOB—NOTE ON JOB 34:9 Although Job had stated that the wicked and the
righteous seem to suffer the same fate, he did not say precisely what
Elihu quotes him here as saying. Job had governed his own lif...
-
_ELIHU’S SECOND SPEECH_
Probably after waiting for a reply from Job, and none being
forthcoming, Elihu resumes. Job 34:1.—“Furthermore Elihu answered
(took up speech), and said”. Job’s silence probabl...
-
EXPOSITION
JOB 34:1
In this chapter Elihu turns from Job to those whom he addresses as
"wise men" (verse 2), or "men of understanding" (verse 10). Whether
these are Job's three special friends, or ot...
-
Furthermore Elihu went on then [Job didn't answer], he said, Hear my
words, O ye wise men; give ear unto me, that have knowledge. For the
ear tries words, as the mouth tastes meat (Job 34:1-3).
That'...
-
Job 21:14; Job 21:30; Job 22:17; Job 27:10; Job 35:3;...
-
HIGH ALTITUDES IN ELIHU'S ANSWER TO JOB
Job 32:1, Job 33:1; Job 34:1; Job 35:1; Job 3
-
He said — Not in express terms, but by consequence; because he said
that good men were no less, nay, sometimes more miserable here than
the wicked....