JOB CHAPTER 3 Job curseth the day and services of his birth, JOB 3:1.
The ease and honours of death, JOB 3:13. Life in anguish matter of
complaint, JOB 3:20. What he feared is now come upon him, JOB 3:25,26.
He spake freely and boldly, as this phrase is used, PROVERBS 31:8,9
EPH 6:19, and elsewhere,... [ Continue Reading ]
No text from Poole on this verse.... [ Continue Reading ]
Let the remembrance of that day be utterly lost; yea, I heartily wish
that it had never been. Such wishes are apparently foolish and
impatient, and yet have been sometimes forced from wise and good men
in grievous distresses, not as if they expected any effect of them,
but only to show their abhorre... [ Continue Reading ]
I wish the sun had never risen upon that day to make it day, or, which
is all one, that it had never been; and whensoever that day returns, I
wish it may be black, and gloomy, and uncomfortable, and therefore
execrable and odious to all men. FROM ABOVE, i.e. from heaven; either,
1. By causing the l... [ Continue Reading ]
DARKNESS AND THE SHADOW OF DEATH, i.e. a black and dark shadow, like
that of the place of the dead, which is a land of darkness, and where
the _light is darkness_, as Job explains this very phrase, JOB
10:21,22; or so gross and palpable darkness, that by its horrors and
damps may take away men's spi... [ Continue Reading ]
LET DARKNESS SEIZE UPON IT, i. e. constant and extraordinary darkness,
without the least glimmering of light from the moon or stars. JOINED
UNTO THE DAYS OF THE YEAR, i.e. reckoned as one, or a part of one, of
them. The night is distinguished from the artificial day, but it is a
part of the natural... [ Continue Reading ]
SOLITARY, i.e. destitute of all society of men meeting and feasting
together, which commonly was done at night, suppers being the most
solemn meals among divers ancient nations. See MARK 6:21 LUKE 14:16 1
THESSALONIANS 12:2 REVELATION 19:9,17. LET NO JOYFUL VOICE; neither of
the bride and bridegroom... [ Continue Reading ]
THAT CURSE THE DAY, i.e. their day, to wit, their birthday; for the
pronoun is here omitted for the metre's sake; for this and the
following Chapter s are written in verse, as all grant. So the sense
is, when their afflictions move them to curse their own birthday, let
them remember mine also, and b... [ Continue Reading ]
LET THE STARS, which are the glory and beauty of the night, to render
it amiable and delightful to men, BE COVERED WITH THICK DARKNESS, nd
that both in the evening twilight, as is here expressed, when the
stars begin to arise and shine forth; and also in the further progress
of the night, even till... [ Continue Reading ]
BECAUSE IT SHUT NOT UP, to wit, the night or the day; to which those
things are ascribed which were done by others in them, as is frequent
in poetical writings, such as this is. Or, _he_, i.e. God; whom in
modesty and reverence he forbears to name. Yet he doth not curse God
for his birth, as the dev... [ Continue Reading ]
FROM THE WOMB, i.e. as soon as ever I was born, or come out of the
womb. And the same thing is expressed in other words, which is an
elegancy usual both in the Hebrew and in other languages.... [ Continue Reading ]
WHY DID THE KNEES PREVENT ME? why did the midwife or nurse receive me,
and lay me upon her knees, and did not suffer me to fall upon the bare
ground, and there to lie, in a neglected and forlorn condition, till
merciful death had taken me out of this miserable world, into which
the cruel kindness of... [ Continue Reading ]
QUIET; free from all those torments of my body and mind which now
oppress me.... [ Continue Reading ]
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 BUILT
DESOLATE PLACES FOR THEMSELVES; which, to show their great wealth and
power, or to leave behind t... [ Continue Reading ]
No text from Poole on this verse.... [ Continue Reading ]
HIDDEN; undiscerned and unregarded. UNTIMELY BIRTH; born before the
due time, and therefore extinct. I HAD NOT BEEN, to wit, in the land
of the living, of which he here speaketh. AS INFANTS WHICH NEVER SAW
LIGHT; being stifled and dead before they were born.... [ Continue Reading ]
THERE, i.e. in the grave, which though not expressed, yet is clearly
implied in the foregoing verses. THE WICKED CEASE FROM TROUBLING; the
great oppressors and troublers of the world cease from all those
vexations, rapines, and murders which here they procured. THERE THE
WEARY BE AT REST; those who... [ Continue Reading ]
THE PRISONERS REST TOGETHER, i.e. one as well as another; they who
were kept in the strongest chains and closest prisons, and condemned
to the most hard and miserable slavery, rest as well as those who were
captives in much better circumstances. Or, IN LIKE MANNER, (as this
word oft signifies,) as t... [ Continue Reading ]
THE SMALL AND GREAT, i.e. persons of all qualifies and conditions,
whether higher or lower. ARE THERE, in the same place and state, all
those kinds of distinctions and differences being for ever abolished.... [ Continue Reading ]
Heb. _Wherefore_ (for what cause, or use, or good) _doth he_ (i.e.
God, though he forbear to name him, out of that holy fear and
reverence which still he retained towards him) give light? either the
light of the sun, which the living only behold, ECCLESIASTES 6:5,
ECCLESIASTES 7:11; or the light of... [ Continue Reading ]
i.e. Desire and pray for it with as much earnestness as men dig for
treasure. But it is observable that Job durst not lay violent hands
upon himself, nor do any thing to hasten or procure his death; but
notwithstanding all his miseries and complaints, he was contented _to
wait all the days of his ap... [ Continue Reading ]
No text from Poole on this verse.... [ Continue Reading ]
WHY IS LIGHT GIVEN? these words are conveniently supplied out of JOB
1:20, where they are, all the following words hitherto being joined in
construction and sense with them. WHOSE WAY IS HID, to wit, from him
who knows not his _way_, i.e. which way to turn himself, what course
to take to comfort him... [ Continue Reading ]
BEFORE I EAT, Heb. _before the face of my bread_, i.e. either when I
am going to eat, or rather, all the time whilst I am eating, (for so
this phrase is used PSALMS 72:5, _before the face of the sun_, &c.;
that is, as we translate it, _as long as the sun endureth_,) I fall
into bitter passions of si... [ Continue Reading ]
This is another reason why he is weary of his life, and why he repents
that ever he was born, because he never enjoyed any solid and secure
comfort. THE THING WHICH I GREATLY FEARED IS COME UPON ME. Heb. _I
feared a fear_, (i.e. a danger or mischief in one kind or other, the
act being here put for t... [ Continue Reading ]
The three expressions note the same thing, which also was signified in
the next foregoing verse, to wit, that even in his prosperous days he
never was secure or at rest from the torment of fear and anxiety.
Others, I did not misbehave myself in prosperity, abusing it by
presumption, and security, an... [ Continue Reading ]