JOB CHAPTER 5 Wrath foolish: the wicked miserable, JOB 5:1. Evil
cometh not by chance; it is natural to our condition, JOB 5:6,7. This
is our motive to prayer and trust in God, JOB 5:8; whose unsearchable
power and wisdom are against the high and crafty, for the relief of
the poor, JOB 5:9. Their ha... [ Continue Reading ]
Either,
1. The wrath of God; or rather,
2. A man's own wrath, fretting, and impatience, and indignation; which
kills men, partly, naturally, as it preys upon a man's spirit, and
wasteth him inwardly, and so hastens his death, of which see PROVERBS
14:30, PROVERBS 17:22; partly, morally, as it prom... [ Continue Reading ]
I have oft observed it in my experience. Having severely rebuked Job
for his transports of passion and intemperate speeches against God, he
now returns to his former argument, and proves that such dreadful and
destructive judgments of God do not befall the righteous, but the
wicked, as he observed,... [ Continue Reading ]
HIS CHILDREN; whose greatness and happiness he designed in all his
enterprises, supposing that his family was and would be established
for ever. ARE FAR FROM SAFETY, i.e. are exposed to great dangers and
calamities in this life, and can neither preserve themselves, nor the
great inheritance which th... [ Continue Reading ]
WHOSE HARVEST, which they now justly and confidently expect to reap,
after all their cost and labour for that end, but are sadly and
suddenly disappointed; which is a great aggravation of their misery.
THE HUNGRY, i.e. the poor, whose necessities make them greedy and
ravenous to eat it all up; and f... [ Continue Reading ]
ALTHOUGH, or _for_, or rather, _because_. So the following words may
contain a reason why he should _seek unto God_, as he exhorts him, JOB
5:8. Or, _surely_, as that particle is oft used. And so it is a note
of his proceeding to another argument. AFFLICTION, or _iniquity_, as
this word oft signifie... [ Continue Reading ]
i.e. He is so commonly exposed to many and various troubles, as if he
were born to no other end. Affliction is become in some sort natural
and proper to man, and it is, together with sin, transmitted from
parents to children, as their most certain and constant inheritance;
God having allotted this p... [ Continue Reading ]
If I were in thy condition; and therefore I would advise thee to the
same course. SEEK UNTO GOD, to wit, by prayer, and humiliation, and
submission, imploring his pardon, and favour, and help, and not repine
at him, and accuse his providence, as thou dost. WOULD I COMMIT MY
CAUSE, i.e. commend my af... [ Continue Reading ]
Here Eliphaz enters upon a discourse of the infinite perfection and
greatness of God's nature and works; which he doth partly as an
argument to enforce the exhortation to _seek and commit his cause to
God_, JOB 5:8, because God was infinitely able, either to punish him
yet far worse, if he continued... [ Continue Reading ]
He beginneth with this ordinary and obvious work of God, in which he
implies that there is something unsearchable and wonderful, as indeed
there is in the rise of it from the earth, in the strange hanging of
that heavy body in the air, and in the distribution of it as God sees
fit, AMOS 4:7; and how... [ Continue Reading ]
These words contain either,
1. A declaration of God's end in giving rain, which is to enrich those
who were poor, or mourning for the drought, by sending rain, and
making their lands fruitful; or rather,
2. Another example of God's great and wonderful works. And the
infinitive verb is here put for... [ Continue Reading ]
OF THE CRAFTY; such as are cunning to work evil, and to cover it with
fair pretences, as hypocrites use to do, and as Job's friends charged
him with doing: God breaks the hopes and designs of such men; as he
hath now blasted thy expectation, and taken away thy outward
happiness, which was the thing... [ Continue Reading ]
THE WISE IN THEIR OWN CRAFTINESS; wicked men, who are wise to do evil,
and wise in the opinion of the world, he not only deceiveth in their
hopes and counsels, but turns them against themselves; as we see in
Ahithophel, Haman, &c. _The froward_, or _perverse_, or _wrestlers_;
such as wind and turn e... [ Continue Reading ]
i.e. In plain things they run into gross mistakes and errors, and
commonly choose those counsels and courses which are worst for
themselves. DARKNESS oft notes misery, but here ignorance or error, as
it is also used JOB 12:25, JOB 37:19, and elsewhere. GROPE, like blind
men to find their way, not kn... [ Continue Reading ]
THE POOR, or _helpless_; who therefore flee to God for refuge. FROM
THEIR MOUTH, or, FROM THE SWORD which cometh out of their mouth, i.e.
from all their censures, slanders, threatenings, deceitful
insinuations, false swearings of witnesses, unrighteous sentences of
corrupt judges, whereby their good... [ Continue Reading ]
So this poor man obtaineth what he in some measure hoped or expected
from God, to whom he committed his cause; and other poor men will be
encouraged by his example to place their hope in God. INIQUITY, i. e.
wicked men; the abstract for the concrete, as _pride, deceit,
injustice_, are put for proud,... [ Continue Reading ]
BEHOLD; for what I am saying, though most true, will not be believed
without serious consideration. HAPPY IS THE MAN WHOM GOD CORRECTETH,
Heb. _blessednesses_ (i.e. various and great happiness, as the plural
number implies) belong to that man whom God rebukes, to wit, with
strokes, JOB 33:16,19. Tho... [ Continue Reading ]
BINDETH UP, to wit, the wounds, as good surgeons use to do when they
have dressed them, in order to their healing. Compare PSALMS 147:3
EZEKIEL 34:4. The sense is, Though he hath seen it fit to wound thee,
yet he will not always grieve thee, but will in due time release thee
from all thy miseries. T... [ Continue Reading ]
HE SHALL DELIVER THEE, to wit, if thou seekest to him by prayer and
repentance. SIX, i.e. manifold or repeated; as _six_ is used for many,
PROVERBS 6:16. THERE SHALL NO EVIL TOUCH THEE, to wit, so as to undo
or destroy thee, as touching is used, JOSHUA 9:19 HEBREWS 11:28 1 JOHN
5:18. See also Genesi... [ Continue Reading ]
IN FAMINE; which Job might be thought to fear, as being so poor that
he needed his friends contributions for his relief. FROM DEATH; from
that terrible kind of death. These things he utters with more
confidence, partly because the rewards or punishments of this life
were more constantly distributed... [ Continue Reading ]
HID, i.e. protected, as in some secret and safe place. FROM THE
SCOURGE OF THE TONGUE, i.e. from false accusations and virulent
slanders and reproaches, either by diverting their tongues to other
persons or things, or by clearing thy integrity. NEITHER SHALT THOU BE
AFRAID; thou shalt have no cause... [ Continue Reading ]
Thou shalt not only be _redeemed from famine_, JOB 5:20, and _not fear
destruction_, JOB 5:21, but thou shalt laugh at them; not with a
laughter of scorn and contempt, as this word is used, JOB 39:18 PSALMS
2:4, PSALMS 37:13; (for God's judgments are to be entertained with
reverence and godly fear;)... [ Continue Reading ]
Thou shalt be free from any annoyance by stones, either in thy walking
or other postures, or in thy ploughing, as if they had made an
inviolable league with thee. Stones may be, and in these stony
countries were, hurtful to men many ways; either by bruising or
hurting their feet when they walked bar... [ Continue Reading ]
THOU SHALT KNOW, by certain and constant experience, THAT THY
TABERNACLE, i.e. thy habitation, as it follows, including also the
inhabitants, children, or friends and servants, SHALL BE IN PEACE;
shall enjoy great safety from all their enemies, and concord among
themselves, and prosperity in all the... [ Continue Reading ]
THOU SHALT KNOW; partly by assurance from God's promises, and the
impressions of his Spirit; and partly by experience in due time. THY
SEED SHALL BE GREAT; thy posterity, which God will give thee instead
of those which thou hast lost, shall be high, and honourable, and
powerful. Or, _shall be many._... [ Continue Reading ]
IN A FULL AGE; in a mature and old, but vigorous, age, as the word
implies. Thou shalt not be cut off by a hand of violence before thy
time, as thy sons and other wicked men have been; but shalt die in a
_good old age_, as did Abraham, GENESIS 25:8, and Moses, DEUTERONOMY
34:7. AS A SHOCK OF CORN CO... [ Continue Reading ]
It is not my single opinion, but my brethren concur with me, as thou
wilt hear from their own mouths. This is no rash or hasty conceit, but
what we have learned by deep consideration and hard study, long
experience and diligent observation, both of God's word, so far as he
hath been pleased to revea... [ Continue Reading ]