Job 7:16
The peculiar circumstances of Job had, no doubt, something to do with
eliciting from him this aspiration, otherwise its spirit would
scarcely accord with the general tone of the patriarchs and of the
saints of the Old Testament dispensation. For they evidently, as in
the case of Hezekiah,... [ Continue Reading ]
Job 7:20
The great design of the book of Job, leaving out all detail and the
undercurrents of the story, appears to be twofold: (1) to show that a
good man, and because he is good, may yet receive at the hand of the
God he loves and serves the severest discipline of pain and sorrow;
(2) to illustra... [ Continue Reading ]