* Elihu offers to reason with Job. (1-7) Elihu blames Job for
reflecting upon God. (8-13) God calls men to repentance. (14-18) God
sends afflictions for good. (19-28) Elihu entreats Job's attention.
(29-33)... [ Continue Reading ]
1-7 Job had desired a judge to decide his appeal. Elihu was one
according to his wish, a man like himself. If we would rightly
convince men, it must be by reason, not by terror; by fair argument,
not by a heavy hand.... [ Continue Reading ]
8-13 Elihu charges Job with reflecting upon the justice and goodness
of God. When we hear any thing said to God's dishonour, we ought to
bear our testimony against it. Job had represented God as severe in
marking what he did amiss. Elihu urges that he had spoken wrong, and
that he ought to humble hi... [ Continue Reading ]
14-18 God speaks to us by conscience, by providences, and by
ministers; of all these Elihu discourses. There was not then, that we
know of, any Divine revelation in writing, though now it is our
principal guide. When God designs men's good, by the convictions and
dictates of their own consciences, h... [ Continue Reading ]
19-28 Job complained of his diseases, and judged by them that God was
angry with him; his friends did so too: but Elihu shows that God often
afflicts the body for good to the soul. This thought will be of great
use for our getting good from sickness, in and by which God speaks to
men. Pain is the f... [ Continue Reading ]
29-33 Elihu shows that God's great and gracious design toward the
children of men, is, to save them from being for ever miserable, and
to bring them to be for ever happy. By whatever means we are kept back
from the we shall bless the Lord for them at least, and should bless
him for them though they... [ Continue Reading ]