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Verse Job 10:10. _HAST THOU NOT POURED ME OUT AS MILK_] After all
that some learned men have said on this subject, in order to confine
the images here to simple _nutrition_, I am satisfied that
_gene...
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HAST THOU NOT POURED ME OUT AS MILK? - The whole image in this verse
and the following, is designed to fur nish an illustration of the
origin and growth of the human frame. The Note of Dr. Good may be...
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CHAPTER S 9-10 JOB ANSWERS BILDAD
_ 1. The supremacy and power of God (Job 9:1)_
2. How then can Job meet Him? (Job 9:11)
3. He destroyeth the perfect and the wicked (Job 9:22)
4. Confession of we...
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Job's tone becomes sharper. He accuses God of having created him only
to torment him. What profit is there to God in destroying the work
that has cost Him so much pains? (Job 10:3)? Is God short-sight...
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These verses refer to the formation of the child in the womb, from
conception to full growth, cf. Psalms 139:13-16....
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HAST THOU NOT POURED ME OUT AS MILK, &C.— See Pliny, Hist. Nat. l.
7. c. 15.; see also this and the following verses finely elucidated in
Scheuchzer, Physique Sacree, tom. vi. p. 39....
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5. HE WOULD ASK THE ALMIGHTY THE REASON FOR THE CHANGE IN HIS
TREATMENT OF HIS CREATURE. (JOB 10:1-22)
TEXT 10:1-22
10 My soul is weary of my life;
I will give free coarse to my complaint;
I will s...
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_HAST THOU NOT POURED ME OUT AS MILK, AND CURDLED ME LIKE CHEESE?_
Hast thou not poured me out as milk, and curdled me like cheese? In
the organization of the body, from its rude commencements in the...
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JOB'S SECOND SPEECH (CONCLUDED)
1-7. Job seeks the reason of his trial, and protests against God's
treatment as inconsistent with the natural relations between Creator
and created, and with God's kno...
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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 10
JOB PRAYS TO GOD
JOB PR...
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Job could see that God designed the human body. And Job could see that
this was not a simple task. God acted carefully when he made Job’s
body. God did not cause Job to live by accident. Rather, God s...
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POURED ME OUT AS MILK. — An allusion to the embryo. (See Psalms
139:13.)...
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הֲ לֹ֣א כֶ֭ † חָלָב תַּתִּיכֵ֑נִי וְ֝...
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X. THE THOUGHT OF A DAYSMAN JOB 9:1; Job 10:1
Job SPEAKS
IT is with an infinitely sad restatement of what God has been made to
appear to him by Bildad's speech that Job begins his reply. Yes, yes;
it...
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SOUL BITTERNESS
Job 10:1
In this chapter Job accuses God of persecuting His own workmanship,
Job 20:3; of pursuing him with repeated strokes, as if he had not time
enough to wait between them, but mu...
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Notwithstanding all this, Job appealed to God. Turning from his answer
to Bildad, he poured out his agony as in the presence of the Most
High. It was by no means a hopeful appeal, but it was an appeal...
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_Milked. Hebrew, "poured me out as milk, and curdled me like cheese?"
(Haydock) --- See Wisdom vii. 1. The ancients explained our origin by
the comparison of milk curdled, or cheese; (Arist.[Aristotle...
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(8) В¶ Thine hands have made me and fashioned me together round
about; yet thou dost destroy me. (9) Remember, I beseech thee, that
thou hast made me as the clay; and wilt thou bring me into dust agai...
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THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS CHAPTER S 4 THROUGH 31.
As to the friends of Job, they do not call for any extended remarks.
They urge the doctrine that God's earthly government is a full measure
and...
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HAST THOU NOT POURED ME OUT AS MILK,.... Expressing, in modest terms,
his conception from the seed of his parents, comparable to milk, from
being a liquid, and for its colour:
AND CURDLED ME LIKE CHE...
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Hast thou not poured me out as milk, and curdled me like cheese?
Ver. 10. _Hast thou not poured me out as milk_] Or, melted me, that
is, made me of some such thing as liquid and white milk. _Generati...
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_Hast thou not poured me out as milk?_ Thus he modestly and accurately
describes God's admirable work in forming the fœtus in the womb, out
of a small and liquid substance, gradually coagulated and co...
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Hast Thou not poured me out as milk and curdled me like cheese? This
describes the entire molding of the body before birth, one of God's
great mysteries....
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JOB'S PRAYER FOR ENLIGHTENMENT.
Job now launches forth into a pitiful complaint, addressing God
Himself on the great severity with which He was treating him, although
He knew that he was innocent of...
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AN ATTEMPT TO REASON WITH GOD
(vv.1-22)
Since there was no mediator, Job in this chapter (from verse 2 on)
directs all of his words directly to God, reasoning with Him as
regards why God should deal...
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Here is. poetic description of the formation of Job in the womb,
compare with Psalms 139:13-16; Ecclesiastes 11:5. "God caused Job to
be conceived and develop in the womb, an intricate process like th...
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8-13 Job seems to argue with God, as if he only formed and preserved
him for misery. God made us, not we ourselves. How sad that those
bodies should be instruments of unrighteousness, which are capab...
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Thus he modestly and accurately describes God's admirable work in
making man out of a small and liquid, and as it were milky, substance,
by degrees congealed and condensed into that exquisite frame of...
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Job 10:10 out H5413 (H8686) milk H2461 curdle H7087 (H8686) cheese
H1385
poured - Psa
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CONTENTS: Job's answer to Bildad continued.
CHARACTERS: God, Job, Bildad.
CONCLUSION: Sometimes, when in affliction, the believer is tempted to
think that God's providences and His justice cannot be...
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Job 10:1. _I will leave my complaint upon myself._ These words seem to
imply, that he would bear his complaint in silence; but it immediately
follows, _I will speak in the bitterness of my soul._ Oste...
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_Is it good unto Thee that Thou shouldest oppress?_
JOB’S MISTAKEN VIEWS OF HIS SUFFERINGS
I. As inconsistent with all his ideas of his Maker.
1. As inconsistent with His goodness. “Is it good unto...
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JOB—NOTE ON JOB 10:8 Job shares the wonder of the psalmist (Psalms
139:14) and the insight given to the prophet (Jeremiah 1:
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_JOB’S REPLY TO BILDAD—CONTINUED_
His speech takes the form rather of an expostulation with God in
regard to his afflictions. The vehemence of his spirit reaches its
height in this chapter. Does not...
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EXPOSITION
JOB 10:1
Having answered Bildad, Job proceeds to pour out the bitterness of his
soul in a pathetic complaint, which he addresses directly to God.
There is not much that is novel in the lon...
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Now Job goes on in the tenth chapter. He said,
My soul is weary of my life (Job 10:1);
He goes right back into his misery. He looks for the answer, but it
isn't there; it isn't to be found. And so I...
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Psalms 139:14...