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Verse Job 29:16. _THE CAUSE_ WHICH _I KNEW NOT I SEARCHED OUT._] When
any thing difficult occurred, I did not give it a _slight_
consideration; I examined it to the bottom, whatever pain, time, and
tr...
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I WAS A FATHER TO THE POOR - I took them under my protection, and
treated them as if they were my own children.
AND THE CAUSE WHICH I KNEW NOT I SEARCHED OUT - This is according to
the interpretation...
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CHAPTER 29
_ 1. His past prosperity and honors (Job 29:1)_
2. The good works he did (Job 29:11)
Job 29:1. The words spoken by Job were wholesome words, showing that
his mind was moving in another ch...
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JOB 29. JOB'S FORMER HAPPY DAYS.
Job 29:1. Job longs that he might once again live as of old under
God's favour. In Job 29:4 secret means intimacy (_cf._ Psalms 25:14)....
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POOR. helpless. Hebrew. _'ebyon._ See note on Proverbs 6:11....
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The ground of this universal reverence Job's benevolent care of the
poor and his strict justice to their cause....
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_the cause which I knew not_ Rather, THE CAUSE OF HIM WHOM I KNEW NOT.
Not merely the poor about him, to whom he might feel that he owed
help, but even strangers who had a cause that needed unravellin...
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DISCOURSE: 479
JOB’S CHARACTER
Job 29:11. When the ear heard me, then it blessed me: and when the eye
saw me, it gave witness to me; because I delivered the poor that
cried, and the fatherless, and hi...
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b. The cause of his honored position was benevolence and righteousness
(Job 29:11-17)
TEXT 29:11-17
11 FOR WHEN THE EAR HEARD _ME,_ THEN IT BLESSED ME;
And when the eye saw _me,_ it gave witness un...
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_BECAUSE I DELIVERED THE POOR THAT CRIED, AND THE FATHERLESS, AND HIM
THAT HAD NONE TO HELP HIM._
The grounds on which Job was praised (Job 29:11) - his helping the
afflicted (Psalms 72:12), who cried...
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THE CAUSE _which_ I knew not] RV 'the cause of him that I knew not.'...
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JOB'S PAST GREATNESS AND HAPPINESS
Job mournfully recalls the days of God's favour, and the prosperity
and honour he once enjoyed. In this chapter we have the picture of a
great and worthy chieftain...
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Job did many good things. He even helped people whom nobody else would
help. And Job wanted to do good deeds every day (verse 14). Job did
these things because he was a servant of God (Job 1:8). So Jo...
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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 29
JOB DESCRIBES HIS LIFE B...
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אָ֣ב אָ֭נֹכִֽי לָֽ † אֶבְיֹונִ֑ים וְ
רִ֖ב...
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XXIV.
AS A PRINCE BEFORE THE KING
Job 29:1; Job 30:1; Job 31:1
Job SPEAKS
FROM the pain and desolation to which he has become inured as a
pitiable second state of existence, Job looks back to the y...
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THE BITTER MEMORY OF THE HAPPY PAST
Job 29:1
How many thousands, looking back on the beautiful dawn of life which
has become overcast, have uttered the thought of the opening words of
this chapter! T...
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Job now moved a step forward in his reply. He was still without a
solution. That of his friends he utterly repudiated. In order to
prepare the way for the utterance of a solemn oath of innocence, he
f...
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_Diligently, not passing sentence at random. I also endeavoured to do
justice to those who durst not make any complaint. The prince ought to
have an eye to all things. (Calmet)_...
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(6) When I washed my steps with butter, and the rock poured me out
rivers of oil; (7) В¶ When I went out to the gate through the city,
when I prepared my seat in the street! (8) The young men saw me,...
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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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I [WAS] A FATHER TO THE POOR,.... Not in a literal sense; for his
children were rich as well as himself, while he had them; but in a
civil sense, he was the patron of the poor; he was an advocate for...
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I [was] a father to the poor: and the cause [which] I knew not I
searched out.
Ver. 16. _I was a father to the poor_] _Ab laebionim,_ an elegant
alliteration, as Mercer here noteth. Job was not only...
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_I was eyes to the blind_ That is, instead of eyes, to instruct,
direct, and assist such, as through ignorance or weakness were apt to
mistake, and to be seduced or cheated by the craft and artifices...
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JOB SPEAKS OF HIS BENEVOLENCE AND THE HONOR ACCORDED HIM...
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I was a father to the poor, attending to the wants of the needy like a
natural father; AND THE CAUSE WHICH I KNEW NOT I SEARCHED OUT, he made
it his business to find out about the friendless in the co...
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JOB'S PAST GREATNESS
In this chapter Job dwells upon the honour and dignity that had been
his in the past. While he was sincere in what he said, and no doubt
spoke truthfully, yet there is far too muc...
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7-17 All sorts of people paid respect to Job, not only for the
dignity of his rank, but for his personal merit, his prudence,
integrity, and good management. Happy the men who are blessed with
such g...
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A FATHER, i.e. had the care and bowels of a father to them. THE CAUSE
WHICH I KNEW NOT; either,
1. Those which were not brought to my knowledge or tribunal, either
through neglect, or because the inj...
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Job 29:16 father H1 poor H34 out H2713 (H8799) case H7379 know H3045
(H8804)
a father -...
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CONTENTS: Job's answer continued. He rehearses the story of his life.
CHARACTERS: God, Job, friends.
CONCLUSION: A gracious soul delights in God's smiles, not the smiles
of the world, although virtu...
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Job 29:3. When _his candle shined upon my head;_ that is, when the
light of his countenance shone upon me, in every form of patriarchal
prosperity. This figure seems to be borrowed from the lights in...
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_I was a father to the poor._
A FATHER TO THE POOR
The text is part of Job’s noble vindication of himself from a charge
of hypocrisy and impiety. So far was Job from considering the poor as
made for...
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_I put on righteousness._
AD MAGISTRATUM
When others do us open wrong, it is not vanity, but charity, to do
ourselves open right. And whatsoever appearance of folly or vain
boasting there is in so do...
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_JOB’S RETROSPECT_
Takes a calm retrospective view of his past experience and life. Thus
disproves the suspicions and accusations of his friends, and shows
that his complaints were sufficiently well-g...
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EXPOSITION
JOB 29:1
From these deep musings upon the nature of true wisdom, and the
contrast between the ingenuity and cleverness of man and the infinite
knowledge of God, Job turns to another contra...
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Moreover Job continued (Job 29:1)
He's got a lot to say. Bildad has run out, so Job thought, "I'll just
keep going on." And now it's sort of a lament of the days before all
of his afflictions. Lookin...
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1 Kings 3:16; Deuteronomy 13:14; Deuteronomy 17:8; Ephesians 5:1;...