Mark Dunagan Commentaries
Job 25:5
Even the glorious heavenly bodies such as the moon and the stars, when compared to God are not bright or pure.
Even the glorious heavenly bodies such as the moon and the stars, when compared to God are not bright or pure.
Verse Job 25:5. _BEHOLD EVEN TO THE MOON, AND IT SHINETH NOT_] It is continually _changing_ its appearance. It never appears twice in its whole revolution with the _same face_: it is ever _waxing_ or...
BEHOLD EVEN TO THE MOON, AND IT SHINETH NOT - Or, behold even the moon shineth not. That is, in comparison with God it is dark and obscure. The idea is, that the most beautiful and glorious objects be...
CHAPTER 25 THE THIRD ADDRESS OF BILDAD _ 1. What God is (Job 25:1)_ 2. What man is (Job 25:4) Job 25:1. Bildad's arguments are exhausted. He has reached the end of his resources and Zophar does not...
JOB 25-27. offer a difficult critical problem. The phenomena which excite attention are these: (_a_) Bildad's speech is unusually short; (_b_) Job's reply contains a section (Job 26:5) very like Bilda...
BEHOLD. Figure of speech _Asterismos_. App-6....
The thought of Job 25:4 amplified. Even the moon, the brightest star, does not shine, is dark, when He looks upon it, and the stars are not pure, how much less man, which is a worm? The contrast drawn...
Such is the Majesty and the universal power of God. How then should a man be righteous before Him? _be justified with God_ i. e. be just or righteous before God; comp. Job 4:17 _seq_., Job 14:1; Job...
2. Man is not pure before God. (Job 25:5-6) TEXT 25:5, 6 5 BEHOLD, EVEN THE MOON HATH NO BRIGHTNESS, And the stars are not pure in his sight: 6 How much less man, that is a worm! And the son of m...
_THEN ANSWERED BILDAD THE SHUHITE, AND SAID,_ He tries to show Job's rashness (Job 23:3), by arguments borrowed from Eliphaz (Job 15:15), with which cf. Job 11:17. Verse 2. Power and terror - i:e., t...
BILDAD'S LAST SPEECH He ignores Job's questionings respecting the justice of God's rule, but declares His perfection and majesty, and the imperfection of all created things, repeating the theme of th...
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 25 BILDAD INTERRUPTS GOD I...
Bildad repeated the ideas in Eliphaz’s first speech (Job 4:17-19). Bildad was right that every person does wrong things against God (Romans 3:23). But Bildad did not say that God wants to forgive us ...
EVEN TO THE MOON AND STARS, pure and chaste as their light is, they are not clean before Him (comp. Job 4:18), for the stars rise and set, and once in every month the moon hides her face....
הֵ֣ן עַד ־יָ֭רֵחַ וְ לֹ֣א יַאֲהִ֑יל וְ֝
XXI. THE DOMINION AND THE BRIGHTNESS Job 25:1 BILDAD SPEAKS THE argument of the last chapter proceeded entirely on the general aspect of the question whether the evil are punished in proportion to...
HOW CAN MAN BE JUST BEFORE GOD? Job 25:1 Bildad's closing speech adds little to the controversy. He suggests simply that Job's vindications of himself do not imply that he is righteous before God, a...
The answer of Bildad is characterized by its brevity, and by the fact that he did not set himself to argue the matter with Job. It is a manifest weakening in the controversy on the side of the friends...
Behold even to the moon, and it shineth not; yea, (d) the stars are not pure in his sight. (d) If God shows his power, the moon and stars cannot have the light which is given to them, much less can m...
_Sight, compared with him. The most beautiful things in nature are nothing; and of course, the most just are all imperfection, when left to themselves. (Calmet)_...
(4) How then can man be justified with God? or how can he be clean that is born of a woman? (5) Behold even to the moon, and it shineth not; yea, the stars are not pure in his sight. (6) How much less...
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...
BEHOLD, EVEN TO THE MOON,.... If all things that are glorious and illustrious in the lower world, and which are between that and the region of the moon, are beheld; or all from the seat of the Divine...
Behold even to the moon, and it shineth not; yea, the stars are not pure in his sight. Ver. 5. _Behold even to the moon, and it shineth not_] _i.e._ Either descend in thy thoughts, from the highest o...
_Behold, even to the moon, and it shineth not_ The moon, though bright and glorious, if compared with the divine majesty, is without any lustre or glory. By his naming the moon, and thence proceeding...
Behold even to the moon, and it shineth not, the moon itself pales beside the absolute glory of God's light; YEA, THE STARS ARE NOT PURE IN HIS SIGHT, their scintillating brilliancy also fades into da...
BILDAD REBUKES JOB AGAIN. Since Job had asserted his innocence in such emphatic terms, Bildad believed it incumbent upon him to reprove him, chiefly in two propositions, namely, that man cannot argue...
BILDAD'S REPLY THE GREATNESS OF GOD (vv.1-3) The brevity of Bildad's reply is evidence that he had no answer to Job's predicament. He confines himself rather to fundamental facts that were important...
The moon, though a bright and glorious creature, JOB 31:26 SONG OF SOLOMON 6:10, if compared with the splendour of the Divine majesty, is but as a dark and earthy lump, without any lustre or glory. He...
Job 25:5 moon H3394 shine H166 (H8686) stars H3556 pure H2141 (H8804) sight H5869...
CONTENTS: Bildad's third discourse on Job's case. CHARACTERS: God, Bildad, Job. CONCLUSION: Man cannot, in himself, be justified before God for he has no merit of his own to extenuate his guilt. KE...
Job 25:4. _How can man be justified with God?_ Bildad asks a question which he himself could not answer; but we have the proper answer from the living oracle, Job 42:8. “Take seven bullocks, and offer...
_Dominion and fear are with Him._ IDEAS OF GOD AND MAN I. Most exalted ideas of god. He speaks of Him-- 1. As the head of all authority. “Dominion and fear are with Him.” 2. As the maintainer of a...
JOB—NOTE ON JOB 25:1 Bildad’s words represent the final speech of the three friends. The friends have argued that their theological understanding and application represent God’s perspective. They have...
_THIRD SPEECH OF BILDAD THE SHUHITE_ His speech either a very abortive one, or it includes, as some think, the following chapter from the fifth verse to the end, the first four verses of that chapter...
EXPOSITION JOB 25:1 Far from accepting Job's challenge, and grappling with the difficulty involved in the frequent, if not universal, prosperity of the wicked. Bildad, in his weak reply, entirely avo...
Then answered Bildad the Shuhite, and said [concerning God], Dominion and fear are with him, he makes peace in his high places. Is there any number of his armies? and upon whom doth not his light aris...
2 Corinthians 3:10; Isaiah 24:23; Isaiah 60:19; Isaiah 60:20...
Moon — The moon, tho' bright and glorious, if compared with the Divine Majesty, is without any lustre or glory. By naming the moon, and thence proceeding to the stars, the sun is also included....