-
Verse Job 4:21. _DOTH NOT THEIR EXCELLENCY - GO AWAY!_] Personal
beauty, corporeal strength, powerful eloquence, and various mental
endowments, pass away, or are _plucked up by the roots_; they are no...
-
DOTH NOT THEIR EXCELLENCY ... - Dr. Good renders this, “Their
fluttering round is over with them,” by a very forced construction
of the passage. Translators and expositors have been very much divided...
-
CHAPTER S 4-5 THE FIRST ADDRESS OF ELIPHAZ
_ 1. He rebukes Job (Job 4:1)_
2. The righteous are not cast off (Job 4:6)
3. An awe-inspiring vision (Job 4:12)
4. Experience and exhortation ...
-
This is what the vision said. Translate as _mg.:_ Shall mortal man be
just before God, shall a man be pure before his maker? Even the angels
are fallible, how much more man, who inhabits a house of cl...
-
Third, surely instead of despairing and murmuring under his
afflictions Job should follow a very different way. I, says Eliphaz,
putting himself in Job's place, would seek unto God, all whose doings
a...
-
_their excellency go away_ This verse is obscure. The word rendered
_go away_means to _pull out_, as a pin or the posts of a gate, Judges
16:3; Judges 16:14 (English version, went away with), or the s...
-
Turning to Job's murmurs against heaven, Eliphaz points to the
unapproachable purity of God and the imperfection of all creatures,
and warns Job against such complaints
Having expressed his wonder th...
-
2. The Visionno mortal can question God's just acts. (Job 4:12-21)
TEXT 4:12-21
12 NOW A THING WAS SECRETLY BROUGHT TO ME,
And mine ear received a whisper thereof.
13 In thoughts from the visions...
-
_DOTH NOT THEIR EXCELLENCY WHICH IS IN THEM GO AWAY? THEY DIE, EVEN
WITHOUT WISDOM._
Their excellency - (Psalms 39:11; Psalms 146:4; 1 Corinthians 13:8).
But Umbreit by an Oriental image from a bow u...
-
4:21 tent-cord (e-4) Or 'glory.'...
-
THE FIRST SPEECH OF ELIPHAZ (JOB 4:5)
Eliphaz is the principal and probably the oldest of the three friends:
cp. Job 32:6. He is also the most considerate. But the complainings of
Job in Job 3 had evi...
-
DOTH NOT, etc.] rather, 'Is not their tent-cord (or tent-peg) pulled
up in them?' The falling tent is a figure of collapse and death. EVEN
WITHOUT WISDOM] i.e. without having learnt the great lessons...
-
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 4
ELIPHAZ’S FIRST SPEECH
V...
-
This is wrong. God knows when a man dies. And God cares about his
people (Psalms 116:16). God even notices when a little bird dies
(Matthew 10:29-31).
A dead man will live again. Death is not the end...
-
הֲ לֹא ־נִסַּ֣ע יִתְרָ֣ם בָּ֑ם
יָ֝מ֗וּתוּ וְ
-
VII.
THE THINGS ELIPHAZ HAD SEEN
Job 4:1; Job 5:1
ELIPHAZ SPEAKS
THE ideas of sin and suffering against which the poem of Job was
written come now dramatically into view. The belief of the three
fr...
-
“SHALL MORTAL MAN BE MORE JUST THAN GOD?”
Job 4:1
The first cycle of speeches is opened by Eliphaz. It must be
remembered that he and the two others believed that special suffering
resulted from and...
-
Now begins the great controversy between Job and his friends, which
occupies the major portion of the Book. This controversy moves in
three cycles. The first, commencing here, runs through chapter
fou...
-
Doth not their excellency [which is] in them go away? they die, even
without (q) wisdom.
(q) That is, before any of them were so wise, as to think of death....
-
_And they. Hebrew, "doth not their dignity pass away with them? They
die without wisdom." (Haydock) --- This is but too frequently the case
of the great ones of this world, who never discern true from...
-
REFLECTIONS
MY soul! here are some very sweet instructions to be gathered from
this chapter. In whatever light Eliphaz, the Temanite, be considered,
still the HOLY GHOST can and will make his conduct...
-
(12) В¶ Now a thing was secretly brought to me, and mine ear
received a little thereof. (13) In thoughts from the visions of the
night, when deep sleep falleth on men, (14) Fear came upon me, and
trem...
-
Eliphaz Relying on Experience
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Last week, in Chapter 3, Job was at the height of his deep, dark,
depression!
1. In fact, he stated over and over again that he wished that he had
n...
-
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...
-
DOTH NOT THEIR EXCELLENCY [WHICH IS] IN THEM GO AWAY?.... Either the
soul which is in them, and is the most excellent part of them; this,
though it dies not, yet it goes away and departs from the body...
-
Doth not their excellency [which is] in them go away? they die, even
without wisdom.
Ver. 21. _Doth not their excellency which is in them go away?_]
Journeyeth not their excellency with them? so Brou...
-
_Doth not their excellency which is in them go away?_ Whatsoever is
really, or by common estimation, excellent in men, all their natural,
and moral, and civil accomplishments, as high birth, great ric...
-
Doth not their excellency which is in them go away? They die, even
without wisdom, literally, "Is it not torn away is their cord?" the
picture being taken from the quick striking of a tent. Without ha...
-
Job having thus given way to his impatience, his friends thought it
their duty to correct him. But instead of showing him in what respect
his position was wrong, they proceed according to the assumpti...
-
ELIPHAZ: COMMENDATION TWISTED INTO REBUKE
(vv.1-6)
The three friends of Job could only think of God's justice in
reference to Job's sufferings, and had no idea of God's love. Eliphaz
no doubt though...
-
"THEY DIE, YET WITHOUT WISDOM": "Job obviously is not. wise person
according to Eliphaz" _(Bible Knowledge Comm. p. 726)._ "To die
without ever finding wisdom was the ultimate disaster for. wise man o...
-
12-21 Eliphaz relates a vision. When we are communing with our own
hearts, and are still, Psalms 4:4, then is a time for the Holy Spirit
to commune with us. This vision put him into very great fear....
-
Whatsoever is really or by common estimation excellent in men, all
their natural, and moral, and civil accomplishments, as high birth,
great riches, power, and wisdom, &c.; these are so far from prese...
-
CONTENTS: Eliphaz's theory in regard to Job's suffering.
CHARACTERS: God, Eliphaz, Job.
CONCLUSION: Those who pass rash and uncharitable censures upon their
brethren, do Satan's work. We should be c...
-
Job 4:1. _Eliphaz answered,_ being the eldest, or the more eloquent.
Job 4:3. _Thou hast instructed many._ The holy patriarchs were all
preachers of righteousness on the sabbath days, &c, He admits t...
-
_They die, even without wisdom._
DYING IN IGNORANCE
“Alas! while the body stands so broad and brawny must the soul be
blinded, dwarfed, stupefied, almost annihilated? Alas! This too was a
breath of...
-
_And His angels He charged with folly._
FOLLY IN ANGELS
“His angels He charged with folly.” Revelation conveys to us the
highly interesting information that there is between the great Spirit
and man,...
-
_Then Eliphaz the Temanite answered and said._
THE FIRST COLLOQUY
At this point we pass into the poem proper. It opens with three
colloquies between Job and his friends. In form these colloquies
clos...
-
JOB—NOTE ON JOB 4:12 Eliphaz reports that he had a vision (vv. Job
4:12) and then describes its content (vv. Job 4:17). The vision raises
t
-
_COMMENCEMENT OF THE CONTROVERSY BETWEEN JOB AND HIS THREE FRIENDS_
First Course of the Speeches. First Dialogue,—Eliphaz and Job
FIRST SPEECH OF ELIPHAZ
_Eliphaz censures Job for his impatience, an...
-
EXPOSITION
Job having ended his complaint, Eliphaz the Temanite, the first-named
of his three friends (Job 2:11), and perhaps the eldest of them, takes
the word, and endeavours to answer him. After a...
-
So Job has made his complaint, and so Eliphaz, his friend who came to
comfort him, he said,
If we attempt to talk to you, will you be grieved? [But really after
what you've said] who can keep silent?...
-
Isaiah 14:16; Isaiah 2:22; James 1:11; Job 36:12; Luke 12:20;...
-
THE PHILOSOPHY OF ELIPHAZ
Job 4:1
INTRODUCTORY WORDS
We are now approaching a part of the Book of Job that is most
interesting. Job's three friends have at last broken their silence,
and Eliphaz th...
-
Excellency — Whatsoever is by common estimation excellent in men,
all their natural, and moral, and civil accomplishments, as high
birth, great riches, power and wisdom, these are so far from
preservi...