_A.M. 2484. B.C. 1520._
Job still bemoans himself, Job 17:1. Encourages good men to hold on
their way, Job 17:8; Job 17:9. Declares he looks for no ease but in
the grave, Job 17:10. Job in this chapter suddenly passes from one
thing to another, as is usual for men in much trouble.... [ Continue Reading ]
_My breath is corrupt_ Is offensive to those around me, through my
disease. But, as the word חבלה, _chubbalah_, here rendered
corrupt, may signify _bound, straitened_, or distressed with _pain_,
as a woman in travail, Chappelow thinks the phrase had better be
rendered: _Spiritus meus constringitur,... [ Continue Reading ]
_Are there not mockers with me?_ Do not my friends, instead of
comforting, mock and abuse me, as if I had made use of religion only
as a cloak to cover my wickedness? Thus he returns to what he had said
chap. Job 16:20), and intimates the necessity and justice of his
following appeal, which otherwis... [ Continue Reading ]
_Lay down now_ Some earnest or pledge. _Put me in a surety with thee_
Let me have an assurance that God will take the hearing and
determining of the cause into his own hands, and I desire no more.
_Who is he that will strike hands with me?_ That is, agree and
promise, or be surety to me, whereof str... [ Continue Reading ]
_Thou hast hid their heart from understanding_ Rather, _thou hast hid
understanding from their heart._ The minds of my friends are so
blinded, that they cannot see those truths which are most plain and
evident to all men of sense and experience. Hence, I desire a more
wise and able judge. _Therefore... [ Continue Reading ]
_He that speaketh flattery to his friends_ “The Hebrew of this
verse,” says Peters, “literally, runs thus: _He shall reckon
friends for a portion_, or _inheritance, and the eyes of his children
shall fail;_ that is, with expectation. They may look their eyes out
before they receive any benefit or as... [ Continue Reading ]
_He_ That is, God, who is generally designed by this pronoun in this
book; _hath made me also a by-word of the people_ Or, a proverb, or
subject of common talk. My miseries are so great and unprecedented
that they fill all people with discourse, and are become proverbial to
express extreme misery. _... [ Continue Reading ]
_Mine eye also is dim by reason of sorrow_ Through excessive weeping
and decay of spirits, which cause a dimness of the sight. _And all my
members are as a shadow_ My body is so reduced, and I am grown so poor
and thin, and my colour so wan and ghastly, that I look more like a
ghost or a shadow than... [ Continue Reading ]
_Upright men shall be astonied at this_ Wise and good men, when they
shall see me, and consider my calamities, will not be so forward to
censure and condemn me as you are, but will rather stand and wonder at
the depth and mysteriousness of God's judgments, which fall so heavily
upon innocent men, wh... [ Continue Reading ]
_The righteous shall hold on his way_ Shall persevere in that good way
upon which he hath entered, and not be turned from it by any
afflictions which may befall himself, or any other good men; nor by
any contempt or reproach cast upon them by the ungodly, by reason
thereof. _And he that hath clean h... [ Continue Reading ]
_But as for you all_ Who have charged me so heavily. _Do you return
and come now_ Recollect yourselves: reflect on what I have said, and
consider my cause again; peradventure your second thoughts may be
wiser. _For I cannot find one wise man among you_ Namely, as to this
matter. None of you judge tr... [ Continue Reading ]
_My days are past_ The days of my life. I am a dying man, and
therefore the hopes you give me of the bettering of my condition are
vain. _My purposes are broken off_ Or the designs and expectations
which I had in my prosperous days concerning myself and children, and
the continuance of my happiness.... [ Continue Reading ]
_They change the night into day_ My distressing thoughts, griefs, and
fears, so incessantly pursue and disturb me, that I can no more sleep
in the night than in the day. _The light is short_ The day-light,
which often gives some comfort to men in misery, seems to be gone and
fled as soon as it is be... [ Continue Reading ]
_If I wait, the grave is my house_ Hebrew, אם אקוה, _im akaveh_,
If I eagerly desire and expect any thing now, it is the grave, the
only habitation I can promise myself; and which I am just entering.
There I am going to rest in a bed where I shall not be disturbed, for
which therefore I am preparing... [ Continue Reading ]
_I have said to corruption_ Hebrew, קראתי, _karati, I have called
to corruption;_ to the grave, where the body will be dissolved and
become corrupt. _Thou art my father_ I am near akin to thee, being
formed out of thee, and thou wilt receive and embrace me, and keep me
in thy house as parents do the... [ Continue Reading ]
_They shall go down to the bars of the pit_ They that would see my
hope must go down into the grave, or rather into the invisible world,
to behold it. Or, he means, My hope shall go down, of which he spake
in the singular number, Job 17:15, and which he here changes into the
plural, as is usual in t... [ Continue Reading ]