Man's life is a lot of hardship. APPOINTED TIME] RM 'time of service.'
2, 3. As the labourer longs for the weary day to end and to receive
his wages, so Job bemoans the length of his sufferings and sighs for
death to end them.... [ Continue Reading ]
JOB'S FIRST SPEECH (CONCLUDED)
1-10. Job laments the hardship and misery of his destiny.... [ Continue Reading ]
MONTHS OF VANITY] so called because they were unsatisfactory,
hopeless. 'Months' imply that Job's sufferings had lasted a
considerable time.... [ Continue Reading ]
WORMS] from the diseased flesh. CLODS OF DUST] the crust of his sores.
These symptoms are found in leprosy, though they are not peculiar to
it.... [ Continue Reading ]
WEAVER'S SHUTTLE] the implement which carries the thread swiftly
backwards and forwards in weaving. Job has just been longing for
death, but yet he feels that length of days is desirable in itself if
freed from so much misery. WITHOUT HOPE] of recovery.... [ Continue Reading ]
GOOD] i.e. happiness.... [ Continue Reading ]
THINE EYES, etc.] render, 'Thine (God's) eyes shall look for me, but I
shall be no more.'... [ Continue Reading ]
GRAVE] better, as RV, 'Sheol,' the place of the departed: see on Job
3:15. Note how hopeless is the outlook here and elsewhere towards the
future.
11-21. He appeals to God, complaining of the undeserved severity of
his treatment. He demands why God concerns Himself to interfere with
so insignifican... [ Continue Reading ]
'Am I so dangerous a character that I need such persistent
persecution?.' WHALE] rather, 'sea monster,' perhaps the
personification of the sea, the mythical dragon of the ancients. The
Babylonians told the myth of the dragon Tiâmat, who waged war against
heaven and was slain by the God Marduk. (See... [ Continue Reading ]
DREAMS] the bad dreams of the sick.... [ Continue Reading ]
STRANGLING] or, suffocation. Job longs for the arrival of this sign of
approaching death. MY LIFE] RV '_these_ my bones.' He was reduced to a
skeleton. Possibly we should read 'my pains.'... [ Continue Reading ]
RV 'I loathe _my life:_ I would not live alway.' VANITY] RM 'as a
breath.'... [ Continue Reading ]
MAGNIFY] i.e. consider of such importance. SET THINE HEART] or 'fix
thy thoughts.' The thought of Job 7:17. is 'Surely man is too
insignificant for such constant persecution. Even Ins sins are hardly
worth heeding.' Cp. Psalms 8:4, of which these vv. seem to be a bitter
parody.... [ Continue Reading ]
TILL I SWALLOW, etc.] i.e. for a moment.... [ Continue Reading ]
RV 'If I have sinned, what do I unto thee, O thou watcher of men?':
i.e. granting that I have sinned (which Job does not), how can it
affect Thee who art so great? AGAINST THEE] RV 'for thee.'... [ Continue Reading ]
IN THE MORNING] RV 'diligently.' Job believes that one day God will
turn to him once more in love, but then it will be too late. The faint
hope expressed here gradually becomes a conviction: cp. Job 13:15; Job
14:13; Job 16:19; Job 19:23.
The speech of Eliphaz, while considerate in tone, yet took Jo... [ Continue Reading ]