After this opened (a) Job his mouth, and (b) cursed his day.
(a) The seven days ended, (Job 2:13).
(b) Here Job begins to feel his great imperfection in this battle
between the spirit and the flesh, (Romans 7:18) and after a manner
yields yet in the end he gets victory though he was in the mean ti... [ Continue Reading ]
Let the day (c) perish wherein I was born, and the night [in which] it
was said, There is a man child conceived.
(c) Men should not be weary of their life and curse it, because of the
infinities that it is subject to, but because they are given to sin
and rebellion against God.... [ Continue Reading ]
Let that day be darkness; let not God (d) regard it from above,
neither let the light shine upon it.
(d) Let it be put out of the number of days, and let it not have the
sight of the sun to separate it from the night.... [ Continue Reading ]
Let darkness and the (e) shadow of death stain it; let a cloud dwell
upon it; let the blackness of the day terrify it.
(e) That is, most obscure darkness, which makes them afraid of death
that they are in it.... [ Continue Reading ]
Let them curse it that curse the day, who are (f) ready to raise up
their mourning.
(f) Who curse the day of their birth, let them lay that curse on this
night.... [ Continue Reading ]
Let the stars of the twilight thereof be dark; let it look for light,
but [have] none; neither let it (g) see the dawning of the day:
(g) Let it be always night, and never see day.... [ Continue Reading ]
(h) Why died I not from the womb? [why] did I [not] give up the ghost
when I came out of the belly?
(h) This, and that which follows declares, that when man gives place
to his passions, he is not able to stay or keep measure, but runs
headlong into all evil unless God calls him back.... [ Continue Reading ]
For now should I have (i) lain still and been quiet, I should have
slept: then had I been at rest,
(i) The vehemency of his afflictions made him utter these words as
though death was the end of all miseries, and as if there were no life
after this, which he speaks not as though it were so, but the... [ Continue Reading ]
With kings and counsellors of the earth, which built (k) desolate
places for themselves;
(k) He notes the ambition of them who for their pleasure as it were
change the order of nature, and build in most barren places, because
they would by this make their names immortal.... [ Continue Reading ]
There the wicked (l) cease [from] troubling; and there the weary be at
rest.
(l) That is, by death the cruelty of the tyrants has ceased.... [ Continue Reading ]
[There] the (m) prisoners rest together; they hear not the voice of
the oppressor.
(m) All they who sustain any kind of calamity and misery in this
world: which he speaks after the judgment of the flesh.... [ Continue Reading ]
Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery, and (n) life unto
the bitter [in] soul;
(n) He shows that the benefits of God are not comfortable, unless the
heart is joyful, and the conscience quieted.... [ Continue Reading ]
[Why is light given] to a man whose way is (o) hid, and whom God hath
hedged in?
(o) That sees not how to come out of his miseries, because he does not
depend on God's providence.... [ Continue Reading ]
For the thing which I greatly (p) feared is come upon me, and that
which I was afraid of is come unto me.
(p) In my prosperity I looked for a fall, as it now has come to pass.... [ Continue Reading ]
I was not in safety, neither had I rest, neither was I quiet; (q) yet
trouble came.
(q) The fear of troubles that would ensue, caused my prosperity to
seem to me as nothing, and yet I am not exempted from trouble.... [ Continue Reading ]