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Job Chapter
Thirty-four
New King James Version (NKJV)
INTRODUCTION TO JOB 34
In
this chapter Elihu reassumes his discourse, and proceeds in his answer to Job,
in which are first a preface exciting attention, Job 34:1; then a
charge is brought against Job, expressed in or extracted from some words that
dropped from his lips, not so well guarded, Job 34:5; a
refutation of these expressions of his in a variety of arguments, Job 34:10; and the
chapter is closed with some good advice to Job, Job 34:31; and with
an earnest request of Elihu to men of understanding, to join with him in trying
him to the uttermost, Job 34:34.
Job 34:1 Elihu
further answered and said:
YLT
1And Elihu answereth and
saith:
Furthermore Elihu answered and said. It is
reasonable to suppose that Elihu made a considerable pause, to see whether Job
would make any reply to what he had delivered, or object to what he had said;
which he gave him free liberty to do, if he had anything upon his mind: but
perceiving he was not inclined to return any answer to him, he went on with his
discourse; and which is called a further answer to him: for though Joh had made
no reply to which this could be called an answer, yet as there were several
things remaining for Elihu to answer to, and which he proposed to answer and
did, it may with great propriety here be said that he answered him.
Job 34:2 2 “Hear my words, you wise men;
Give ear to me, you who have knowledge.
YLT
2Hear, O wise men, my words,
And, O knowing ones, give ear to me.
Hear my words, O ye wise men,.... This is not an
address to Job's three friends, as some think; for Elihu had expressed his
displeasure at them, in condemning Job without convicting him, and returning
solid answers to him; and therefore he should not take their method of dealing
with him, but take another; and plainly suggests that wisdom was not with them,
nor taught by them; and therefore, as he could not give flattering titles to
men, it could not well be thought that he should address them as wise and
understanding men, unless indeed in an ironic way, as some choose to interpret
it; see Job 32:3. Rather
therefore some bystanders are here spoken to, whom Elihu knew to be men of
wisdom and knowledge, &c. as it follows,
and give ear unto me, ye that have knowledge; and as they
were endued not only with natural and political wisdom and knowledge, but with
that which is divine and spiritual, they were proper judges of the affair in
controversy, and could best discern whether what Elihu delivered was right or
wrong, and to the purpose or not. And besides, though they had a large share of
wisdom and knowledge, yet it was but imperfect; and the most wise and knowing
may become more so, and that sometimes by means of their inferiors and juniors:
and therefore Elihu craves their attention to what he had said or should say,
though he was but a young man, and they aged, and men of great geniuses and
abilities; and the rather he might be pressing on them to be his hearers and
judges, because, generally speaking, such, as they are the most judicious, so
the most candid hearers.
Job 34:3 3 For the ear tests words As
the palate tastes food.
YLT
3For the ear doth try words,
And the palate tasteth to eat.
For the ear trieth words,.... Not only the musical
sound of them, the goodness of the language and diction, and the grammatical
construction of them, but the sense of them, and whether the matter of them is
good or not; that they are sound speech, which cannot be condemned, or unsound;
whether they are right or wrong, agreeably to right reason, sound doctrine, and
the word of God; for there are words and words, some the words of men, others
the words of God. A sanctified ear tries these; but then men must have such
ears to hear, and be attentive to what they hear, and retain it; hear
internally as well as externally; and which a man does when his ears are opened
by the Lord, from whom are the hearing ear and seeing eye; and such try what
they hear, distinguish between good and bad, approve truth and receive it, and
retain and hold it fast:
as the mouth tasteth meat; words and doctrines are
like meat, some good and some bad; and such that have a good taste try them,
either a rational or rather a spiritual discernment: some have no spiritual
taste, their taste is not changed, and therefore cannot distinguish, nor make
any good judgment of things; but others have, and these discern the difference,
relish truth, savour the things that be of God, taste the good word of God, and
esteem it more than their necessary food; and it is sweeter to them than the
honey or the honeycomb. Such Elihu judged these men to be he addressed, and
therefore desired their attention to what he had to say.
Job 34:4 4 Let us choose justice for
ourselves; Let us know among ourselves what is good.
YLT
4Judgment let us choose for
ourselves, Let us know among ourselves what [is] good.
Let us choose to us judgments,.... Take the part of the
question or controversy in which truth and justice lie, and he doubtless has
respect to the present controversy with Job;
let us know among ourselves what is good; agree upon
that which is best to be done in the present case, what judgment to be made of
the dealings of God with Job, and his behaviour under them, and what the best
advice to give to him.
Job 34:5 5 “For Job has said, ‘I am
righteous, But God has taken away my justice;
YLT
5For Job hath said, `I have
been righteous, And God hath turned aside my right,
For Job hath said, I am righteous,.... Not in express
words, but what amounted to it: no doubt he was a righteous man in an evangelic
sense, being justified by the righteousness of Christ, as all the Old Testament
saints were, who looked to him and believed in him as the Lord their
righteousness, and said, as the church in those times did, "surely in the
Lord have I righteousness and strength"; Isaiah 45:24. And
moreover he was an upright man, to which the Lord himself bore testimony, Job 1:8; and had
the truth of grace in him, that "new man which is created in righteousness
and true holiness"; and also lived an holy life and conversation; but then
he did not say or think that he was righteous in or of himself, or so as to be
free from sin: Job could not judge or speak thus of himself, which would be
contrary to what he expressly declares, Job 7:20; though it
must be owned, that he thought himself so righteous, holy, and good, that he
ought not to have been afflicted in the manner he was; in which sense it is
probable Elihu understood him: and besides, these words are not to be taken
separately, but in connection with what follows, which shows Job's sense, and
how Elihu understood him, that though he was a righteous person, he had not
justice done him:
and God hath taken away my judgment; which words he did say;
see Gill on Job 27:2; or, as
Mr. Broughton renders the words, "the Omnipotent keeps back my
right"; does not vindicate my cause, nor so much as give it a hearing, nor
lets me know why he contends with me; and, though I call for justice to be done,
cannot be heard, Job 19:7; a like
complaint of the church in Isaiah 40:27.
Job 34:6 6 Should I lie concerning my
right? My wound is incurable, though I am without transgression.’
YLT
6Against my right do I lie?
Mortal [is] mine arrow -- without transgression.'
Should I lie against my right?.... No; I ought not:
this though Job had not said in so many words, yet this seems to be his sense
in Job 27:4; that
should he own and say that he was a wicked man, a hypocrite, and destitute of
the grace of God, he should not only speak against himself, but, contrary to
his conscience, say an untruth, and not do justice to his character. Some read
the words without an interrogation, as Mr. Broughton,
"for
my right I must be a liar;'
that
is, for vindicating my right, seeking and endeavouring to do myself justice,
and clear myself from false imputations, I am reckoned a liar. And to this
purpose is the paraphrase of Aben Ezra,
"because
I seek judgment, they say that I lie.'
Others
render them, "there is a lie in judging me", so the Vulgate Latin
version; that is,
"I
am falsely accused, I am judged wrongfully:'
things
I know not are laid to my charge, which has often been the case of good men:
or, "I have lied in judgment"; that is, "failed", as the
word is sometimes used, Isaiah 58:11;
failed in his expectation of judgment or of justice being done him; he looked
for it, but was disappointed; but the first sense seems best;
my wound is incurable without transgression; not that he
thought himself without transgression, but that his wound or stroke inflicted
on him, or the afflictions he was exercised with, were without cause; were not
for any injustice in his hands, or wickedness that he had committed; and that
he utterly despaired of being rid of them, or restored to his former health and
prosperity; and to this sense he had expressed himself, Job 9:17. In the
Hebrew text it is, "my arrow"F25חצי
"sagitta mea", Montanus, Schultens, Michaelis. , that is, the arrow
that was in him, the arrows of the Lord that stuck fast in him; these were
thrown at him and fastened in him without cause; and there was no hope of their
being drawn out, or of the wounds made by them being healed; see Job 6:4. Now what
Elihu was offended at in these expressions was, that Job should so rigidly
insist on his innocence, and not own himself faulty in any respect; nor allow
there was any cause for his afflictions, nor entertain any hope of the removal
of them: whereas it became him to acknowledge his sins, which no man is free
from, and that he was dealt with less than his iniquities deserved; and that,
instead of indulging despair, he should rather say, "I will return"
to the Lord; he hath "torn" and he will "heal", he hath
"smitten" and he will "bind up", Hosea 6:1.
Job 34:7 7 What man is like
Job, Who drinks scorn like water,
YLT
7Who [is] a man like Job? He
drinketh scoffing like water,
What man is like Job,.... This is said as
wondering at the part he acted, that a man so wise and good as Job was esteemed
to be should behave in such a manner as he did;
who drinketh up scorning like
water? For a foolish and wicked man to do so is not strange nor
uncommon; but for a man of such sense and grace as Job was to do this was
astonishing; to have no more regard to his character than to expose himself to
the scorn and ridicule of men: for a man to become a laughing stock to profane
and wicked men for his religion and piety, it is no disgrace, but an honour to
him; but by unbecoming words and gestures to make himself justly jeered and
scoffed at is great indiscretion. Or it may be understood actively of his
dealing very freely and frequently in scoffs and jeers, which he poured out
very liberally and plentifully, and seemingly with as much delight as a man
drinks water when thirsty; see Job 11:3.
Job 34:8 8 Who goes in company with
the workers of iniquity, And walks with wicked men?
YLT
8And he hath travelled for
company With workers of iniquity, So as to go with men of wickedness.
Which goeth in company with the workers of iniquity,.... The worst
of men, who make it their constant business and employment to commit sin:
and walketh with wicked men; the most abandoned of
mankind. Not that Job kept company with such, and walked with them in all
excess of not; nor did Elihu think so; Job was "a man that feared God, and
eschewed evil", and evil men; he was "a companion of them that feared
the Lord"; his delight was "with the excellent of the earth":
nor should a good man keep company and walk with the wicked, nor can he with
any pleasure. But the sense is, that by his words, the expressions that dropped
from his lips, he seemed to agree with them, and to be of the same sentiments
with them; and what he delivered tended to encourage and harden them in their
sinful ways; and what those words were follow.
Job 34:9 9 For he has said, ‘It
profits a man nothing That he should delight in God.’
YLT
9For he hath said, `It doth
not profit a man, When he delighteth himself with God.'
For he hath said,.... Not plainly and expressly, but
consequentially; what it was thought might be inferred from what he had said,
particularly in Job 9:22;
it profiteth a man nothing that he should delight himself with God; in his house
and ordinances, ways and worship; he may as well indulge himself in the
pleasures of sin, and in the delights of the world, if God destroys the perfect
and the wicked, as Job had said in the place referred to; if this be the case,
it is in vain to serve God, and pray unto him, or keep his ordinances; which
are the language and sentiments of wicked men, and according to which they act,
see Job 21:14, Malachi 3:14. Mr.
Broughton renders it,
"when
he would walk with God;'
and
so the Targum,
"in
his walking with God;'
and
another Targum,
"in
his running with God:'
though
he walks and even runs in the way of his commandments, yet it is of no
advantage to him; or he does the will of God, as Aben Ezra; or seeks to please
him or be acceptable to him, and to find grace in his sight. Whereas though
love and hatred are not known by prosperity and adversity, but both come to
good and bad men, which seems to be Job's meaning in the above place, from
whence this inference is deduced; yet it is certain that godliness is
profitable to all, 1 Timothy 4:8.
Job 34:10 10 “Therefore listen to me,
you men of understanding: Far be it from God to do wickedness, And from
the Almighty to commit iniquity.
YLT
10Therefore, O men of heart,
hearken to me; Far be it from God to do wickedness, And [from] the Mighty to do
perverseness:
Therefore hearken unto me, ye men of understanding,.... The same
persons he addresses as wise men and men of knowledge, Job 34:2; and here
as men of understanding, or "heart"F26אנשי
לבב "viri cordis", Pagninus, Montanus,
Michaelis. ; the heart being the seat of wisdom and knowledge; and such Elihu
desired to be his hearers, to attend to what he was about to say; which was to
refute the words of Job, or his sense expressed in the preceding verses;
far be it from God that he should do wickedness; and from
the Almighty, that he should commit iniquity; do any
injustice or injury to any person, there being no unrighteousness in him, nor
in any of his ways and works; which Job tacitly seemed to charge God with, at
least as Elihu understood him. But sin is contrary to his pure and holy nature;
he cannot look upon it with pleasure, much less commit it; it is forbidden by
his holy righteous law, and therefore would never he done by him the lawgiver;
nor can anyone single instance be given of wickedness and unrighteousness
committed by him in any of his works of nature, or providence, or grace. He is
the author of the evil of afflictions, whether as punishments or fatherly
corrections; and in neither case does he commit or do any injustice; not in
punishing wicked men less than they deserve, as he does in this life; nor in
correcting his own people, which is always for their good: but not of the evil
of sin; this may be concluded from the titles here given, of "Almighty and
All-sufficient"; for being so he can be under no temptation of doing an
unjust thing; and which is expressed with the like abhorrence and indignation
by Elihu as the same sentiment is by the Apostle Paul, Romans 9:14.
Job 34:11 11 For He repays man according
to his work, And makes man to find a reward according to his way.
YLT
11For the work of man he
repayeth to him, And according to the path of each He doth cause him to find.
For the work of a man will he render unto him,.... The
reward of his work, as Ben Gersom interprets it, whether the work of a wicked
man or of a good man:
and cause every man to find according to his ways. Which is a
truth frequently inculcated in the Scriptures; and will take place especially
at the resurrection of the dead, which is for that purpose, and at the final
judgment, by the righteous Judge of all; for, though wicked men may not be
punished now according to their deserts, they will hereafter, which is
sufficient to vindicate the justice of God: and as for the works and ways of
good men, though God does not proceed according to them in the methods of his
grace, they are not justified by them, nor called and saved according to them;
for, though evil works deserve damnation, good works do not merit salvation;
yet they are not neglected by the Lord; he is not unrighteous to forget them,
and verily there is a reward for righteous men though it is not of debt but
grace; and not for, but in keeping the commands of God, is this reward; even
communion with him and peace in their souls, which they enjoy in, though not as
arising from their keeping them; and at the last day, when their justification
will be pronounced before men and angels, it will be according to their works
of righteousness, not done by themselves, but done by Christ, in their room and
stead and reckoned to them; for the obedience of Christ, by which they are made
righteous, though imputed to them without works, is nothing else but a series
of good works most perfectly done by Christ for them; and according to which
the crown of righteousness in a righteous way will be given them by the
righteous Judge. All which therefore is a full proof that no iniquity is, will,
or can be committed by the Lord.
Job 34:12 12 Surely God will never do
wickedly, Nor will the Almighty pervert justice.
YLT
12Yea, truly, God doth not do
wickedly, And the Mighty doth not pervert judgment.
Yea, surely God will not do wickedly,.... This
truth is repeated and affirmed in the strongest manner; or "will not
condemn", as the Vulgate Latin version, and so the Targum, that is, he
will not condemn the righteous; for, though he may afflict them, which is done
that they may not be condemned with the world, he will not condemn them; for
there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ; his righteousness, by
which they are justified, secures them from all condemnation;
neither will the Almighty pervert judgment: pronounce a
wrong sentence, decline the execution of justice, swerve from the rule of it,
or do a wrong thing; for he punishes wherever he finds it, either in the sinner
or his surety; and his punishing it in his Son, as the surety of his people, is
the strongest proof of his punitive justice that can be given: nor does he
neglect to chastise his people for sin, though satisfied for; so far is he from
conniving at sin, and still further from committing it; see See Gill on Job 8:2.
Job 34:13 13 Who gave Him charge over
the earth? Or who appointed Him over the whole world?
YLT
13Who hath inspected for
Himself the earth? And who hath placed all the habitable world?
Who hath given him a charge over the earth?.... Or who
hath committed the earth unto him, and made it his care and charge? Is there
any above him that has put him into this post and office? Under whose direction
and command is he, and to whom is he accountable? None at all; he is no deputy
or sub-governor: the kings of the earth are under him, and they have others
subordinate to them; but he above all, higher than the highest: he is sole
Governor of the world in his own right, by right of creation, and which he has
from himself and not another; he has no rival, nor partner with him, none to
whom he is accountable, or can control him; and since he is the Judge of all
the earth, he will do right. Subordinate governors sometimes do unjust things
in obedience to their superiors, or to please them, or through fear of them;
but nothing of this kind is or can be the case with God; as he cannot do any
injustice through inclination of nature, nor through ignorance, as men may; so
neither through fear of any, there being none above him from whom he has
received a charge, or that rules over him; and, as Jarchi expresses it, can say
to him, what dost thou? as, I did not command thee so and so. And though he is
sovereign and independent, and his power uncontrollable, it is contrary to his
nature to make an ill use of it; and was justice perverted by him, the world
would soon be in the utmost confusion: but it is a plain case there is a God
that judgeth in the earth, and cannot commit iniquity. Or this may be said with
respect to man; who has committed the earth to man, to be his charge, to be
governed by him? if so, it would soon come to nothing; all creatures in it
would be destroyed, as in the following verses; but this is not the case. Or
who has given it to man to possess it, and to enjoy all things in it, and has
put all things into his hands, and in subjection to him, to make use thereof,
and for his good, delight, and pleasure, and visits him in it in a providential
way, in great kindness and goodness? It is the Lord; and can it be thought that
he that is so good and beneficent to men will do them any injustice? no,
surely! Yea, should he take away all these good things he has given them, and
even life itself, it could be no injustice, since he would only take away what
he had given and had a right unto;
or who hath disposed the whole world? or created
it, as Aben Ezra; that stored it with all the good things in it for the use of
men? or put it in the beautiful order it is, so suitable and convenient for the
good of his creatures? or made it the habitable earth it is for man and beast?
so Mr. Broughton renders the whole,
"who
before him looked to the earth, or who settled all the dwelt land?'
Or
who made it the fruitful earth it is, abounding with plenty of food for man and
beast? or who disposes of all things in it by his wise providence, so that
everything is beautiful in its season? None but the Lord has done all this; how
then can it be thought that he who has filled the earth with his goodness
should do wickedly or pervert judgment?
Job 34:14 14 If He should set His heart
on it, If He should gather to Himself His Spirit and His breath,
YLT
14If He doth set on him His
heart, His spirit and his breath unto Him He gathereth.
If he set his heart upon man,.... Not his love and
affections; though there are some he does in this sense set his heart on, and
whose souls at death he gathers to himself, but with this sense the next verse
will not agree; but to destroy him, as Jarchi adds by way of explanation; if he
gives his mind to it, is set upon it and resolved to do it, none can hinder
him; or sets himself against him in an hostile way, the issue must be entire
ruin and destruction to the race of men; but it is plain this is not the case,
or otherwise all must have perished long ago: or if he severely marks the ways
and works of men, and deals with them according to the strictness of his
justice, which yet he might do without any charge of injustice, none could
stand before him; but this he does not, so far is he from any injustice, or any
appearance of it;
if he gather unto himself
his spirit and his breath; not his own spirit and breath, drawing in
and retaining that within himself, and withholding the influence of it from his
creatures, which the Septuagint version seems to favour; but the spirit and
breath of man, which are of God, and which, as he gives, he can gather when he
pleases. The spirit or rational soul of man is put in him by the Lord; this at
death is separated from the body, yet dies not with it, but is gathered to the
Lord: and the breath which he breathes into man, and is in his nostrils, and
which, as he gives, he can take away, and then man dies. But in doing this he
does no injustice; indeed, should he in anger and resentment rise up and deal
thus with men in general, the consequence must be as follows.
Job 34:15 15 All flesh would perish
together, And man would return to dust.
YLT
15Expire doth all flesh
together, And man to dust returneth.
All flesh shall perish together,.... Not one by one, or
one after another, as they generally do, but all together; as when the flood
swept away the world of the ungodly. "All flesh" signifies all men,
and their bodies of flesh particularly, which are weak, frail, and mortal; and
if God gathers or takes out the spirit from them, they die immediately, which
is meant by perishing, as in Ecclesiastes 7:15;
and man shall turn again unto dust; from whence he came, as
the body does at death; when those earthly tabernacles of the bodies of men,
which have their foundation in the dust, are dissolved and sink into it. Now
though this is the case of particular persons, one after another, yet it is not
a general case, as it would be if God was to exert his power, as he might
without any charge of injustice: and this shows the merciful kindness of God to
man, so far is he from doing any thing injurious or unjust.
Job 34:16 16 “If you have
understanding, hear this; Listen to the sound of my words:
YLT 16And if [there is]
understanding, hear this, Give ear to the voice of my words.
If now thou hast understanding, hear this,.... Not as
calling his understanding in question, as if he, had none; for Job was a very
understanding man; he had not lost his natural understanding by his
afflictions, see Job 6:13; nor was
he without an understanding of divine things, as his speeches and answers show;
but rather it is taken for granted that he was a man of understanding:
"if" or "seeing" thou hast understanding, art a man of
knowledge and intelligence, therefore hearken and attend to what has been said
or about to be said; though, as some Jewish interpretersF1Jarchi,
Bar Tzemach, in loc. so Cocceius, Schmidt, and Schultens. observe, the word is
not a noun, but a verb, and is imperative, "understand thou now, hear
this"; and then the sense is, "if" things are so as before
related, Job 34:13; then now
understand this, take it into thy heart and mind, and well weigh and consider
it:
hearken to the voice of my words; either the preceding or
following ones.
Job 34:17 17 Should one who hates
justice govern? Will you condemn Him who is most just?
YLT
17Yea, doth one hating
justice govern? Or the Most Just dost thou condemn?
Shall even he that hateth right govern?.... That
hates moral and civil justice; is such an one fit to rule among men or over
them? No, surely; for to love righteousness and do it is a qualification of a
civil governor; it is his business to administer justice; and if an hater of
it, he can never be a proper person to rule: and if God was an hater of that
which is right, as he would seem to be if he did not do it, he would not be fit
to govern the world as he does. To this absurdity is Job reduced, by suggesting
that right was not done him, or that God had removed his judgment from him; see
2 Samuel 23:3, Romans 3:5. Mr.
Broughton translates the words, "can a foe to judgment rule well?" And
yet it cannot be denied, but must be owned, that God does judge in the earth,
and judges righteously. Or shall such an one "bind"F2יחבש "obligabit", Montanus; so Junius and
Tremellius, Piscator, Cocceius, Michaelis. ? the allusion may be to a surgeon
that binds up wounds. Sin makes wounds, and such as cannot be healed by men;
but God can bind them up and cure them, and does: but would he do this if he
hated that which is right, if he was not kind and merciful, just and good? see Hosea 6:1. Or, as
others render it, which comes pretty near to the same sense, "shall a
hater of judgment refrain wrath"F3"An nasum osor judicii
fraenabit?" Schultens. ? Such are tyrants, cruel and unmerciful, full of
wrath and vengeance, and which they execute in a barbarous manner: but such is
not God; he stirs not up all his wrath, which he in justice might; he retains
it not for ever, but delights in mercy;
and wilt thou condemn him that is most just? It is not
right to condemn any just man, to charge him wrongfully, and then pass an
unrighteous sentence on him; and much less to charge the righteous God with
injustice, and condemn him that is most just, superlatively just; in whom there
is not the least shadow of unrighteousness; who is righteous in all his ways,
and holy in all his works; who is naturally, essentially, and infinitely
righteous.
Job 34:18 18 Is it fitting
to say to a king, ‘You are worthless,’ And to nobles, ‘You are
wicked’?
YLT
18Who hath said to a king --
`Worthless,' Unto princes -- `Wicked?'
Is it fit to say to a
king, thou art wicked?.... Not even to a bad king; for though he
may be reproved for his sins, yet not by any or everyone, but by a fit and
proper person: and generally speaking, if not always, the Scriptural instances
of reproving such kings are of men that were prophets, and sent in the name of
the Lord to do it; and when done by them, was done with decency: and much less
should this be said to a good king; as to say to him, Belial, the word here
used; or thou art Belial; or a son of Belial, as Shimei said to David, 2 Samuel 16:7; a
name given to the worst of men, and is the devil himself; and signifies either
one without a yoke, or lawless, which a king is not; or unprofitable, whereas a
king is a minister of God for good; is for the punishment of evildoers, and for
a praise to them that do well;
and to princes, ye are
ungodly? Who have their name from being generous, munificent, and
liberal, and therefore should not be treated in such a manner; who are the sons
of kings, or subordinate magistrates to them, and execute their will and
pleasure, laws and precepts. And if now such language is not to be used to
earthly kings and princes, then surely not to the King of kings and Lord of
lords; so Jarchi interprets it of God the King of the world; and some Christian
interpreters, as Schmidt, understand by "princes" the three Persons
in the Godhead; which can hardly be made to bear: though, could the whole be
understood of God in the three Persons of the Deity, the connection with Job 34:19 would run
more smoothly without the supplement that is made; so Broughton,
"to
the King, the King of nobles, that accepteth not,' &c.
Job 34:19 19 Yet He is not partial to
princes, Nor does He regard the rich more than the poor; For they are
all the work of His hands.
YLT
19That hath not accepted the
person of princes, Nor hath known the rich before the poor, For a work of His
hands [are] all of them.
How much less to him that accepteth
not the persons of princes,.... And indeed God is not the respecter of
the persons of any, no, not of the greatest men on earth, kings and princes, Acts 10:34; these
are alike dealt with by him as others in the dispensations of his providence;
nor do they escape the marks of his displeasure, wrath and vengeance, when they
sin against him:
nor regardeth the rich more than the poor? by showing
favour to them, or conniving at them,
for they are all the work of his hands; both the rich
and the poor; not only as creatures made by him, but as rich men and poor men;
it is God that makes men rich or poor, 1 Samuel 2:7;
instances follow proving this, that God is no respecter of persons on account
of outward circumstances.
Job 34:20 20 In a moment they die, in
the middle of the night; The people are shaken and pass away; The mighty are
taken away without a hand.
YLT
20[In] a moment they die, and
at midnight Shake do people, and they pass away, And they remove the mighty
without hand.
In a moment shall they die,.... Princes as well as
the common people, rich men as well as poor; all must and do die, great and
small, high and low, kings and peasants, rich and poor men, and sometimes
suddenly; are struck dead at once, and without any previous notice, that night,
that hour, that moment their souls are required of them. The Targum interprets
this of the men of Sodom. And Mr. Broughton, in his margin, refers to the
history of them in Genesis 19:1;
and the people shall be troubled at midnight; either the
common people, when their kings and governors die; or the relations and friends
of persons deceased; and this circumstance "at midnight" is added,
which makes the scene more melancholy, awful, and shocking, when it happens at
such a time. The above Targum understands it of the Egyptians, when their
firstborn were slain, which was in the middle of the night; and Mr. Broughton
refers in his margin to the same instance: but it is a question whether this
affair ever came to the knowledge of Job and his friends, at least not so early
as this controversy;
and pass away; not into another country, being taken and
carried away captive; but pass away by death into their graves, and into
another world. Sephorno interprets it of the destroying angel's passing over
the tents of the Israelites, and not entering into them to smite them when they
smote the firstborn of Egypt. But the former sense is best, see Psalm 37:36;
and the mighty shall be taken away without hand: without the
hand of men, but by the immediate hand of God; not falling in battle, or in a
common natural way by diseases, but by some judgment of God upon them: and the
whole verse seems to be understood not of a natural death, or in the common
way, but of sudden death in a way of judgment, from the immediate hand of God,
and that upon the mighty and great men of the earth; which shows that he is no
respecter of princes, see Daniel 8:25.
Job 34:21 21 “For His eyes are
on the ways of man, And He sees all his steps.
YLT
21For His eyes [are] on the
ways of each, And all his steps He doth see.
For his eyes are upon the ways of man,.... Which
denotes the omniscience of God, which reaches to every man, to every
individual, and to all men in general; and to their ways, to every step taken
by them, to the whole of their lives and conversations, and every action of
them; to all their internal and external ways and goings; perhaps the former
may be meant in this, and the latter in the following clause. This may denote
all their inward thoughts, the workings of their mind, the imaginations of
their heart; all their secret purposes, designs, and schemes; and all the
desires and affections of their soul; and all these, whether good or bad:
and he seeth all his goings; the whole of his walk
and conversation, conduct and behaviour; all his external ways, works, and
actions; and these whether of good or bad men, see Psalm 139:1.
Job 34:22 22 There is no darkness nor
shadow of death Where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves.
YLT
22There is no darkness nor
death-shade, For workers of iniquity to be hidden there;
There is no darkness,
nor shadow of death, where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves. By whom may be
meant chiefly profane sinners that are abandoned to a vicious course of life,
and make a trade of sin, or that the common course of their lives; though
secret sinners, and even professors of religion, hypocrites, who in a more
private manner live in sin, come under this name, Matthew 7:23; such
may endeavour to hide themselves through shame and fear, but all in vain and to
no purpose; there is no screening themselves and their actions from the
all-seeing eye of God, and from his wrath and vengeance. "No
darkness" of any sort can hide them, not the thick clouds of the heavens,
nor the darkness of the night; nor is there any darkness in God that can obstruct
his sight of them; nor are they able to cast any mist before his eyes, or use
any colourings, pretences, and excuses he cannot see through. "Nor shadow
of death": the grossest and thickest darkness; nor is even the grave
itself an hiding place for sinners, from whence they will be raised to receive
the just deserts of their sins. See Job 10:21. Now from
the omniscience of God, and his clear uninterrupted sight of all persons and
their actions, inward and outward, Elihu argues to the justice of God, who
therefore cannot do anything amiss through ignorance, error, or mistake.
Job 34:23 23 For He need not further
consider a man, That he should go before God in judgment.
YLT
23For He doth not suffer man
any more, To go unto God in judgment,
For he will not lay upon man more than right,.... Neither
in a way of duty, his law being holy, just, and good, not any of his
commandments grievous, but all his precepts concerning all things right, his
yoke easy and his burden light; nor in a way of punishment, always punishing
then less than their iniquities deserve; nor in a way of chastisement,
suffering nothing to befall his people but what is common to men; and he is
faithful to bear them up under it and through it, and to make a way to escape
out of it: or the phrase, "than right", being a supplement, may be
left out, and the words be connected with what follows,
that he should enter into judgment with God; and the sense
is, either that God does not put it on man to go again into judgment with him;
he does not suffer him to have a cause heard over again, to appeal from God or
to him to have a second hearing; nor is anything to be got by it, he is in one
mind, and none can turn him or reverse or get reversed any sentence of his; and
therefore it was a piece of weakness in Job to insist so much as he did to have
a hearing of his cause before him, since he could not expect there would be any
alteration made in his favour: or, as Mr. Broughton reads it, "it is not
for men to purpose to enter into judgment before the Omnipotent"; such a
purpose is vain, he can never carry his cause against him; it is a piece of
weakness to pretend to litigate a point with him: or the sense is, he puts no
more on man than to come to him in judgment, so Schultens; he has appointed a
person and time to judge the world in righteousness, and all must appear before
his tribunal; and everything, thought, word and action, will then and there be
brought into an account, and righteous judgment will pass; and therefore, since
he has fixed such a method of proceeding, and requires no other, he can never
be charged with injustice.
Job 34:24 24 He breaks in pieces mighty
men without inquiry, And sets others in their place.
YLT
24He breaketh the mighty --
no searching! And He appointeth others in their stead.
He shall break in pieces mighty men without number,.... Such as
are mighty in bodily strength, as the giants of the old world, and such as were
inhabitants of some parts of the land of Canaan; or mighty in power and
authority, being kings, princes, rulers, and governors, over nations and
cities; or mighty in wealth and riches, which give men power and strength;
these God can and sometimes does break in pieces like potters' vessels, and
even mighty kingdoms and nations themselves he will make like the chaff of the
summer threshing floor: and even without number; or there have been and will be
numberless instances of this kind; who can tell how many of these mighty men,
men of gigantic stature, were drowned in the flood, or cut off by the sword of
the Israelites in the land of Canaan? or "without search"F4לא חקר "absque
inquisitione", Beza, Mercerus; "sine investigatione", Michaelis;
so Cocceius, Schultens. as it may be rendered; either on the part of God, who
needs not any, with whom are unnecessary any formal inquiries into a cause, or
examination of witnesses, in order to a judicial process against delinquents,
all being naked and open before him at once; or on the part of man, with whom
the ways and judgments of God are unsearchable and who ought not closely and
curiously to inquire into any of his proceedings, and the causes and reasons of
them, who does all things after the counsel of his own will. Mr. Broughton
renders it "without end", for ever; with an everlasting destruction,
an utter and irretrievable one; he so breaks them as that they never can be
made whole again, like an earthen vessel that is broke to pieces and cannot be
put together again;
and set others in their stead; God always provides for
a succession in the world, that as when one generation goes off another comes
on; when he destroyed the world with a flood, he preserved a family to
replenish the earth; when the fathers of the Jewish nation, their carcasses
fell in the wilderness, their children were raised up in their room to enter
the good land and possess it; and particularly he provides for the civil
government of the world and when he pulls down or removes one king he sets up
another, and will not suffer kingdoms and states to fall into anarchy and
confusion: and sometimes, when he casts down the mighty from their seats, he
exalts men of low degree, as when he rejected Saul he took David from the
sheepfold, 1 Samuel 16:11; and
makes such kings and kingdoms to "stand"F5ויעמד "et stare faciet", Pagninus, Montanus, V.
L. so Mercerus, Drusius, Cocceius, Schultens. stable and firm, as the kingdom
of David, and as the word here used signifies.
Job 34:25 25 Therefore He knows their
works; He overthrows them in the night, And they are crushed.
YLT
25Therefore He knoweth their
works, And He hath overturned by night, And they are bruised.
Therefore he knoweth their works,.... Being God
omniscient, or rather takes notice of them, weighs and considers them, and
gives to man according to them; or rather makes them known, for of his
omniscience Elihu had spoken before; he makes them known to themselves, fastens
convictions of their evil ways and works on their consciences, and obliges them
to confess them, as the instances of Cain, Pharaoh, and others, show; and he
makes them known to others by the judgment he executes, as on the old world,
Sodom and Gomorrah; and the works of all will be made manifest at the day of
judgment;
and he overturneth them in the night; literally
taken, as the firstborn of the Egyptians were slain in the night, Exodus 12:30; and
Pharaoh and his host were drowned in the Red sea in the night, Exodus 15:4; and
the Assyrian army were destroyed by an angel in one night, 2 Kings 19:35; and
Belshazzar was killed in the night, and the Babylonian empire translated to the
Medes and Persians at the same time, Daniel 5:30, or
figuratively, that is, suddenly, at unawares, and by surprise, and as quickly
and easily as the night is turned into day; and such a revolution is made, as
when he turns the night into day, and discovers and makes known all their
secret actions committed in the dark; or he turns the night of calamity upon
them, and puts an end to their light of temporal happiness and prosperity; or
turns the night of death and everlasting wrath and justice on them, the
blackness of darkness upon them:
so that they are destroyed; both in a temporal
sense, on every side, with an utter destruction; and in a spiritual sense, with
an everlasting one.
Job 34:26 26 He strikes them as wicked men
In the open sight of others,
YLT
26As wicked He hath stricken
them, In the place of beholders.
He striketh them as wicked men,.... Such is the strict
justice of God, that he never strikes men, or inflicts punishment on them, or
brings down his judgments upon them, but as wicked men, and because of their
wickedness; the casting of man out of Eden was for his sin, as well as the
casting down the angels from heaven that sinned; the drowning of the old world,
the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, the ruin of Pharaoh and his host, the
driving the Canaanites out of their land, the various captivities of the Israelites,
with other instances of God's displeasure with men in this world, and the
everlasting punishment of them in another, are only of them as wicked men, and
for sin; and therefore he is not chargeable with any unrighteousness. Sephorno
interprets it, "instead of wicked men", and illustrates it by the
shaking out of Pharaoh and his host into the sea in the room and stead of the
wicked Israelites, that came up from thence,
in the open sight of others: which the same
interpreter refers to the Israelites seeing the Egyptians dead on the seashore;
or "in the place of them that see"F6במקום
ראים "in loco videntium", V. L. Pagninus,
Montanus, Piscator, Michaelis; "in loco spectantium", Beza, Cocceius,
Schultens. , that is, in a public manner, as generally malefactors are
executed, to which the allusion may be; it denotes the publicness of God's
righteous judgments on wicked men, for the greater declaration of his power and
justice, and for the greater shame and disgrace of such wicked men, and for the
joy and comfort of the righteous delivered from them.
Job 34:27 27 Because they turned back
from Him, And would not consider any of His ways,
YLT
27Because that against right
They have turned aside from after Him, And none of His ways have considered
wisely,
Because they turned back from him,.... Became apostates
from the ways and worship of God, as the posterity of Cain before the flood,
and the posterity of Ham after it; who had been educated and trained up
therein, and turned from the law of God, as the Septuagint version, from the
light and law of nature:
and would not consider any of his ways; either of
providence, whether in a way of mercy which might lead to repentance, or in a
way of judgment which might be a caution and instruction to them; or of his
precepts, the way of his commandments, not any of these would they consider; so
as to express a value for them, show any regard to them, and walk in them; and
which was owing to the stubbornness of their wills; they would not advert to
them.
Job 34:28 28 So that they caused the
cry of the poor to come to Him; For He hears the cry of the afflicted.
YLT
28To cause to come in unto
Him The cry of the poor, And the cry of the afflicted He heareth.
So that they cause the cry of the poor to come to him,.... To God;
through their oppressions of the poor they are made to cry by reason of them,
and who come to God with their cries, and tears, and supplications, and which
enter into the ears of the Lord of hosts;
and he heareth the cry of the afflicted; as he did the
cry of the Israelites under Egyptian bondage; he is a God hearing and answering
prayer, and he particularly attends to the cry of the humble and of the
afflicted, and arises for their help and deliverance.
Job 34:29 29 When He gives quietness,
who then can make trouble? And when He hides His face, who then can see
Him, Whether it is against a nation or a man alone?—
YLT
29And He giveth rest, and who
maketh wrong? And hideth the face, and who beholdeth it? And in reference to a
nation and to a man, [It is] the same.
When he giveth quietness, who then can make trouble?.... Quietness
or peace is of God; external peace to bodies of men, to communities, civil and
religious, and to particular persons; quietness and contentment in outward
enjoyments, peace and safety at home, and from enemies abroad; inward spiritual
peace, this is of God, is in Christ, and from him; is the fruit of his
righteousness, spoke by his blood, comes through faith in Christ, and is
enjoyed in his ordinances, and continues as long as it is the pleasure of God
to give it, and cannot be disturbed by men or devils; a national peace, when
God gives it, cannot be broke in upon; nor the peace of churches, though there
are always some inclined to be troublers of the Israel of God; nor the peace of
particular persons, not their outward peace and quietness, when God sets an
hedge of providence about them; nor their inward peace, not by all the
afflictions and persecutions they meet with in the world; nor by all the
temptations of Satan, and the corruptions of their own hearts. The Targum is,
"who shall condemn?" and so the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, Syriac,
and Arabic versions; when God acquits, absolves, and justifies men, who can
condemn them? see Romans 8:33. When
God pronounces the sentence of justification by the righteousness of Christ in
the conscience of a sinner, it produces peace solid and substantial, and this
being done, who shall condemn? or of what avail will their condemnation be?
whether of the law, or of Satan, or of the world, or of themselves, of their
own hearts;
and when he hideth his face, who then can behold him?
whether it be done against a nation, or against a man only; whether God
hides his face from a nation, as he sometimes did from the nation of Israel,
because of their sins; when he would not hear their prayers, nor assist them
against their enemies, nor arise for their help and deliverance out of their
hands: or from his church and people, his spiritual Jacob and Israel, as when
they complain, their way is hid from the Lord, and the Lord has forgotten and
forsaken them; or from particular persons, as from David, Heman, and others;
and who, of the Lord's people, but at one time or another are under the hidings
of his face? and then there is no finding him, no looking to him with comfort
and confidence; no looking into and beholding the works and ways of God, and
the causes of his dealings with them; these are out of sight, his ways are in
the deep, and his footsteps are not known. Some refer this to men; who will
show favour to him whom God frowns upon? who will look at him in a pleasant
manner, when God hides his face from him?
Job 34:30 30 That the hypocrite should
not reign, Lest the people be ensnared.
YLT
30From the reigning of a
profane man, From the snares of a people;
That the hypocrite reign not,.... These words seem to
be connected with Job 34:24, "he
breaketh in pieces mighty men", &c. the whole of Job 34:29 being
read in a parenthesis; or with the phrase "he hideth his face"; as
God is said to be in the destruction of mighty wicked men, who oppress the
poor, and cause their cry to come to God, to prevent the reign of an hypocrite,
or however to shorten it. By "an hypocrite" is not meant a common
hypocrite in religion, but an hypocrite in politics; who pretends to great
humanity and goodness, to a tender care of the people, and a preservation of
them in their rights and liberties, and promises to support and establish the
constitution, and observe the laws of the nation, with a show of zeal for the
religion professed in it. But when he has ascended the throne, and got the
power into his hands, he throws off the mask and becomes a tyrant; and men of
such a temper, either God does not suffer to ascend the throne, but if they do
get on it through artifice and deceit, he suffers them not to continue, but
deposes them, and cuts their reign short: and this he does
lest the people be ensnared; be brought into bondage,
and lose their rights, privileges, and liberties; or lest they be drawn into
sin by their precepts or examples. Some take the sense of the words to be, that
God suffers not such to reign, but when he does it is because of the offences
or sins of the people; he gives them such kings in his wrath, to punish them
for their iniquities.
Job 34:31 31 “For has anyone
said to God, ‘I have borne chastening; I will offend no more;
YLT
31For unto God hath any said:
`I have taken away, I do not corruptly,
Surely it is meet to be said unto God,.... By any
afflicted person under his chastising hand, and particularly by Job, for whom
the advice and instructions in this verse and Job 34:32 are
designed:
I have borne chastisement; the word
"chastisement" is not in the text, but is very properly supplied, as
it is by Jarchi and others; the affliction of God's people is a fatherly
chastisement, and should be considered and borne as such; and it becomes an
afflicted good man to say,
"I
have borne and still do bear, and I am content yet to bear, the chastisement of
the Lord; I am desirous to bear it willingly, cheerfully, and patiently, until
he is pleased to remove it from me.'
See
Micah 7:9;
I will not offend any more; that is, sin any more;
sin is an offence to God, being contrary to his nature, and a breach of his
law; Job had sinned as every good man does, no man is without sin, in many
things we all offend; and on account of sin God chastens his people, and the
design of it is to bring them to a sense and acknowledgment of it; and it
becomes them under chastening providences to confess it, and humble themselves
under the mighty hand of God, and in the strength of divine grace determine to
be careful not to offend more. Some render the words "I will not
corrupt"F7לא אחבל
"non corrumpam", Montanus, Mercerus, Piscator. ; that is, myself or
others, my ways and works, by sinning; and others, "I will not
break", or "break through"F8"Non
disrumpam", Beza. ; the commands of God; and so the sense of this and the
former version is much the same with ours; or I will not endeavour to break
through the afflictive providence in which I am shut up, or break off the
fetters and cords of affliction, but bear all patiently, until it is the Lord's
time and will to set me at liberty. Some, as Ben Gersom, interpret this and the
preceding clause, "I pardon, I will not destroy"; or "will not
retain a pledge", as othersF9"Non pignerabo",
Cocceius; "non pigneratus eram", Schultens. Vid. Gusset. Ebr.
Comment. p. 238. ; and so take them to be the words of God himself; and thus
Mr. Broughton renders the whole verse,
"now
unto the Omnipotent, which saith, I pardon, I will not destroy, "this
should" be said,'
namely,
what follows in Job 34:32 F11Tigurine
version, Vatablus, Junius and Tremellius. ; it is the prerogative of God, and
it is his grace to pardon, and such whom he pardons he never destroys, but
accepts, discharges, and remits the surety's bond or pledge; and nothing more
effectually engages to a careful abstinence from sin for the future, than a
sense of pardoning grace; and it highly becomes such persons to say what they
are next directed to.
Job 34:32 32 Teach me what I do
not see; If I have done iniquity, I will do no more’?
YLT
32Besides [that which] I see,
shew Thou me, If iniquity I have done -- I do not add?'
That which I see not
teach thou me,.... Which may be understood either of the chastisements of God,
and his dealings with his people in a providential way, and of the design and
use of them, which are sometimes unsearchable, and at most but a part of them
only seen and known; it is meet to say to God, it is but a small part and
portion of thy ways that is known by me; I can see but little into them: teach
me more of thy mind and will in them, or else of sins and transgressions, the
cause of chastisement; it is proper for an afflicted man to say unto God, I am
conscious to myself of many sinful failings and infirmities, but there may be
secret sins committed by me which have escaped my notice and observation; point
them out to me, that I may be humbled for them, and make a free confession of
them;
if I have done iniquity, I will do no more; that is, if I
have committed any capital crime, any foul offence or gross enormity, for
otherwise no man lives without sin, I sincerely repent of it, and will take
care for the future, through divine grace, to do so no more.
Job 34:33 33 Should He repay it
according to your terms, Just because you disavow it? You must choose,
and not I; Therefore speak what you know.
YLT
33By thee doth He recompense,
That thou hast refused -- That thou dost choose, and not I? And what thou hast
known, speak.
Should it be according, to
thy mind?.... O Job, for the words seem to he directed to him; and may
respect either the government of the world in general, and the disposal of all
things in it, treated of in this chapter, though more remotely, Job 34:13. Is it
not proper that God should govern it, who has made it, and do all things in it
as he pleases? is it fit he should consult with men what to do, or be
instructed and taught by them in the path of judgment? is it meet that every
man should have his mind and will, and have everything go in the form and
course most eligible to him? Or else they may respect chastisement, with which
the words are more nearly connected; and so the sense be, should man be
consulted, as Job or any other, and his mind known first, whether he should be
chastened or not? should a son or a servant be asked first by a parent or
master, whether it is fitting to give correction or not? or is man to be
advised with in what way and manner he should be chastened of God, whether in
his person, or family, or estate? or how long the chastening should endure upon
him, and when it should be removed? no, surely; all should be left with God,
the wise and sovereign Disposer of all things;
he will recompense it, whether thou refuse, or whether thou choose,
and not I; that is, God will recompense chastisement; he will chastise whom
he pleases, and in what manner he pleases, and as long as he pleases, whether
man consents or submits to it or not; he will not ask his leave; he will do
according to the counsel of his own will; and thou Job mayest choose or refuse
to submit to him as thou likest best; for my part, was it my case, I would not
refuse submission to his will; I would say, "it is the Lord, let him do
what seemeth good in his sight". Some make this last clause the words of
God, put by way of question, "shouldest thou choose or refuse, and not
I?" shouldest thou have thine option and refusal, and not I? should man be
his own chooser, or choose for himself what he likes best? should he not say,
the Lord shall choose mine inheritance for me, though that inheritance is
affliction? The words are rendered by others to different senses, all which to
observe would be too tedious: someF12המעמך
ישלמנה "ecce de tuo rependit illud",
Schultens. to this sense,
"what
is of thyself God recompenses;'
sin
is of a man's self, it flows from his corrupt heart and will, he is not tempted
to it of God; nor is it to be ascribed to the temptations of Satan, which,
though they may have their influence, sin is a man's own act and deed; and God
will recompense it in one way or another, whether man will or not; either in a
way of punishment on the sinner himself, or on his surety for him; or in a way
of fatherly correction and chastisement; and this is the Lord's doing and not
mine, and he is just in so doing;
therefore speak what thou knowest: if thou knowest anything
better than this, or canst contradict what is said: or as othersF13Junius
and Tremellius, Grotius. to this purpose,
"did
ever such a speech come from thee, as expressed in the preceding verses? God
will recompense it, if thou refusest to speak in such a submissive manner; thou
mayest refuse to do it, I would not; I should choose to submit and hear the
affliction patiently; if thou thinkest otherwise, speak out thy mind.'
Job 34:34 34 “Men of understanding say
to me, Wise men who listen to me:
YLT
34Let men of heart say to me,
And a wise man is hearkening to me.
Let men of understanding tell me,.... Whether I am right
or wrong:
and let a wise man hearken unto me; to what I have said or
shall say. Elihu here addresses the company around him, the wise and
intelligent part of them; the words may be rendered in the future tense, men of
understanding "will" tell meF14יאמרו
"dicent"; Junius and Tremellius, Piscator, Vatablus, Mercerus,
Drusius, Cocceius, Michaelis, Schultens: so Broughton. , and a wise man
"will" hearken to me and assent, not only to what I have said, but to
what I am about to say, namely, what follows.
Job 34:35 35 ‘Job speaks without
knowledge, His words are without wisdom.’
YLT
35Job -- not with knowledge
doth he speak, And his words [are] not with wisdom.
Job hath spoken without knowledge,.... Not that Job was an
ignorant man, either in things natural or divine; but in this point, about the
chastening hand of God upon him, he had said some things which betrayed lack of
knowledge, as in Job 34:5;
and his words were without wisdom; Job was not
destitute of human wisdom, nor of spiritual wisdom, but no man is wise at all
times; some things had dropped from him which savoured of folly and ignorance,
and which he afterwards was convinced of, and confessed with shame, Job 40:4; being
charged by the Lord himself with what he is here by Elihu, Job 38:2; and it
may be observed, that Elihu does not charge Job with being a wicked man, as his
three friends did, but as having spoken unadvisedly with lips, under his
chastening circumstances, and which he labours to convince him of.
Job 34:36 36 Oh, that Job were tried to
the utmost, Because his answers are like those of wicked men!
YLT
36My Father! let Job be tried
-- unto victory, Because of answers for men of iniquity,
My desire is that Job may be tried unto the end,.... This is
my opinion, or what "I bring in"F15אבי
"pro" אביא "adducam", so some in
Codurcus: "haec autem in medio affero", Tigurine version;
"adduco", Schultens. adduce, and lay before you, men of understanding
and wisdom, and leave it with you to consider of. Some render it, "O my
Father, let Job be tried", &c. as if it was an apostrophe to God, and
a request to him; so Mr. Broughton, who adds,
"which
art in heaven,'
and
the same is added by some Jewish interpretersF16P. Abraham Peritsol,
Simeon Bar Tzemach, Sephorno. , as there are othersF17Jarchi, Aben
Ezra, Ben Gersom. of them which go this way, and also several Christian
commentatorsF18Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Vatablus, Drusius,
Cocceius; so V. L. ; and of lateF19Hodge's Elihu. it has been urged,
from this and other passages, that Elihu was Christ, who here addresses God as
his father: but this is his New Testament title; and though God is the father
of all men by creation, and of saints by adoption, yet this relation and title
are not so frequently claimed under the former dispensation, or however not so
early as the times of Job, but are more peculiar to the Gospel dispensation,
under which saints receive "not the spirit of bondage again to fear, but
the Spirit of adoption, whereby they cry, Abba, Father", Romans 8:15;
wherefore admitting this version, rather some grave venerable person, as
EliphazF20So Hieron. Trad. Heb. fol. 75. I. , senior to Elihu, who
was a young man, is addressed under this title; or the whole circle of Job's
friends now about him, all elder than Elihu, may be intended;
"father" for "fathers", the singular for the plural, see Acts 7:2; and what
he proposes is, that they should make it their joint request at the throne of
grace, that Job's afflictions be still continued; that he might be thoroughly
tried by them, and be purged from all his dross, he not appearing yet to be
thoroughly sensible of his sinful speeches, and humbled for them; and therefore
it was proper he should be still corrected and chastened to the end, or unto
victory, as Mr. Broughton, or until victory was obtained, and he was obliged to
yield, and cry "peccavi": but since afflictions are things not joyous
but grievous, and it does not seem so agreeable to a good man, kind and humane,
to desire the continuance of the afflictions of another, though palliated with
a plausible for his good; it seems better to understand this as a motion made
to the understanding part of the company by Elihu, that the words of Job, which
he had spoken without knowledge and wisdom, might be taken under strict
examination by them, and thoroughly scanned, that it might be better known what
was proper to be said more to him for his conviction;
because of his answers for wicked men; or concerning
or relative to such answers which he had made, which were like to those which
wicked men make; who charge the ways of God with inequality and want of equity,
ask where is the God of judgment? or which serve the cause of the wicked, and
which furnish them with arguments, prepare them for them, and put them into
their mouths, to argue against God and his providential dealings with men, and
against all religion. See Job 34:8.
Job 34:37 37 For he adds rebellion to
his sin; He claps his hands among us, And multiplies his words against
God.”
YLT
37For he doth add to his sin,
Transgression among us he vomiteth, And multiplieth his sayings to God.
For he addeth rebellion unto his sin,.... Or he
"may" or "will" addF21יסף
"addet"; Montanus, Mercerus, Drusius, Cocceius, so in the next
clauses. , if he is suffered to go on at this rate, and is not stopped; as yet
he has only committed, it may be charitably hoped, some sins through ignorance,
error, and mistake, but if he is let alone he will proceed from evil to evil,
to more ungodliness; to be guilty of presumptuous sins, of open treason and
rebellion against God;
he clappeth his hands amongst us, or "he
will clap"; he will either clap his hands together as expressive of
extreme grief and sorrow, of the agonies of his mind; showing extravagant
impatience, and pouring out his complaints in the most bitter manner, see Ezekiel 21:14; or
rather by way of joy and triumph, as having got the victory over us, see Psalm 47:1;
and multiplieth his words against God, or "will
multiply"; he has said too many things already against God, his justice in
his dealings with him, Job 34:5; he will
say more if he is not restrained. These are the reasons Elihu gives for a
thorough trial and strict examination of Job; and they are taken partly from a
concern for the good of Job, and partly on their account, that they might not
be triumphed over, and chiefly for the glory of God.
──《John Gill’s
Exposition of the Bible》