PREVIOUS CHAPTER - NEXT CHAPTER - HELP - GR VIDEOS - GR YOUTUBE - TWITTER - SD1 YOUTUBE CHAPTER 21 SECOND SERIES. Job 21:1-34. JOB'S ANSWER. 2. consolations--If you will listen calmly to me, this will be regarded as "consolations"; alluding to Eliphaz' boasted "consolations" (Job 15:11), which Job felt more as aggravations ("mockings," Job 21:3) than consolations (Job 16:2). 3. literally, "Begin your mockings" (Job 17:2).
4. Job's difficulty was not as to man, but as to God, why He so
afflicted him, as if he were the guilty hypocrite which the friends
alleged him to be. Vulgate translates it, "my disputation."
5. lay . . . hand upon . . . mouth-- (Pr 30:32; Jud 18:19). So the heathen god of silence was pictured with his hand on his mouth. There was enough in Job's case to awe them into silence (Job 17:8). 6. remember--Think on it. Can you wonder that I broke out into complaints, when the struggle was not with men, but with the Almighty? Reconcile, if you can, the ceaseless woes of the innocent with the divine justice! Is it not enough to make one tremble? [UMBREIT].
7. The answer is
Ro 2:4;
1Ti 1:16;
Ps 73:18;
Ec 8:11-13;
Lu 2:35-end;
Pr 16:4;
Ro 9:22.
8. In opposition to Job 18:19; 5:4. 9. Literally, "peace from fear"; with poetic force. Their house is peace itself, far removed from fear. Opposed to the friends' assertion, as to the bad (Job 15:21-24; 20:26-28), and conversely, the good (Job 5:23, 24). 10. Rather, "their cattle conceive." The first clause of the verse describes an easy conception, the second, a happy birth [UMBREIT].
11. send forth--namely, out of doors, to their happy sports under
the skies, like a joyful flock sent to the pastures.
12. take--rather, "lift up the voice" (sing) to the note of
[UMBREIT].
13. wealth--Old English Version for "prosperity."
14. Therefore--rather, "And yet they are such as say," &c.,
that is, say, not in so many words, but virtually, by their conduct
(so the Gergesenes,
Mt 8:34).
How differently the godly
(Isa 2:3).
15. (Compare
Jer 2:20;
Pr 30:9,
Margin,
Ex 5:2).
16. not in their hand--but in the hand of God. This is Job's
difficulty, that God who has sinners prosperity (good) in His hand
should allow them to have it.
17. Job in this whole passage down to
Job 21:21
quotes the assertion of the friends, as to the short continuance of the
sinner's prosperity, not his own sentiments. In
Job 21:22
he proceeds to refute them. "How oft is the candle" (lamp), &c.,
quoting Bildad's sentiment
(Job 18:5, 6),
in order to question its truth (compare
Mt 25:8).
18. Job alludes to a like sentiment of Bildad (Job 18:18), using his own previous words (Job 13:25). 19. Equally questionable is the friends' assertion that if the godless himself is not punished, the children are (Job 18:19; 20:10); and that God rewardeth him here for his iniquity, and that he shall know it to his cost. So "know" (Ho 9:7).
20. Another questionable assertion of the friends, that the sinner
sees his own and his children's destruction in his lifetime.
21. The argument of the friends, in proof of
Job 21:20,
What pleasure can he have from his house (children) when he is
dead--("after him,"
Ec 3:22).
22. Reply of Job, "In all these assertions you try to teach God how
He ought to deal with men, rather than prove that He does in fact so deal with them. Experience is against you. God gives prosperity and
adversity as it pleases Him, not as man's wisdom would have it, on
principles inscrutable to us"
(Isa 40:13;
Ro 11:34).
23. Literally, "in the bone of his perfection," that is, the full strength of unimpaired prosperity [UMBREIT].
24. breasts--rather, "skins," or "vessels" for fluids [LEE]. But [UMBREIT] "stations or
resting-places of his herds near water"; in opposition to Zophar
(Job 20:17);
the first clause refers to his abundant substance, the second to his
vigorous health.
26. (Ec 9:2). 27. Their wrongful thoughts against Job are stated by him in Job 21:28. They do not honestly name Job, but insinuate his guilt.
28. ye say--referring to Zophar
(Job 20:7).
29. Job, seeing that the friends will not admit him as an impartial
judge, as they consider his calamities prove his guilt, begs them to
ask the opinion of travellers
(La 1:12),
who have the experience drawn from observation, and who are no way
connected with him. Job opposes this to Bildad
(Job 8:8)
and Zophar
(Job 20:4).
30. Their testimony (referring perhaps to those who had visited
the region where Abraham who enjoyed a revelation then lived) is that
"the wicked is (now) spared (reserved) against the day of destruction
(hereafter)." The Hebrew does not so well agree with [UMBREIT] "in the day of destruction." Job does not deny
sinners' future punishment, but their punishment in this
life. They have their "good things" now. Hereafter, their
lot, and that of the godly, shall be reversed
(Lu 16:25).
Job, by the Spirit, often utters truths which solve the difficulty
under which he labored. His afflictions mostly clouded his faith, else
he would have seen the solution furnished by his own words. This
answers the objection, that if he knew of the resurrection in
Job 19:25,
and future retribution
(Job 21:30),
why did he not draw his reasonings elsewhere from them, which he did
not? God's righteous government, however, needs to be vindicated as to
this life also, and therefore the Holy Ghost has caused the
argument mainly to turn on it at the same time giving glimpses of a
future fuller vindication of God's ways.
31. That is, who dares to charge him openly with his bad ways? namely, in this present life. He shall, I grant (Job 21:30), be "repaid" hereafter.
32. Yet--rather, "and."
33. As the classic saying has it, "The earth is light upon him." His
repose shall be "sweet."
34. falsehood--literally, "transgression." Your boasted "consolations" (Job 15:11) are contradicted by facts ("vain"); they therefore only betray your evil intent ("wickedness") against me. GOTO NEXT CHAPTER - D. J-F-B INDEX & SEARCH
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