521 lines
37 KiB
XML
521 lines
37 KiB
XML
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<div2 id="Job.iv" n="iv" next="Job.v" prev="Job.iii" progress="2.02%" title="Chapter III">
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<h2 id="Job.iv-p0.1">J O B</h2>
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<h3 id="Job.iv-p0.2">CHAP. III.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Job.iv-p1">"You have heard of the patience of Job," says the
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apostle, <scripRef id="Job.iv-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Jas.5.11" parsed="|Jas|5|11|0|0" passage="Jam 5:11">Jam. v. 11</scripRef>. So we
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have, and of his impatience too. We wondered that a man should be
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so patient as he was (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.1.1-Job.2.13" parsed="|Job|1|1|2|13" passage="Job 1:1-2:13"><i>ch.</i>
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i. and ii.</scripRef>), but we wonder also that a good man should
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be so impatient as he is in this chapter, where we find him cursing
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his day, and, in passion, I. Complaining that he was born,
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<scripRef id="Job.iv-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.1-Job.3.10" parsed="|Job|3|1|3|10" passage="Job 3:1-10">ver. 1-10</scripRef>. II.
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Complaining that he did not die as soon as he was born, <scripRef id="Job.iv-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.11-Job.3.19" parsed="|Job|3|11|3|19" passage="Job 3:11-19">ver. 11-19</scripRef>. III. Complaining that
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his life was now continued when he was in misery, <scripRef id="Job.iv-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.20-Job.3.26" parsed="|Job|3|20|3|26" passage="Job 3:20-26">ver. 20-26</scripRef>. In this it must be
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owned that Job sinned with his lips, and it is written, not for our
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imitation, but our admonition, that he who thinks he stands may
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take heed lest he fall.</p>
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<scripCom id="Job.iv-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Job.3" parsed="|Job|3|0|0|0" passage="Job 3" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Job.iv-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.1-Job.3.10" parsed="|Job|3|1|3|10" passage="Job 3:1-10" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Job.3.1-Job.3.10">
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<h4 id="Job.iv-p1.8">Job Curses His Day. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Job.iv-p1.9">b. c.</span> 1520.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Job.iv-p2">1 After this opened Job his mouth, and cursed
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his day. 2 And Job spake, and said, 3 Let the day
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perish wherein I was born, and the night <i>in which</i> it was
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said, There is a man child conceived. 4 Let that day be
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darkness; let not God regard it from above, neither let the light
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shine upon it. 5 Let darkness and the shadow of death stain
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it; let a cloud dwell upon it; let the blackness of the day terrify
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it. 6 As <i>for</i> that night, let darkness seize upon it;
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let it not be joined unto the days of the year, let it not come
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into the number of the months. 7 Lo, let that night be
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solitary, let no joyful voice come therein. 8 Let them curse
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it that curse the day, who are ready to raise up their mourning.
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9 Let the stars of the twilight thereof be dark; let it look
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for light, but <i>have</i> none; neither let it see the dawning of
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the day: 10 Because it shut not up the doors of my
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<i>mother's</i> womb, nor hid sorrow from mine eyes.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p3">Long was Job's heart hot within him; and,
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while he was musing, the fire burned, and the more for being
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stifled and suppressed. At length he spoke with his tongue, but not
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such a good word as David spoke after a long pause: <i>Lord, make
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me to know my end,</i> <scripRef id="Job.iv-p3.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.39.3-Ps.39.4" parsed="|Ps|39|3|39|4" passage="Ps 39:3,4">Ps. xxxix. 3,
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4</scripRef>. Seven days the prophet Ezekiel sat down astonished
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with the captives, and then (probably on the sabbath day) <i>the
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word of the Lord came to him,</i> <scripRef id="Job.iv-p3.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.3.15-Ezek.3.16" parsed="|Ezek|3|15|3|16" passage="Eze 3:15,16">Ezek. iii. 15, 16</scripRef>. So long Job and his
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friends sat thinking, but said nothing; <i>they</i> were afraid of
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speaking what they thought, lest they should grieve him, and
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<i>he</i> durst not give vent to his thoughts, lest he should
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offend them. They came to comfort him, but, finding his afflictions
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very extraordinary, they began to think comfort did not belong to
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him, suspecting him to be a hypocrite, and therefore they said
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nothing. But losers think they may have leave to speak, and
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therefore Job first gives vent to his thoughts. Unless they had
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been better, it would however have been well if he had kept them to
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himself. In short, he cursed his day, the day of his birth, wished
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he had never been born, could not think or speak of his own birth
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without regret and vexation. Whereas men usually observe the annual
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return of their birth-day with rejoicing, he looked upon it as the
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unhappiest day of the year, because the unhappiest of his life,
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being the inlet into all his woe. Now,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p4">I. This was bad enough. The extremity of
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his trouble and the discomposure of his spirits may excuse it in
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part, but he can by no means be justified in it. Now he has
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forgotten the good he was born to, the lean kine have eaten up the
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fat ones, and he is filled with thoughts of the evil only, and
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wishes he had never been born. The prophet Jeremiah himself
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expressed his painful sense of his calamities in language not much
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unlike this: <i>Woe is me, my mother, that thou hast borne me!</i>
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<scripRef id="Job.iv-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.15.10" parsed="|Jer|15|10|0|0" passage="Jer 15:10">Jer. xv. 10</scripRef>. <i>Cursed be
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the day wherein I was born,</i> <scripRef id="Job.iv-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.20.14" parsed="|Jer|20|14|0|0" passage="Jer 20:14">Jer.
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xx. 14</scripRef>, &c. We may suppose that Job in his
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prosperity had many a time blessed God for the day of his birth,
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and reckoned it a happy day; yet now he brands it with all possible
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marks of infamy. When we consider the iniquity in which we were
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conceived and born we have reason enough to reflect with sorrow and
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shame upon the day of our birth, and to say that the <i>day of our
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death,</i> by which we are <i>freed from sin</i> (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p4.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.6.7" parsed="|Rom|6|7|0|0" passage="Ro 6:7">Rom. vi. 7</scripRef>), is far <i>better.</i>
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<scripRef id="Job.iv-p4.4" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.7.1" parsed="|Eccl|7|1|0|0" passage="Ec 7:1">Eccl. vii. 1</scripRef>. But to curse
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the day of our birth because then we entered upon the calamitous
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scene of life is to quarrel with the God of nature, to despise the
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dignity of our being, and to indulge a passion which our own calm
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and sober thoughts will make us ashamed of. Certainly there is no
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condition of life a man can be in in this world but he may in it
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(if it be not his own fault) so honour God, and work out his own
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salvation, and make sure a happiness for himself in a better world,
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that he will have no reason at all to wish he had never been born,
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but a great deal of reason to say that he had his being to good
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purpose. Yet it must be owned, if there were not another life after
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this, and divine consolations to support us in the prospect of it,
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so many are the sorrows and troubles of this that we might
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sometimes be tempted to say that we were <i>made in vain</i>
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(<scripRef id="Job.iv-p4.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.89.47" parsed="|Ps|89|47|0|0" passage="Ps 89:47">Ps. lxxxix. 47</scripRef>), and to
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wish we had never been. There are those in hell who with good
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reason wish they had never been born, as Judas, <scripRef id="Job.iv-p4.6" osisRef="Bible:Matt.26.24" parsed="|Matt|26|24|0|0" passage="Mt 26:24">Matt. xxvi. 24</scripRef>. But, on this side hell, there
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can be no reason for so vain and ungrateful a wish. It was Job's
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folly and weakness to curse his day. We must say of it, This was
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his infirmity; but good men have sometimes failed in the exercise
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of those graces which they have been most eminent for, that we may
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understand that when they are said to be <i>perfect</i> it is meant
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that they were upright, not that they were sinless. <i>Lastly,</i>
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Let us observe it, to the honour of the spiritual life above the
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natural, that though many have cursed the day of their first birth,
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never any cursed the day of their new-birth, nor wished they never
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had had grace, and the Spirit of grace, given them. Those are the
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most excellent gifts, above life and being itself, and which will
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never be a burden.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p5">II. Yet it was not so bad as Satan promised
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himself. Job cursed his day, but he did not curse his God—was
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weary of his life, and would gladly have parted with that, but not
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weary of his religion; he resolutely cleaves to that, and will
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never let it go. The dispute between God and Satan concerning Job
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was not whether Job had his infirmities, and whether he was subject
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to like passions as we are (that was granted), but whether he was a
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hypocrite, who secretly hated God, and if he were provoked, would
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show his hatred; and, upon trial, it proved that he was no such
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man. Nay, all this may consist with his being a pattern of
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patience; for, though he did thus speak unadvisedly with his lips,
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yet both before and after he expressed great submission and
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resignation to the holy will of God and repented of his impatience;
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he condemned himself for it, and therefore God did not condemn him,
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nor must we, but watch the more carefully over ourselves, lest we
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sin after the similitude of this transgression.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p6">1. The particular expressions which Job
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used in cursing his day are full of poetical fancy, flame, and
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rapture, and create as much difficulty to the critics as the thing
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itself does to the divines: we need not be particular in our
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observations upon them. When he would express his passionate wish
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that he had never been, he falls foul upon the day, and wishes,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p7">(1.) That earth might forget it: <i>Let it
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perish</i> (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.3" parsed="|Job|3|3|0|0" passage="Job 3:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>);
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<i>let it not be joined to the days of the year,</i> <scripRef id="Job.iv-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.6" parsed="|Job|3|6|0|0" passage="Job 3:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>. "Let it be not only not
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inserted in the calendar in red letters, as the day of the king's
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nativity useth to be" (and Job was a king, <scripRef id="Job.iv-p7.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.29.25" parsed="|Job|29|25|0|0" passage="Job 29:25"><i>ch.</i> xxix. 25</scripRef>), "but let it be erased
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and blotted out, and buried in oblivion. Let not the world know
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that ever such a man as I was born into it, and lived in it, who am
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made such a spectacle of misery."</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p8">(2.) That Heaven might frown upon it:
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<i>Let not God regard it from above,</i> <scripRef id="Job.iv-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.4" parsed="|Job|3|4|0|0" passage="Job 3:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>. "Every thing is indeed as it is
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with God; that day is honourable on which he puts honour, and which
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he distinguishes and crowns with his favour and blessing, as he did
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the seventh day of the week; but let my birthday never be so
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honoured; let it be <i>nigro carbone notandus—marked as with a
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black coal</i> for an evil day by him that determines the times
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before appointed. The father and fountain of light appointed the
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greater light to rule the day and the less lights to rule the
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night; but let that want the benefit of both." [1.] <i>Let that day
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be darkness</i> (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p8.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.4" parsed="|Job|3|4|0|0" passage="Job 3:4"><i>v.</i>
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4</scripRef>); and, if the light of the day be darkness, <i>how
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great is that darkness!</i> how terrible! because then we look for
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light. Let the gloominess of the day represent Job's condition,
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whose sun went down at noon. [2.] As for that night too, let it
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want the benefit of moon and stars, and <i>let darkness seize upon
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it,</i> thick darkness, darkness that may be felt, which will not
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befriend the repose of the night by its silence, but rather disturb
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it with its terrors.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p9">(3.) That all joy might forsake it: "Let it
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be a melancholy night, solitary, and not a merry night of music and
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dancing. <i>Let no joyful voice come therein</i> (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.7" parsed="|Job|3|7|0|0" passage="Job 3:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>); let it be a long night,
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and not <i>see the eye-lids of the morning</i> (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.9" parsed="|Job|3|9|0|0" passage="Job 3:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>), which bring joy with them."</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p10">(4.) That all curses might follow it
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(<scripRef id="Job.iv-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.8" parsed="|Job|3|8|0|0" passage="Job 3:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>): "Let none
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ever desire to see it, or bid it welcome when it comes, but, on the
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contrary, <i>let those curse it that curse the day.</i> Whatever
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day any are tempted to curse, let them at the same time bestow one
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curse upon my birth-day, particularly those that make it their
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trade to raise up mourning at funerals with their ditties of
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lamentation. Let those that curse the day of the death of others in
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the same breath curse the day of my birth." Or those who are so
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fierce and daring as to be ready to raise up the <i>Leviathan</i>
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(for that is the word here), who, being about to strike the whale
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or crocodile, curse it with the bitterest curse they can invent,
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hoping by their incantations to weaken it, and so to make
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themselves master of it. Probably some such custom might there be
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used, to which our divine poet alludes. "Let it be as odious as
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<i>the day wherein men bewail the greatest misfortune,</i> or the
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time <i>wherein they see the most dreadful apparition;</i>" so
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bishop Patrick, I suppose taking the Leviathan here to signify the
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devil, as others do, who understand it of the curses used by
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conjurors and magicians in raising the devil, or when they have
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raised a devil that they cannot lay.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p11">2. But what is the ground of Job's quarrel
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with the day and night of his birth? It is <i>because it shut not
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up the doors of his mother's womb,</i> <scripRef id="Job.iv-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.10" parsed="|Job|3|10|0|0" passage="Job 3:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>. See the folly and madness of a
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passionate discontent, and how absurdly and extravagantly it talks
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when the reins are laid on the neck of it. Is this Job, who was so
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much admired for his wisdom that <i>unto him men gave ear, and kept
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silence at his counsel,</i> and <i>after his words they spoke not
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again?</i> <scripRef id="Job.iv-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.29.21-Job.29.22" parsed="|Job|29|21|29|22" passage="Job 29:21,22"><i>ch.</i> xxix. 21,
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11</scripRef>. Surely his wisdom failed him, (1.) When he took so
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much pains to express his desire that he had never been born,
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which, at the best was a vain wish, for it is impossible to make
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that which has been not to have been. (2.) When he was so liberal
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of his curses upon a day and a night that could not be hurt, or
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made any the worse for his curses. (3.) When he wished a thing so
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very barbarous to his own mother as that she had not brought him
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forth when her full time had come, which must inevitably have been
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her death, and a miserable death. (4.) When he despised the
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goodness of God to him in giving him a being (such a being, so
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noble and excellent a life, such a life, so far above that of any
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other creature in this lower world), and undervalued the gift, as
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not worth the acceptance, only because <i>transit cum onere—it was
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clogged with a proviso of trouble,</i> which now at length came
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upon him, after many years' enjoyment of its pleasures. What a
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foolish thing it was to wish that his eyes had never seen the
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light, that so they might not have seen sorrow, which yet he might
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hope to see through, and beyond which he might see joy! Did Job
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believe and hope that he should <i>in his flesh see God at the
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latter day</i> (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p11.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.26" parsed="|Job|19|26|0|0" passage="Job 19:26"><i>ch.</i> xix.
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26</scripRef>), and yet would he wish he had never had a being
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capable of such a bliss, only because, for the present, he had
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sorrow in the flesh? God by his grace arm us against this foolish
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and hurtful lust of impatience.</p>
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</div><scripCom id="Job.iv-p11.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.11-Job.3.19" parsed="|Job|3|11|3|19" passage="Job 3:11-19" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Job.3.11-Job.3.19">
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<h4 id="Job.iv-p11.5">Job's Complaint of Life. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Job.iv-p11.6">b. c.</span> 1520.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Job.iv-p12">11 Why died I not from the womb? <i>why</i> did
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I <i>not</i> give up the ghost when I came out of the belly?
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12 Why did the knees prevent me? or why the breasts that I should
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suck? 13 For now should I have lain still and been quiet, I
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should have slept: then had I been at rest, 14 With kings
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and counsellors of the earth, which built desolate places for
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themselves; 15 Or with princes that had gold, who filled
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their houses with silver: 16 Or as a hidden untimely birth I
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had not been; as infants <i>which</i> never saw light. 17
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There the wicked cease <i>from</i> troubling; and there the weary
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be at rest. 18 <i>There</i> the prisoners rest together;
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they hear not the voice of the oppressor. 19 The small and
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great are there; and the servant <i>is</i> free from his
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master.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p13">Job, perhaps reflecting upon himself for
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his folly in wishing he had never been born, follows it, and thinks
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to mend it, with another, little better, that he had died as soon
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as he was born, which he enlarges upon in these verses. When our
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|||
|
Saviour would set forth a very calamitous state of things he seems
|
|||
|
to allow such a saying as this, <i>Blessed are the barren, and the
|
|||
|
wombs that never bore, and the paps which never gave suck</i>
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Job.iv-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.23.29" parsed="|Luke|23|29|0|0" passage="Lu 23:29">Luke xxiii. 29</scripRef>); but
|
|||
|
blessing the barren womb is one thing and cursing the fruitful womb
|
|||
|
is another! It is good to make the best of afflictions, but it is
|
|||
|
not good to make the worst of mercies. Our rule is, <i>Bless, and
|
|||
|
curse not.</i> Life is often put for all good, and death for all
|
|||
|
evil; yet Job here very absurdly complains of life and its supports
|
|||
|
as a curse and plague to him, and covets death and the grave as the
|
|||
|
greatest and most desirable bliss. Surely Satan was deceived in Job
|
|||
|
when he applied that maxim to him, <i>All that a man hath will he
|
|||
|
give for his life;</i> for never any man valued life at a lower
|
|||
|
rate than he did.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p14">I. He ungratefully quarrels with life, and
|
|||
|
is angry that it was not taken from him as soon as it was given him
|
|||
|
(<scripRef id="Job.iv-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.11-Job.3.12" parsed="|Job|3|11|3|12" passage="Job 3:11,12"><i>v.</i> 11, 12</scripRef>):
|
|||
|
<i>Why died not I from the womb?</i> See here, 1. What a weak and
|
|||
|
helpless creature man is when he comes into the world, and how
|
|||
|
slender the thread of life is when it is first drawn. We are ready
|
|||
|
to die from the womb, and to breathe our last as soon as we begin
|
|||
|
to breathe at all. We can do nothing for ourselves, as other
|
|||
|
creatures can, but should drop into the grave if the knees did not
|
|||
|
prevent us; and the lamp of life, when first lighted, would go out
|
|||
|
of itself if the breasts given us, that we should suck, did not
|
|||
|
supply it with fresh oil. 2. What a merciful and tender care divine
|
|||
|
Providence took of us at our entrance into the world. It was owing
|
|||
|
to this that we <i>died not from the womb</i> and did not <i>give
|
|||
|
up the ghost when we came out of the belly.</i> Why were we not cut
|
|||
|
off as soon as we were born? Not because we did not deserve it.
|
|||
|
Justly might such weeds have been plucked up as soon as they
|
|||
|
appeared; justly might such cockatrices have been crushed in the
|
|||
|
egg. Nor was it because we did, or could, take any care of
|
|||
|
ourselves and our own safety: no creature comes into the world so
|
|||
|
shiftless as man. It was not our might, or the power of our hand,
|
|||
|
that preserved us these beings, but God's power and providence
|
|||
|
upheld our frail lives, and his pity and patience spared our
|
|||
|
forfeited lives. It was owing to this that the knees prevented us.
|
|||
|
Natural affection is put into parents' hearts by the hand of the
|
|||
|
God of nature: and hence it was that the blessings of the breast
|
|||
|
attended those of the womb. 3. What a great deal of vanity and
|
|||
|
vexation of spirit attends human life. If we had not a God to serve
|
|||
|
in this world, and better things to hope for in another world,
|
|||
|
considering the faculties we are endued with and the troubles we
|
|||
|
are surrounded with, we should be strongly tempted to wish that we
|
|||
|
had <i>died from the womb,</i> which would have prevented a great
|
|||
|
deal both of sin and misery.</p>
|
|||
|
<verse id="Job.iv-p14.2">
|
|||
|
<l class="t1" id="Job.iv-p14.3">He that is born to-day, and dies to-morrow,</l>
|
|||
|
<l class="t1" id="Job.iv-p14.4">Loses some hours of joy, but months of sorrow.</l>
|
|||
|
</verse>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p15">4. The evil of impatience, fretfulness, and
|
|||
|
discontent. When they thus prevail they are unreasonable and
|
|||
|
absurd, impious and ungrateful. To indulge them is a slighting and
|
|||
|
undervaluing of God's favour. How much soever life is embittered,
|
|||
|
we must say, "It was of the Lord's mercies that we died not from
|
|||
|
the womb, that we were not consumed." Hatred of life is a
|
|||
|
contradiction to the common sense and sentiments of mankind, and to
|
|||
|
our own at any other time. Let discontented people declaim ever so
|
|||
|
much against life, they will be loth to part with it when it comes
|
|||
|
to the point. When the old man in the fable, being tired with his
|
|||
|
burden, threw it down with discontent and called for Death, and
|
|||
|
Death came to him and asked him what he would have with him, he
|
|||
|
then answered, "Nothing, but to help me up with my burden."</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p16">II. He passionately applauds death and the
|
|||
|
grave, and seems quite in love with them. To desire to die that we
|
|||
|
may be with Christ, that we may be free from sin, and that we may
|
|||
|
be <i>clothed upon with our house which is from heaven,</i> is the
|
|||
|
effect and evidence of grace; but to desire to die only that we may
|
|||
|
be quiet in the grave, and delivered from the troubles of this
|
|||
|
life, savours of corruption. Job's considerations here may be of
|
|||
|
good use to reconcile us to death when it comes, and to make us
|
|||
|
easy under the arrest of it; but they ought not to be made use of
|
|||
|
as a pretence to quarrel with life while it is continued, or to
|
|||
|
make us uneasy under the burdens of it. It is our wisdom and duty
|
|||
|
to make the best of that which is, be it living or dying, and so to
|
|||
|
<i>live to the Lord</i> and <i>die to the Lord,</i> and to be his
|
|||
|
in both, <scripRef id="Job.iv-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.14.8" parsed="|Rom|14|8|0|0" passage="Ro 14:8">Rom. xiv. 8</scripRef>. Job
|
|||
|
here frets himself with thinking that if he had but died as soon as
|
|||
|
he was born, and been carried from the womb to the grave, 1. His
|
|||
|
condition would have been as good as that of the best: I would have
|
|||
|
been (says he, <scripRef id="Job.iv-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.14" parsed="|Job|3|14|0|0" passage="Job 3:14"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
14</scripRef>) <i>with kings and counsellors of the earth,</i>
|
|||
|
whose pomp, power, and policy, cannot set them out of the reach of
|
|||
|
death, nor secure them from the grave, nor distinguish theirs from
|
|||
|
common dust in the grave. Even princes, who had gold in abundance,
|
|||
|
could not with it bribe Death to overlook them when he came with
|
|||
|
commission; and, though they filled their houses with silver, yet
|
|||
|
they were forced to leave it all behind them, no more to return to
|
|||
|
it. Some, by the <i>desolate places</i> which the kings and
|
|||
|
counsellors are here said <i>to build for themselves,</i>
|
|||
|
understand the sepulchres or monuments they prepared for themselves
|
|||
|
in their life-time; as Shebna (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p16.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.22.16" parsed="|Isa|22|16|0|0" passage="Isa 22:16">Isa.
|
|||
|
xxii. 16</scripRef>) <i>hewed himself out a sepulchre;</i> and by
|
|||
|
the gold which the princes had, and the silver with which they
|
|||
|
filled their houses, they understand the treasures which, they say,
|
|||
|
it was usual to deposit in the graves of great men. Such arts have
|
|||
|
been used to preserve their dignity, if possible, on the other side
|
|||
|
death, and to keep themselves from lying even with those of
|
|||
|
inferior rank; but it will not do: death is, and will be, an
|
|||
|
irresistible leveller. <i>Mors sceptra ligonibus æquat—Death
|
|||
|
mingles sceptres with spades. Rich and poor meet together</i> in
|
|||
|
the grave; and there a <i>hidden untimely birth</i> (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p16.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.16" parsed="|Job|3|16|0|0" passage="Job 3:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>), a child that either
|
|||
|
never saw light or but just opened its eyes and peeped into the
|
|||
|
world, and, not liking it, closed them again and hastened out of
|
|||
|
it, lies as soft and easy, lies as high and safe, as kings and
|
|||
|
counsellors, and princes, that had gold. "And therefore," says Job,
|
|||
|
"would I had lain there in the dust, rather than to lie here in the
|
|||
|
ashes!" 2. His condition would have been much better than now it
|
|||
|
was (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p16.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.13" parsed="|Job|3|13|0|0" passage="Job 3:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>):
|
|||
|
"<i>Then should I have lain still, and been quiet,</i> which now I
|
|||
|
cannot do, I cannot be, but am still tossing and unquiet; then <i>I
|
|||
|
should have slept,</i> whereas now sleep departeth from my eyes;
|
|||
|
<i>then had I been at rest,</i> whereas now I am restless." Now
|
|||
|
that life and immortality are brought to a much clearer light by
|
|||
|
the gospel than before they were placed in good Christians can give
|
|||
|
a better account than this of the gain of death: "Then should I
|
|||
|
have been present with the Lord; then should I have seen his glory
|
|||
|
face to face, and no longer through a glass darkly." But all that
|
|||
|
poor Job dreamed of was rest and quietness in the grave out of the
|
|||
|
fear of evil tidings and out of the feeling of sore boils. <i>Then
|
|||
|
should I have been quiet;</i> and had he kept his temper, his even
|
|||
|
easy temper still, which he was in as recorded in the two foregoing
|
|||
|
chapters, entirely resigned to the holy will of God and acquiescing
|
|||
|
in it, he might have been quiet now; his soul, at least, might have
|
|||
|
dwelt at ease, even when his body lay in pain, <scripRef id="Job.iv-p16.6" osisRef="Bible:Ps.25.13" parsed="|Ps|25|13|0|0" passage="Ps 25:13">Ps. xxv. 13</scripRef>. Observe how finely he describes
|
|||
|
the repose of the grave, which (provided the soul also be at rest
|
|||
|
in God) may much assist our triumphs over it. (1.) Those that now
|
|||
|
are troubled will there be out of the reach of trouble (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p16.7" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.17" parsed="|Job|3|17|0|0" passage="Job 3:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>): <i>There the wicked
|
|||
|
cease from troubling.</i> When persecutors die they can no longer
|
|||
|
persecute; their <i>hatred and envy</i> will then <i>perish.</i>
|
|||
|
Herod had vexed the church, but, when he became a prey for worms,
|
|||
|
he ceased from troubling. When the persecuted die they are out of
|
|||
|
the danger of being any further troubled. Had Job been at rest in
|
|||
|
his grave, he would have had no disturbance from the Sabeans and
|
|||
|
Chaldeans, none of all his enemies would have created him any
|
|||
|
trouble. (2.) Those that are now toiled will there see the period
|
|||
|
of their toils. <i>There the weary are at rest.</i> Heaven is more
|
|||
|
than a rest to the souls of the saints, but the grave is a rest to
|
|||
|
their bodies. Their pilgrimage is a weary pilgrimage; sin and the
|
|||
|
world they are weary of; their services, sufferings, and
|
|||
|
expectations, they are wearied with; but in the grave they <i>rest
|
|||
|
from all their labours,</i> <scripRef id="Job.iv-p16.8" osisRef="Bible:Rev.14.13 Bible:Isa.57.23" parsed="|Rev|14|13|0|0;|Isa|57|23|0|0" passage="Re 14:13,Isa 57:23">Rev. xiv. 13; Isa. lvii. 23</scripRef>. They
|
|||
|
are easy there, and make no complaints; there believers sleep in
|
|||
|
Jesus. (3.) Those that were here enslaved are there at liberty.
|
|||
|
Death is the prisoner's discharge, the relief of the oppressed, and
|
|||
|
the servant's manumission (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p16.9" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.18" parsed="|Job|3|18|0|0" passage="Job 3:18"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
18</scripRef>): <i>There the prisoners,</i> though they walk not at
|
|||
|
large, yet they <i>rest together,</i> and are not put to work, to
|
|||
|
grind in that prison-house. They are no more insulted and trampled
|
|||
|
upon, menaced and terrified, by their cruel task-masters: <i>They
|
|||
|
hear not the voice of the oppressor.</i> Those that were here
|
|||
|
doomed to perpetual servitude, that could call nothing their own,
|
|||
|
no, not their own bodies, are there no longer under command or
|
|||
|
control: <i>There the servant is free from his master,</i> which is
|
|||
|
a good reason why those that have power should use it moderately,
|
|||
|
and those that are in subjection should bear it patiently, yet a
|
|||
|
little while. (4.) Those that were at a vast distance from others
|
|||
|
are there upon a level (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p16.10" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.19" parsed="|Job|3|19|0|0" passage="Job 3:19"><i>v.</i>
|
|||
|
19</scripRef>): <i>The small and great are there,</i> there the
|
|||
|
same, there all one, all alike free among the dead. The tedious
|
|||
|
pomp and state which attend the great are at an end there. All the
|
|||
|
inconveniences of a poor and low condition are likewise over; death
|
|||
|
and the grave know no difference.</p>
|
|||
|
<verse id="Job.iv-p16.11">
|
|||
|
<l class="t1" id="Job.iv-p16.12">Levelled by death, the conqueror and the slave,</l>
|
|||
|
<l class="t1" id="Job.iv-p16.13">The wise and foolish, cowards and the brave,</l>
|
|||
|
<l class="t1" id="Job.iv-p16.14">Lie mixed and undistinguished in the grave.</l>
|
|||
|
</verse>
|
|||
|
<attr id="Job.iv-p16.15">Sir <span class="smallcaps" id="Job.iv-p16.16">R. Blackmore</span>.</attr>
|
|||
|
</div><scripCom id="Job.iv-p16.17" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.20-Job.3.26" parsed="|Job|3|20|3|26" passage="Job 3:20-26" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Job.3.20-Job.3.26">
|
|||
|
<p class="passage" id="Job.iv-p17">20 Wherefore is light given to him that is in
|
|||
|
misery, and life unto the bitter <i>in</i> soul; 21 Which
|
|||
|
long for death, but it <i>cometh</i> not; and dig for it more than
|
|||
|
for hid treasures; 22 Which rejoice exceedingly, <i>and</i>
|
|||
|
are glad, when they can find the grave? 23 <i>Why is light
|
|||
|
given</i> to a man whose way is hid, and whom God hath hedged in?
|
|||
|
24 For my sighing cometh before I eat, and my roarings are
|
|||
|
poured out like the waters. 25 For the thing which I greatly
|
|||
|
feared is come upon me, and that which I was afraid of is come unto
|
|||
|
me. 26 I was not in safety, neither had I rest, neither was
|
|||
|
I quiet; yet trouble came.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p18">Job, finding it to no purpose to wish
|
|||
|
either that he had not been born or had died as soon as he was
|
|||
|
born, here complains that his life was now continued and not cut
|
|||
|
off. When men are set on quarrelling there is no end of it; the
|
|||
|
corrupt heart will carry on the humour. Having cursed the day of
|
|||
|
his birth, here he courts the day of his death. The beginning of
|
|||
|
this strife and impatience is as the letting forth of water.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p19">I. He thinks it hard, in general, that
|
|||
|
miserable lives should be prolonged (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.20-Job.3.22" parsed="|Job|3|20|3|22" passage="Job 3:20-22"><i>v.</i> 20-22</scripRef>): <i>Wherefore is light in
|
|||
|
life given to those that are bitter in soul?</i> Bitterness of
|
|||
|
soul, through spiritual grievances, makes life itself bitter.
|
|||
|
<i>Why doth he give light?</i> (so it is in the original): he means
|
|||
|
<i>God,</i> yet does not name him, though the devil had said, "He
|
|||
|
will curse thee to thy face;" but he tacitly reflects on the divine
|
|||
|
Providence as unjust and unkind in continuing life when the
|
|||
|
comforts of life are removed. Life is called <i>light,</i> because
|
|||
|
pleasant and serviceable for walking and working. It is
|
|||
|
candle-light; the longer it burns the shorter it is, and the nearer
|
|||
|
to the socket. This light is said to be given us; for, if it were
|
|||
|
not daily renewed to us by a fresh gift, it would be lost. But Job
|
|||
|
reckons that to those who are in misery it is <b><i>doron
|
|||
|
adoron</i></b>—<i>gift and no gift,</i> a gift that they had
|
|||
|
better be without, while the light only serves them to see their
|
|||
|
own misery by. Such is the vanity of human life that it sometimes
|
|||
|
becomes a vexation of spirit; and so alterable is the property of
|
|||
|
death that, though dreadful to nature, it may become desirable even
|
|||
|
to nature itself. He here speaks of those, 1. Who long for death,
|
|||
|
when they have out-lived their comforts and usefulness, are
|
|||
|
burdened with age and infirmities, with pain or sickness, poverty
|
|||
|
or disgrace, and yet it comes not; while, at the same time, it
|
|||
|
comes to many who dread it and would put it far from them. The
|
|||
|
continuance and period of life must be according to God's will, not
|
|||
|
according to ours. It is not fit that we should be consulted how
|
|||
|
long we would live and when we would die; our times are in a better
|
|||
|
hand than our own. 2. Who <i>dig for it as for hidden
|
|||
|
treasures,</i> that is, would give any thing for a fair dismission
|
|||
|
out of this world, which supposes that <i>then</i> the thought of
|
|||
|
men's being their own executioners was not so much as entertained
|
|||
|
or suggested, else those who longed for it needed not take much
|
|||
|
pains for it, they might soon come at it (as Seneca tells them) if
|
|||
|
they are pleased. 3. Who bid it welcome, and <i>are glad</i> when
|
|||
|
they can find the grave and see themselves stepping into it. If the
|
|||
|
miseries of this life can prevail, contrary to nature, to make
|
|||
|
death itself desirable, shall not much more the hopes and prospects
|
|||
|
of a better life, to which death is our passage, make it so, and
|
|||
|
set us quite above the fear of it? It may be a sin to long for
|
|||
|
death, but I am sure it is no sin to long for heaven.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p20">II. He thinks himself, in particular,
|
|||
|
hardly dealt with, that he might not be eased of his pain and
|
|||
|
misery by death when he could not get ease in any other way. To be
|
|||
|
thus impatient of life for the sake of the troubles we meet with is
|
|||
|
not only unnatural in itself, but ungrateful to the giver of life,
|
|||
|
and argues a sinful indulgence of our own passion and a sinful
|
|||
|
inconsideration of our future state. Let it be our great and
|
|||
|
constant care to get ready for another world, and then let us leave
|
|||
|
it to God to order the circumstances of our removal thither as he
|
|||
|
thinks fit: "Lord, when and how thou pleasest;" and this with such
|
|||
|
an indifference that, if he should refer it to us, we would refer
|
|||
|
it to him again. Grace teaches us, in the midst of life's greatest
|
|||
|
comforts, to be willing to die, and, in the midst of its greatest
|
|||
|
crosses, to be willing to live. Job, to excuse himself in this
|
|||
|
earnest desire which he had to die, pleads the little comfort and
|
|||
|
satisfaction he had in life.</p>
|
|||
|
<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p21">1. In his present afflicted state troubles
|
|||
|
were continually felt, and were likely to be so. He thought he had
|
|||
|
cause enough to be weary of living, for, (1.) He had no comfort of
|
|||
|
his life: <i>My sighing comes before I eat,</i> <scripRef id="Job.iv-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.24" parsed="|Job|3|24|0|0" passage="Job 3:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>. The sorrows of life prevented
|
|||
|
and anticipated the supports of life; nay, they took away his
|
|||
|
appetite for his necessary food. His griefs returned as duly as his
|
|||
|
meals, and affliction was his daily bread. Nay, so great was the
|
|||
|
extremity of his pain and anguish that he did not only sigh, but
|
|||
|
roar, and his <i>roarings were poured out like the waters</i> in a
|
|||
|
full and constant stream. Our Master was acquainted with grief, and
|
|||
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we must expect to be so too. (2.) He had no prospect of bettering
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his condition: <i>His way was hidden,</i> and God had <i>hedged him
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in,</i> <scripRef id="Job.iv-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.23" parsed="|Job|3|23|0|0" passage="Job 3:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>. He
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saw no way open of deliverance, nor knew he what course to take;
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his way was <i>hedged up with thorns,</i> that he could not find
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his path. See <scripRef id="Job.iv-p21.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.23.8 Bible:Lam.3.7" parsed="|Job|23|8|0|0;|Lam|3|7|0|0" passage="Job 23:8,La 3:7"><i>ch.</i> xxiii.
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8; Lam. iii. 7</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.iv-p22">2. Even in his former prosperous state
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troubles were continually feared; so that <i>then</i> he was never
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easy, <scripRef id="Job.iv-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.25-Job.3.26" parsed="|Job|3|25|3|26" passage="Job 3:25,26"><i>v.</i> 25, 26</scripRef>.
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He knew so much of the vanity of the world, and the troubles to
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which, of course, he was born, that he was <i>not in safety,
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neither had he rest</i> then. That which made his grief now the
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more grievous was that he was not conscious to himself of any great
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degree either of negligence or security in the day of his
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prosperity, which might provoke God thus to chastise him. (1.) He
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had not been negligent and unmindful of his affairs, but kept up
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such a fear of trouble as was necessary to the maintaining of his
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guard. He was afraid for his children when they were feasting, lest
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they should offend God (<scripRef id="Job.iv-p22.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.1.5" parsed="|Job|1|5|0|0" passage="Job 1:5"><i>ch.</i> i.
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5</scripRef>), afraid for his servants lest they should offend his
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neighbours; he took all the care he could of his own health, and
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managed himself and his affairs with all possible precaution; yet
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all would not do. (2.) He had not been secure, nor indulged himself
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in ease and softness, had not trusted in his wealth, nor flattered
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himself with the hopes of the perpetuity of his mirth; yet trouble
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came, to convince and remind him of the vanity of the world, which
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yet he had not forgotten when he lived at ease. Thus his way was
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hidden, for he knew not wherefore God contended with him. Now this
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consideration, instead of aggravating his grief, might rather serve
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to alleviate it. Nothing will make trouble easy so much as the
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testimony of our consciences for us, that, in some measure, we did
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our duty in a day of prosperity; and an expectation of trouble will
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make it sit the lighter when it comes. The less it is a surprise
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the less it is a terror.</p>
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</div></div2>
|