We left Job honourably acquitted upon a fair trial
between God and Satan concerning him. Satan had leave to touch, to
touch and take, all he had, and was confident that he would then
curse God to his face; but, on the contrary, he blessed him, and so
he was proved an honest man and Satan a false accuser. Now, one
would have thought, this would be conclusive, and that Job would
never have his reputation called in question again; but Job is
known to be armour of proof, and therefore is here set up for a
mark, and brought upon his trial, a second time. I. Satan moves for
another trial, which should touch his bone and his flesh,
1 Again there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord, and Satan came also among them to present himself before the Lord. 2 And the Lord said unto Satan, From whence comest thou? And Satan answered the Lord, and said, From going to and fro in the earth, and from walking up and down in it. 3 And the Lord said unto Satan, Hast thou considered my servant Job, that there is none like him in the earth, a perfect and an upright man, one that feareth God, and escheweth evil? and still he holdeth fast his integrity, although thou movedst me against him, to destroy him without cause. 4 And Satan answered the Lord, and said, Skin for skin, yea, all that a man hath will he give for his life. 5 But put forth thine hand now, and touch his bone and his flesh, and he will curse thee to thy face. 6 And the Lord said unto Satan, Behold, he is in thine hand; but save his life.
Satan, that sworn enemy to God and all good
men, is here pushing forward his malicious prosecution of Job, whom
he hated because God loved him, and did all he could to separate
between him and his God, to sow discord and make mischief between
them, urging God to afflict him and then urging him to blaspheme
God. One would have thought that he had enough of his former
attempt upon Job, in which he was so shamefully baffled and
disappointed; but malice is restless: the devil and his instruments
are so. Those that calumniate good people, and accuse them falsely,
will have their saying, though the evidence to the contrary be ever
so plain and full and they have been cast in the issue which they
themselves have put it upon. Satan will have Job's cause called
over again. The malicious, unreasonable, importunity of that great
persecutor of the saints is represented (
I. The court set, and the prosecutor, or
accuser, making his appearance (
II. The judge himself of counsel for the
accused, and pleading for him (
III. The accusation further prosecuted,
IV. A challenge given to make a further
trial of Job's integrity (
V. A permission granted to Satan to make
this trial,
7 So went Satan forth from the presence of the Lord, and smote Job with sore boils from the sole of his foot unto his crown. 8 And he took him a potsherd to scrape himself withal; and he sat down among the ashes. 9 Then said his wife unto him, Dost thou still retain thine integrity? curse God, and die. 10 But he said unto her, Thou speakest as one of the foolish women speaketh. What? shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil? In all this did not Job sin with his lips.
The devil, having got leave to tear and
worry poor Job, presently fell to work with him, as a tormentor
first and then as a tempter. His own children he tempts first, and
draws them to sin, and afterwards torments, when thereby he has
brought them to ruin; but this child of God he tormented with an
affliction, and then tempted to make a bad use of his affliction.
That which he aimed at was to make Job curse God; now here we are
told what course he took both to move him to it and move it to him,
both to give him the provocation, else he would not have thought of
it: thus artfully in the temptation managed with all the subtlety
of the old serpent, who is here playing the same game against Job
that he played against our first parents (
I. He provokes him to curse God by smiting
him with sore boils, and so making him a burden to himself,
1. The disease with which Job was seized
was very grievous: Satan smote him with boils, sore boils,
all over him, from head to foot, with an evil inflammation
(so some render it), an erysipelas, perhaps, in a higher degree.
One boil, when it is gathering, is torment enough, and gives a man
abundance of pain and uneasiness. What a condition was Job then in,
that had boils all over him, and no part free, and those as of
raging a heat as the devil could make them, and, as it were, set
on fire of hell! The small-pox is a very grievous and painful
disease, and would be much more terrible than it is but that we
know the extremity of it ordinarily lasts but a few days; how
grievous then was the disease of Job, who was smitten all over with
sore boils or grievous ulcers, which made him sick at heart, put
him to exquisite torture, and so spread themselves over him that he
could lie down no way for any ease. If at any time we be exercised
with sore and grievous distempers, let us not think ourselves dealt
with any otherwise than as God has sometimes dealt with the best of
his saints and servants. We know not how much Satan may have a hand
(by divine permission) in the diseases with which the children of
men, and especially the children of God, are afflicted, what
infections that prince of the air may spread, what inflammations
may come from that fiery serpent. We read of one whom Satan had
bound many years,
2. His management of himself, in this
distemper, was very strange,
(1.) Instead of healing salves, he took
a potsherd, a piece of a broken pitcher, to scrape himself
withal. A very sad pass this poor man had come to. When a man
is sick and sore he may bear it the better if he be well tended and
carefully looked after. Many rich people have with a soft and
tender hand charitably ministered to the poor in such a condition
as this; even Lazarus had some ease from the tongues of the dogs
that came and licked his sores; but poor Job has no help
afforded him. [1.] Nothing is done to his sore but what he does
himself, with his own hands. His children and servants are all
dead, his wife unkind,
(2.) Instead of reposing in a soft and warm
bed, he sat down among the ashes. Probably he had a bed left
him (for, though his fields were stripped, we do not find that his
house was burnt or plundered), but he chose to sit in the ashes,
either because he was weary of his bed or because he would put
himself into the place and posture of a penitent, who, in token of
his self-abhorrence, lay in dust and ashes,
II. He urges him, by the persuasions of his
own wife, to curse God,
Thus Satan still endeavours to draw men from God, as he did our first parents, by suggesting hard thoughts of him, as one that envies the happiness and delights in the misery of his creatures, than which nothing is more false. Another artifice he uses is to drive men from their religion by loading them with scoffs and reproaches for their adherence to it. We have reason to expect it, but we are fools if we heed it. Our Master himself has undergone it, we shall be abundantly recompensed for it, and with much more reason may we retort it upon the scoffers, "Are you such fools as still to retain your impiety, when you might bless God and live?" 2. She urges him to renounce his religion, to blaspheme God, set him at defiance, and dare him to do his worst: "Curse God and die; live no longer in dependence upon God, wait not for relief from him, but be thy own deliverer by being thy own executioner; end thy troubles by ending thy life; better die once than be always dying thus; thou mayest now despair of having any help from thy God, even curse him, and hang thyself." These are two of the blackest and most horrid of all Satan's temptations, and yet such as good men have sometimes been violently assaulted with. Nothing is more contrary to natural conscience than blaspheming God, nor to natural sense than self-murder; therefore the suggestion of either of these may well be suspected to come immediately from Satan. Lord, lead us not into temptation, not into such, not into any temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.
III. He bravely resists and overcomes the
temptation,
1. How he resented the temptation. He was
very indignant at having such a thing mentioned to him: "What!
Curse God? I abhor the thought of it. Get thee behind me,
Satan." In other cases Job reasoned with his wife with a great
deal of mildness, even when she was unkind to him (
2. How he reasoned against the temptation:
Shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not
receive evil also? Those whom we reprove we must endeavour to
convince; and it is no hard matter to give a reason why we should
still hold fast our integrity even when we are stripped of every
thing else. He considers that, though good and evil are contraries,
yet they do not come from contrary causes, but both from the hand
of God (
(1.) What he argues for, not only the
bearing, but the receiving of evil: Shall we not receive
evil, that is, [1.] "Shall we not expect to receive it? If God
give us so many good things, shall we be surprised, or think it
strange, if he sometimes afflict us, when he has told us that
prosperity and adversity are set the one over against the other?"
(2.) What he argues from: "Shall we receive
so much good as has come to us from the hand of God during all
those years of peace and prosperity that we have lived, and shall
we not now receive evil, when God thinks fit to lay it on us?"
Note, The consideration of the mercies we receive from God, both
past and present, should make us receive our afflictions with a
suitable disposition of spirit. If we receive our share of the
common good in the seven years of plenty, shall we not receive our
share of the common evil in the years of famine? Qui sentit
commodum, sentire debet et onus—he who feels the privilege, should
prepare for the privation. If we have so much that pleases us,
why should we not be content with that which pleases God? If we
receive so many comforts, shall we not receive some afflictions,
which will serve as foils to our comforts, to make them the more
valuable (we are taught the worth of mercies by being made to want
them sometimes), and as allays to our comforts, to make them the
less dangerous, to keep the balance even, and to prevent our being
lifted up above measure?
IV. Thus, in a good measure, Job still held
fast his integrity, and Satan's design against him was defeated:
In all this did not Job sin with his lips; he not only said
this well, but all he said at this time was under the government of
religion and right reason. In the midst of all these grievances he
did not speak a word amiss; and we have no reason to think but that
he also preserved a good temper of mind, so that, though there
might be some stirrings and risings of corruption in his heart, yet
grace got the upper hand and he took care that the root of
bitterness might not spring up to trouble him,
11 Now when Job's three friends heard of all this evil that was come upon him, they came every one from his own place; Eliphaz the Temanite, and Bildad the Shuhite, and Zophar the Naamathite: for they had made an appointment together to come to mourn with him and to comfort him. 12 And when they lifted up their eyes afar off, and knew him not, they lifted up their voice, and wept; and they rent every one his mantle, and sprinkled dust upon their heads toward heaven. 13 So they sat down with him upon the ground seven days and seven nights, and none spake a word unto him: for they saw that his grief was very great.
We have here an account of the kind visit
which Job's three friends paid him in his affliction. The news of
his extraordinary troubles spread into all parts, he being an
eminent man both for greatness and goodness, and the circumstances
of his troubles being very uncommon. Some, who were his enemies,
triumphed in his calamities,
I. That Job, in his prosperity, had
contracted a friendship with them. If they were his equals, yet he
had not that jealousy of them—if his inferiors, yet he had not
that disdain of them, which was any hindrance to an intimate
converse and correspondence with them. To have such friends added
more to his happiness in the day of his prosperity than all the
head of cattle he was master of. Much of the comfort of this life
lies in acquaintance and friendship with those that are prudent and
virtuous; and he that has a few such friends ought to value them
highly. Job's three friends are supposed to have been all of them
of the posterity of Abraham, which, for some descents, even in the
families that were shut out from the covenant of peculiarity,
retained some good fruits of that pious education which the father
of the faithful gave to those under his charge. Eliphaz descended
from Teman, the grandson of Esau (
II. That they continued their friendship
with Job in his adversity, when most of his friends had forsaken
him,
1. By the kind visit they paid him in his
affliction, to mourn with him and to comfort him,
(1.) By visiting the sons and daughters of
affliction we may contribute to the improvement, [1.] Of our own
graces; for many a good lesson is to be learned from the troubles
of others; we may look upon them and receive instruction, and be
made wise and serious. [2.] Of their comforts. By putting a respect
upon them we encourage them, and some good word may be spoken to
them which may help to make them easy. Job's friends came, not to
satisfy their curiosity with an account of his troubles and the
strangeness of the circumstances of them, much less, as David's
false friends, to make invidious remarks upon him (
(2.) Concerning these visitants observe,
[1.] That they were not sent for, but came of their own accord
(
2. By their tender sympathy with him and
concern for him in his affliction. When they saw him at some
distance he was so disfigured and deformed with his sores that
they knew him not,
They spoke not a word to him, whatever they
said one to another, by way of instruction, for the improvement of
the present providence. They said nothing to that purport to which
afterwards they said much—nothing to grieve him (