590 lines
42 KiB
XML
590 lines
42 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Job.vii" n="vii" next="Job.viii" prev="Job.vi" progress="3.65%" title="Chapter VI">
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<h2 id="Job.vii-p0.1">J O B</h2>
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<h3 id="Job.vii-p0.2">CHAP. VI.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Job.vii-p1">Eliphaz concluded his discourse with an air of
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assurance; very confident he was that what he had said was so plain
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and so pertinent that nothing could be objected in answer to it.
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But, though he that is first in his own cause seems just, yet his
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neighbour comes and searches him. Job is not convinced by all he
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had said, but still justifies himself in his complaints and
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condemns him for the weakness of his arguing. I. He shows that he
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had just cause to complain as he did of his troubles, and so it
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would appear to any impartial judge, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.2-Job.6.7" parsed="|Job|6|2|6|7" passage="Job 6:2-7">ver. 2-7</scripRef>. II. He continues his passionate
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wish that he might speedily be cut off by the stroke of death, and
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so be eased of all his miseries, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.8-Job.6.13" parsed="|Job|6|8|6|13" passage="Job 6:8-13">ver. 8-13</scripRef>. III. He reproves his friends for
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their uncharitable censures of him and their unkind treatment,
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<scripRef id="Job.vii-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.14-Job.6.30" parsed="|Job|6|14|6|30" passage="Job 6:14-30">ver. 14-30</scripRef>. It must be
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owned that Job, in all this, spoke much that was reasonable, but
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with a mixture of passion and human infirmity. And in this contest,
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as indeed in most contests, there was fault on both sides.</p>
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<scripCom id="Job.vii-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.6" parsed="|Job|6|0|0|0" passage="Job 6" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Job.vii-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.1-Job.6.7" parsed="|Job|6|1|6|7" passage="Job 6:1-7" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Job.6.1-Job.6.7">
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<h4 id="Job.vii-p1.6">Job's Reply to Eliphaz. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Job.vii-p1.7">b. c.</span> 1520.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Job.vii-p2">1 But Job answered and said, 2 Oh that my
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grief were thoroughly weighed, and my calamity laid in the balances
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together! 3 For now it would be heavier than the sand of the
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sea: therefore my words are swallowed up. 4 For the arrows
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of the Almighty <i>are</i> within me, the poison whereof drinketh
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up my spirit: the terrors of God do set themselves in array against
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me. 5 Doth the wild ass bray when he hath grass? or loweth
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the ox over his fodder? 6 Can that which is unsavoury be
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eaten without salt? or is there <i>any</i> taste in the white of an
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egg? 7 The things <i>that</i> my soul refused to touch
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<i>are</i> as my sorrowful meat.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p3">Eliphaz, in the beginning of his discourse,
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had been very sharp upon Job, and yet it does not appear that Job
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gave him any interruption, but heard him patiently till he had said
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all he had to say. Those that would make an impartial judgment of a
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discourse must hear it out, and take it entire. But, when he had
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concluded, he makes his reply, in which he speaks very
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feelingly.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p4">I. He represents his calamity, in general,
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as much heavier than either he had expressed it or they had
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apprehended it, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.2-Job.6.3" parsed="|Job|6|2|6|3" passage="Job 6:2,3"><i>v.</i> 2,
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3</scripRef>. He could not fully describe it; they would not fully
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apprehend it, or at least would not own that they did; and
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therefore he would gladly appeal to a third person, who had just
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weights and just balances with which to weigh his grief and
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calamity, and would do it with an impartial hand. He wished that
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they would set his grief and all the expressions of it in one
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scale, his calamity and all the particulars of it in the other, and
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(though he would not altogether justify himself in his grief) they
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would find (as he says, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.23.2" parsed="|Job|23|2|0|0" passage="Job 23:2"><i>ch.</i>
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xxiii. 2</scripRef>) that <i>his stroke was heavier than his
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groaning;</i> for, whatever his grief was, his calamity was
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<i>heavier than the sand of the sea:</i> it was complicated, it was
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aggravated, every grievance weighty, and all together numerous as
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the sand. "Therefore (says he) <i>my words are swallowed up;</i>"
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that is, "Therefore you must excuse both the brokenness and the
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bitterness of my expressions. Do not think it strange if my speech
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be not so fine and polite as that of an eloquent orator, or so
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grave and regular as that of a morose philosopher: no, in these
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circumstances I can pretend neither to the one nor to the other; my
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words are, as I am, quite swallowed up." Now, 1. He hereby
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complains of it as his unhappiness that his friends undertook to
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administer spiritual physic to him before they thoroughly
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understood his case and knew the worst of it. It is seldom that
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those who are at ease themselves rightly weigh the afflictions of
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the afflicted. Every one feels most from his own burden; few feel
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from other people's. 2. He excuses the passionate expressions he
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had used when he cursed his day. Though he could not himself
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justify all he had said, yet he thought his friends should not thus
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violently condemn it, for really the case was extraordinary, and
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that might be connived at in such a man of sorrows as he now was
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which in any common grief would by no means be allowed. 3. He
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bespeaks the charitable and compassionate sympathy of his friends
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with him, and hopes, by representing the greatness of his calamity,
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to bring them to a better temper towards him. To those that are
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pained it is some ease to be pitied.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p5">II. He complains of the trouble and terror
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of mind he was in as the sorest part of his calamity, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.4" parsed="|Job|6|4|0|0" passage="Job 6:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>. Herein he was a type of
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Christ, who, in his sufferings, complained most of the sufferings
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of his soul. <i>Now is my soul troubled,</i> <scripRef id="Job.vii-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:John.12.27" parsed="|John|12|27|0|0" passage="Joh 12:27">John xii. 27</scripRef>. <i>My soul is exceedingly
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sorrowful,</i> <scripRef id="Job.vii-p5.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.26.38" parsed="|Matt|26|38|0|0" passage="Mt 26:38">Matt. xxvi.
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38</scripRef>. <i>My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?</i>
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<scripRef id="Job.vii-p5.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.27.46" parsed="|Matt|27|46|0|0" passage="Mt 27:46">Matt. xxvii. 46</scripRef>. Poor Job
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sadly complains here, 1. Of what he felt <i>The arrows of the
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Almighty are within me.</i> It was not so much the troubles
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themselves he was under that put him into this confusion, his
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poverty, disgrace, and bodily pain; but that which cut him to the
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heart and put him into this agitation, was to think that the God he
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loved and served had brought all this upon him and laid him under
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these marks of his displeasure. Note, Trouble of mind is the sorest
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trouble. <i>A wounded spirit who can bear!</i> Whatever burden of
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affliction, in body or estate, God is pleased to lay upon us, we
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may well afford to submit to it as long as he continues to the use
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of our reason and the peace of our consciences; but, if in either
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of these we be disturbed, our case is sad indeed and very pitiable.
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The way to prevent God's fiery darts of trouble is with the shield
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of faith to quench Satan's fiery darts of temptation. Observe, He
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calls them the <i>arrows of the Almighty;</i> for it is an instance
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of the power of God above that of any man that he can with his
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arrows reach the soul. He that made the soul can make his sword to
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approach to it. The poison or heat of these arrows is said to drink
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up his spirit, because it disturbed his reason, shook his
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resolution, exhausted his vigour, and threatened his life; and
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therefore his passionate expressions, though they could not be
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justified, might be excused. 2. Of what he feared. He saw himself
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charged by <i>the terrors of God,</i> as by an army set in
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battle-array, and surrounded by them. God, by his terrors, fought
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against him. As he had no comfort when he retired inward into his
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own bosom, so he had none when he looked upward towards Heaven. He
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that used to be encouraged with the consolations of God not only
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wanted those, but was amazed with the terrors of God.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p6">III. He reflects upon his friends for their
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severe censures of his complaints and their unskilful management of
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his case. 1. Their reproofs were causeless. He complained, it is
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true, now that he was in this affliction, but he never used to
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complain, as those do who are of a fretful unquiet spirit, when he
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was in prosperity: he did not <i>bray when he had grass,</i> nor
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<i>low over his fodder,</i> <scripRef id="Job.vii-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.5" parsed="|Job|6|5|0|0" passage="Job 6:5"><i>v.</i>
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5</scripRef>. But, now that he was utterly deprived of all his
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comforts, he must be a stock or a stone, and not have the sense of
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an ox or a wild ass, if he did not give some vent to his grief. He
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was forced to eat unsavoury meats, and was so poor that he had not
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a grain of salt wherewith to season them, nor to give a little
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taste to the white of an egg, which was now the choicest dish he
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had at his table, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p6.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.6" parsed="|Job|6|6|0|0" passage="Job 6:6"><i>v.</i>
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6</scripRef>. Even that food which once he would have scorned to
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touch he was now glad of, and it was his <i>sorrowful meat,</i>
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<scripRef id="Job.vii-p6.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.7" parsed="|Job|6|7|0|0" passage="Job 6:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>. Note, It is
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wisdom not to use ourselves or our children to be nice and dainty
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about meat and drink, because we know not how we or they may be
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reduced, nor how that which we now disdain may be made acceptable
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by necessity. 2. Their comforts were sapless and insipid; so some
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understand <scripRef id="Job.vii-p6.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.6-Job.6.7" parsed="|Job|6|6|6|7" passage="Job 6:6,7"><i>v.</i> 6, 7</scripRef>.
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He complains he had nothing now offered to him for his relief that
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was proper for him, no cordial, nothing to revive and cheer his
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spirits; what they had afforded was in itself as tasteless as the
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white of an egg, and, when applied to him, as loathsome and
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burdensome as the most sorrowful meat. I am sorry he should say
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thus of what Eliphaz had excellently well said, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p6.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.5.8-Job.5.13" parsed="|Job|5|8|5|13" passage="Job 5:8-13"><i>ch.</i> v. 8</scripRef>, &c. But peevish
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spirits are too apt thus to abuse their comforters.</p>
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</div><scripCom id="Job.vii-p6.6" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.8-Job.6.13" parsed="|Job|6|8|6|13" passage="Job 6:8-13" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Job.6.8-Job.6.13">
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<p class="passage" id="Job.vii-p7">8 Oh that I might have my request; and that God
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would grant <i>me</i> the thing that I long for! 9 Even that
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it would please God to destroy me; that he would let loose his
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hand, and cut me off! 10 Then should I yet have comfort;
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yea, I would harden myself in sorrow: let him not spare; for I have
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not concealed the words of the Holy One. 11 What <i>is</i>
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my strength, that I should hope? and what <i>is</i> mine end, that
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I should prolong my life? 12 <i>Is</i> my strength the
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strength of stones? or <i>is</i> my flesh of brass? 13
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<i>Is</i> not my help in me? and is wisdom driven quite from
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me?</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p8">Ungoverned passion often grows more violent
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when it meets with some rebuke and check. The troubled sea rages
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most when it dashes against a rock. Job had been courting death, as
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that which would be the happy period of his miseries, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.3.1-Job.3.26" parsed="|Job|3|1|3|26" passage="Job 3:1-26"><i>ch.</i> iii</scripRef>. For this Eliphaz
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had gravely reproved him, but he, instead of unsaying what he had
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said, says it here again with more vehemence than before; and it is
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as ill said as almost any thing we meet with in all his discourses,
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and is recorded for our admonition, not our imitation.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p9">I. He is still most passionately desirous
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to die, as if it were not possible that he should ever see good
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days again in this world, or that, by the exercise of grace and
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devotion, he might make even these days of affliction good days. He
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could see no end of his trouble but death, and had not patience to
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wait the time appointed for that. He has a request to make; there
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is a thing he longs for (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.8" parsed="|Job|6|8|0|0" passage="Job 6:8"><i>v.</i>
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8</scripRef>); and what is that? One would think it should be,
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"That it would please God to deliver me, and restore me to my
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prosperity again;" no, <i>That it would please God to destroy
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me,</i> <scripRef id="Job.vii-p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.9" parsed="|Job|6|9|0|0" passage="Job 6:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>. "As
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once he let loose his hand to make me poor, and then to make me
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sick, let him loose it once more to put an end to my life. Let him
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give the fatal stroke; it shall be to me the <i>coup de grace—the
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stroke of favour,</i>" as, in France, they call the last blow which
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dispatches those that are broken on the wheel. There was a time
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when <i>destruction from the Almighty was a terror</i> to Job
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(<scripRef id="Job.vii-p9.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.31.23" parsed="|Job|31|23|0|0" passage="Job 31:23"><i>ch.</i> xxxi. 23</scripRef>), yet
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now he courts the destruction of the flesh, but in hopes that the
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spirit should be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus. Observe,
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Though Job was extremely desirous of death, and very angry at its
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delays, yet he did not offer to destroy himself, nor to take away
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his own life, only he begged <i>that it would please God to destroy
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him.</i> Seneca's morals, which recommend self-murder as the lawful
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redress of insupportable grievances, were not then known, nor will
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ever be entertained by any that have the least regard to the law of
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God and nature. How uneasy soever the soul's confinement in the
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body may be, it must by no means break prison, but wait for a fair
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discharge.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p10">II. He puts this desire into a prayer, that
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God would grant him this request, that it would please God to do
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this for him. It was his sin so passionately to desire the
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hastening of his own death, and offering up that desire to God made
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it no better; nay, what looked ill in his wish looked worse in his
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prayer, for we ought not to ask any thing of God but what we can
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ask in faith, and we cannot ask any thing in faith but what is
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agreeable to the will of God. Passionate prayers are the worst of
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passionate expressions, for we should <i>lift up pure hands without
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wrath.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p11">III. He promises himself effectual relief,
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and the redress of all his grievances, by the stroke of death
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(<scripRef id="Job.vii-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.10" parsed="|Job|6|10|0|0" passage="Job 6:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>): "<i>Then
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should I yet have comfort,</i> which now I have not, nor ever
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expect till then." See, 1. The vanity of human life; so uncertain a
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good is it that it often proves men's greatest burden and nothing
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is so desirable as to get clear of it. Let grace make us willing to
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part with it whenever God calls; for it may so happen that even
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sense may make us desirous to part with it before he calls. 2. The
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hope which the righteous have in their death. If Job had not had a
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good conscience, he could not have spoken with this assurance of
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comfort on the other side death, which turns the tables between the
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rich man and Lazarus. <i>Now he is comforted, and thou art
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tormented.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p12">IV. He challenges death to do its worst. If
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he could not die without the dreadful prefaces of bitter pains and
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agonies, and strong convulsions, if he must be racked before he be
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executed, yet, in prospect of dying at last, he would make nothing
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of dying pangs: "<i>I would harden myself in sorrow,</i> would open
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my breast to receive death's darts, and not shrink from them.
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<i>Let him not spare;</i> I desire no mitigation of that pain which
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will put a happy period to all my pains. Rather than not die, let
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me die so as to feel myself die." These are passionate words, which
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might better have been spared. We should soften ourselves in
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sorrow, that we may receive the good impressions of it, and by the
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sadness of the countenance our hearts, being made tender, may be
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made better; but, if we harden ourselves, we provoke God to proceed
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in his controversy; <i>for when he judgeth he will overcome.</i> It
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is great presumption to dare the Almighty, and to say, <i>Let him
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not spare;</i> for <i>are we stronger than he?</i> <scripRef id="Job.vii-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.10.22" parsed="|1Cor|10|22|0|0" passage="1Co 10:22">1 Cor. x. 22</scripRef>. We are much indebted
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to sparing mercy; it is bad indeed with us when we are weary of
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that. Let us rather say with David, <i>O spare me a little.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p13">V. He grounds his comfort upon the
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testimony of his conscience for him that he had been faithful and
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firm to his profession of religion, and in some degree useful and
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serviceable to the glory of God in his generation: <i>I have not
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concealed the words of the Holy One.</i> Observe, 1. Job had the
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words of the Holy One committed to him. The people of God were at
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that time blessed with divine revelation. 2. It was his comfort
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that he had not concealed them, had not received the grace of God
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therein in vain. (1.) He had not kept them from himself, but had
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given them full scope to operate upon him, and in every thing to
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guide and govern him. He had not stifled his convictions,
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<i>imprisoned the truth in unrighteousness,</i> nor done any thing
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to hinder the digestion of this spiritual food and the operation of
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this spiritual physic. Let us never conceal God's word from
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ourselves, but always receive it in the light of it. (2.) He had
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not kept them to himself, but had been ready, on all occasions, to
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communicate his knowledge for the good of others, was never ashamed
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nor afraid to own the word of God to be his rule, nor remiss in his
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endeavours to bring others into an acquaintance with it. Note
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Those, and those only, may promise themselves comfort in death who
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are good, and do good, while they live.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p14">VI. He justifies himself, in this extreme
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desire of death, from the deplorable condition he was now in,
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<scripRef id="Job.vii-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.11-Job.6.12" parsed="|Job|6|11|6|12" passage="Job 6:11,12"><i>v.</i> 11, 12</scripRef>.
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Eliphaz, in the close of his discourse, had put him in hopes that
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he should yet see a good issue of his troubles; but poor Job puts
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these cordials away from him, refuses to be comforted, abandons
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himself to despair, and very ingeniously, yet perversely, argues
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against the encouragements that were given him. Disconsolate
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spirits will reason strangely against themselves. In answer to the
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pleasing prospects Eliphaz had flattered him with, he here
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intimates, 1. That he had no reason to expect any such thing:
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"<i>What is my strength, that I should hope?</i> You see how I am
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weakened and brought low, how unable I am to grapple with my
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distempers, and therefore what reason have I to hope that I should
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out-live them, and see better days? <i>Is my strength the strength
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of stones?</i> Are my muscles brass and my sinews steel? No, they
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are not, and therefore I cannot hold out always in this pain and
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misery, but must needs sink under the load. Had I strength to
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grapple with my distemper, I might hope to look through it; but,
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alas! I have not. The <i>weakening of my strength in the way</i>
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will certainly be the <i>shortening of my days,</i>" <scripRef id="Job.vii-p14.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.102.23" parsed="|Ps|102|23|0|0" passage="Ps 102:23">Ps. cii. 23</scripRef>. Note, All things
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considered, we have no reason to reckon upon the long continuance
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of life in this world. <i>What is our strength?</i> It is depending
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||
strength. We have no more strength than God gives us; for in him we
|
||
live and move. It is decaying strength; we are daily spending the
|
||
stock, and by degrees it will be exhausted. It is disproportionable
|
||
to the encounters we may meet with; what is our strength to be
|
||
depended upon, when two or three days' sickness will make us weak
|
||
as water? Instead of expecting a long life, we have reason to
|
||
wonder that we have lived hitherto and to feel that we are
|
||
hastening off apace. 2. That he had no reason to desire any such
|
||
thing: "<i>What is my end, that I should desire to prolong my
|
||
life?</i> What comfort can I promise myself in life, comparable to
|
||
the comfort I promise myself in death?" Note, Those who, through
|
||
grace, are ready for another world, cannot see much to invite their
|
||
stay in this world, or to make them fond of it. That, if it be
|
||
God's will, we may do him more service and may get to be fitter and
|
||
riper for heaven, is an end for which we may wish the prolonging of
|
||
life, in subservience to our chief end; but, otherwise, what can we
|
||
propose to ourselves in desiring to tarry here? The longer life is
|
||
the more grievous will its burdens be (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p14.3" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.12.1" parsed="|Eccl|12|1|0|0" passage="Ec 12:1">Eccl. xii. 1</scripRef>), and the longer life is the less
|
||
pleasant will be its delights, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p14.4" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.19.34-2Sam.19.35" parsed="|2Sam|19|34|19|35" passage="2Sa 19:34,35">2
|
||
Sam. xix. 34, 35</scripRef>. We have already seen the best of this
|
||
world, but we are not sure that we have seen the worst of it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p15">VII. He obviates the suspicion of his being
|
||
delirious (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.13" parsed="|Job|6|13|0|0" passage="Job 6:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>):
|
||
<i>Is not my help in me?</i> that is, "Have I not the use of my
|
||
reason, with which, I thank God, I can help myself, though you do
|
||
not help me? Do you think wisdom is driven quite from me, and that
|
||
I am gone distracted? No, I am not mad, most noble Eliphaz, but
|
||
<i>speak the words of truth and soberness.</i>" Note, Those who
|
||
have grace in them, who have the evidence of it and have it in
|
||
exercise, have wisdom in them, which will be their help in the
|
||
worst of times. <i>Sat lucis intus—They have light within.</i></p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Job.vii-p15.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.14-Job.6.21" parsed="|Job|6|14|6|21" passage="Job 6:14-21" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Job.6.14-Job.6.21">
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Job.vii-p16">14 To him that is afflicted pity <i>should be
|
||
showed</i> from his friend; but he forsaketh the fear of the
|
||
Almighty. 15 My brethren have dealt deceitfully as a brook,
|
||
<i>and</i> as the stream of brooks they pass away; 16 Which
|
||
are blackish by reason of the ice, <i>and</i> wherein the snow is
|
||
hid: 17 What time they wax warm, they vanish: when it is
|
||
hot, they are consumed out of their place. 18 The paths of
|
||
their way are turned aside; they go to nothing, and perish.
|
||
19 The troops of Tema looked, the companies of Sheba waited for
|
||
them. 20 They were confounded because they had hoped; they
|
||
came thither, and were ashamed. 21 For now ye are nothing;
|
||
ye see <i>my</i> casting down, and are afraid.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p17">Eliphaz had been very severe in his
|
||
censures of Job; and his companions, though as yet they had said
|
||
little, yet had intimated their concurrence with him. Their
|
||
unkindness therein poor Job here complains of, as an aggravation of
|
||
his calamity and a further excuse of his desire to die; for what
|
||
satisfaction could he ever expect in this world when those that
|
||
should have been his comforters thus proved his tormentors?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p18">I. He shows what reason he had to expect
|
||
kindness from them. His expectation was grounded upon the common
|
||
principles of humanity (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.14" parsed="|Job|6|14|0|0" passage="Job 6:14"><i>v.</i>
|
||
14</scripRef>): "<i>To him that is afflicted,</i> and that is
|
||
wasting and melting under his affliction, <i>pity should be shown
|
||
from his friend;</i> and he that does not show that pity
|
||
<i>forsakes the fear of the Almighty.</i>" Note, 1. Compassion is a
|
||
debt owing to those that are in affliction. The least which those
|
||
that are at ease can do for those that are pained and in anguish is
|
||
to pity them,—to manifest the sincerity of a tender concern for
|
||
them, and to sympathize with them,—to take cognizance of their
|
||
case, enquire into their grievances, hear their complaints, and
|
||
mingle their tears with theirs,—to comfort them, and to do all
|
||
they can to help and relieve them: this well becomes the members of
|
||
the same body, who should feel for the grievances of their
|
||
fellow-members, not knowing how soon the same may be their own. 2.
|
||
Inhumanity is impiety and irreligion. <i>He that withholds
|
||
compassion from his friend forsakes the fear of the Almighty.</i>
|
||
So the Chaldee. <i>How dwells the love of God in that man?</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Job.vii-p18.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.3.17" parsed="|1John|3|17|0|0" passage="1Jo 3:17">1 John iii. 17</scripRef>. Surely
|
||
those have no fear of the rod of God upon themselves who have no
|
||
compassion for those that feel the smart of it. See <scripRef id="Job.vii-p18.3" osisRef="Bible:Jas.1.27" parsed="|Jas|1|27|0|0" passage="Jam 1:27">Jam. i. 27</scripRef>. 3. Troubles are the
|
||
trials of friendship. When a man is afflicted he will see who are
|
||
his friends indeed and who are but pretenders; for <i>a brother is
|
||
born for adversity,</i> <scripRef id="Job.vii-p18.4" passage="Pr 17:17,18:24">Prov.
|
||
xvii. 17; xviii. 24</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p19">II. He shows how wretchedly he was
|
||
disappointed in his expectations from them (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.15" parsed="|Job|6|15|0|0" passage="Job 6:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>): "<i>My brethren,</i> who
|
||
should have helped me, <i>have dealt deceitfully as a brook.</i>"
|
||
They came by appointment, with a great deal of ceremony, to mourn
|
||
with him and to comfort him (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.2.11" parsed="|Job|2|11|0|0" passage="Job 2:11"><i>ch.</i> ii. 11</scripRef>); and some extraordinary
|
||
things were expected from such wise, learned, knowing men, and
|
||
Job's particular friends. None questioned but that the drift of
|
||
their discourses would be to comfort Job with the remembrance of
|
||
his former piety, the assurance of God's favour to him, and the
|
||
prospect of a glorious issue; but, instead of this, they most
|
||
barbarously fall upon him with their reproaches and censures,
|
||
condemn him as a hypocrite, insult over his calamities, and pour
|
||
vinegar, instead of oil, into his wounds, and thus they deal
|
||
deceitfully with him. Note, It is fraud and deceit not only to
|
||
violate our engagements to our friends, but to frustrate their just
|
||
expectations from us, especially the expectations we have raised.
|
||
Note, further, It is our wisdom to cease from man. We cannot expect
|
||
too little from the creature nor too much from the Creator. It is
|
||
no new thing even for brethren to <i>deal deceitfully</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Job.vii-p19.3" osisRef="Bible:Jer.9.4-Jer.9.5 Bible:Mic.7.5" parsed="|Jer|9|4|9|5;|Mic|7|5|0|0" passage="Jer 9:4,5,Mic 7:5">Jer. ix. 4, 5; Mic. vii.
|
||
5</scripRef>); let us therefore put our confidence in the rock of
|
||
ages, not in broken reeds-in the fountain of life, not in broken
|
||
cisterns. God will out-do our hopes as much as men come short of
|
||
them. This disappointment which Job met with he here illustrates by
|
||
the failing of brooks in summer.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p20">1. The similitude is very elegant,
|
||
<scripRef id="Job.vii-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.15-Job.6.20" parsed="|Job|6|15|6|20" passage="Job 6:15-20"><i>v.</i> 15-20</scripRef>. (1.)
|
||
Their pretensions are fitly compared to the great show which the
|
||
brooks make when they are swollen with the waters of a land flood,
|
||
by the melting of the ice and snow, which make them blackish or
|
||
muddy, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p20.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.16" parsed="|Job|6|16|0|0" passage="Job 6:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>. (2.)
|
||
His expectations from them, which their coming so solemnly to
|
||
comfort him had raised, he compares to the expectation which the
|
||
weary thirsty travellers have of finding water in the summer where
|
||
they have often seen it in great abundance in the winter, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p20.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.19" parsed="|Job|6|19|0|0" passage="Job 6:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>. <i>The troops of Tema
|
||
and Sheba,</i> the caravans of the merchants of those countries,
|
||
whose road lay through the deserts of Arabia, looked and waited for
|
||
supply of water from those brooks. "Hard by here," says one, "A
|
||
little further," says another, "when I last travelled this way,
|
||
there was water enough; we shall have that to refresh us." Where we
|
||
have met with relief or comfort we are apt to expect it again; and
|
||
yet it does not follow; for, (3.) The disappointment of his
|
||
expectation is here compared to the confusion which seizes the poor
|
||
travellers when they find heaps of sand where they expected floods
|
||
of water. In the winter, when they were not thirsty, there was
|
||
water enough. Every one will applaud and admire those that are full
|
||
and in prosperity. But in the heat of summer, when they needed
|
||
water, then it failed them; it was consumed (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p20.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.17" parsed="|Job|6|17|0|0" passage="Job 6:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>); it was turned aside, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p20.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.18" parsed="|Job|6|18|0|0" passage="Job 6:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>. When those who are rich
|
||
and high are sunk and impoverished, and stand in need of comfort,
|
||
then those who before gathered about them stand aloof from them,
|
||
those who before commended them are forward to run them down. Thus
|
||
those who raise their expectations high from the creature will find
|
||
it fail them when it should help them; whereas those who make God
|
||
their confidence have help <i>in the time of need,</i> <scripRef id="Job.vii-p20.6" osisRef="Bible:Heb.4.16" parsed="|Heb|4|16|0|0" passage="Heb 4:16">Heb. iv. 16</scripRef>. Those who make gold
|
||
their hope will sooner or later be ashamed of it, and of their
|
||
confidence in it (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p20.7" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.7.19" parsed="|Ezek|7|19|0|0" passage="Eze 7:19">Ezek. vii.
|
||
19</scripRef>); and the greater their confidence was the greater
|
||
their shame will be: <i>They were confounded because they had
|
||
hoped,</i> <scripRef id="Job.vii-p20.8" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.20" parsed="|Job|6|20|0|0" passage="Job 6:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>. We
|
||
prepare confusion for ourselves by our vain hopes: the reeds break
|
||
under us because we lean upon them. If we build a house upon the
|
||
sand, we shall certainly be confounded, for it will fall in the
|
||
storm, and we must thank ourselves for being such fools as to
|
||
expect it would stand. We are not deceived unless we deceive
|
||
ourselves.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p21">2. The application is very close (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.21" parsed="|Job|6|21|0|0" passage="Job 6:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>): <i>For now you are
|
||
nothing.</i> They seemed to be somewhat, but in conference they
|
||
added nothing to him. Allude to <scripRef id="Job.vii-p21.2" osisRef="Bible:Gal.2.6" parsed="|Gal|2|6|0|0" passage="Ga 2:6">Gal. ii.
|
||
6</scripRef>. He was never the wiser, never the better, for the
|
||
visit they made him. Note, Whatever complacency we may take, or
|
||
whatever confidence we may put, in creatures, how great soever they
|
||
may seem and how dear soever they may be to us, one time or other
|
||
we shall say of them, <i>Now you are nothing.</i> When Job was in
|
||
prosperity his friends were something to him, he took complacency
|
||
in them and their society; but "<i>Now you are nothing,</i> now I
|
||
can find no comfort but in God." It were well for us if we had
|
||
always such convictions of the vanity of the creature, and its
|
||
insufficiency to make us happy, as we have sometimes had, or shall
|
||
have on a sick-bed, a death-bed, or in trouble of conscience:
|
||
"<i>Now you are nothing.</i> You are not what you have been, what
|
||
you should be, what you pretend to be, what I thought you would
|
||
have been; <i>for you see my casting down and are afraid.</i> When
|
||
you saw me in my elevation you caressed me; but now that you see me
|
||
in my dejection you are shy of me, are afraid of showing yourselves
|
||
kind, lest I should thereby be emboldened to beg something of you,
|
||
or to borrow" (compare <scripRef id="Job.vii-p21.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.22" parsed="|Job|6|22|0|0" passage="Job 6:22"><i>v.</i>
|
||
22</scripRef>); "you are afraid lest, if you own me, you should be
|
||
obliged to keep me." Perhaps they were afraid of catching his
|
||
distemper or of coming within smell of the noisomeness of it. It is
|
||
not good, either out of pride or niceness, for love of our purses
|
||
or of our bodies, to be shy of those who are in distress and afraid
|
||
of coming near them. Their case may soon be our own.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Job.vii-p21.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.22-Job.6.30" parsed="|Job|6|22|6|30" passage="Job 6:22-30" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Job.6.22-Job.6.30">
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Job.vii-p22">22 Did I say, Bring unto me? or, Give a reward
|
||
for me of your substance? 23 Or, Deliver me from the enemy's
|
||
hand? or, Redeem me from the hand of the mighty? 24 Teach
|
||
me, and I will hold my tongue: and cause me to understand wherein I
|
||
have erred. 25 How forcible are right words! but what doth
|
||
your arguing reprove? 26 Do ye imagine to reprove words, and
|
||
the speeches of one that is desperate, <i>which are</i> as wind?
|
||
27 Yea, ye overwhelm the fatherless, and ye dig <i>a pit</i>
|
||
for your friend. 28 Now therefore be content, look upon me;
|
||
for <i>it is</i> evident unto you if I lie. 29 Return, I
|
||
pray you, let it not be iniquity; yea, return again, my
|
||
righteousness <i>is</i> in it. 30 Is there iniquity in my
|
||
tongue? cannot my taste discern perverse things?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p23">Poor Job goes on here to upbraid his
|
||
friends with their unkindness and the hard usage they gave him. He
|
||
here appeals to themselves concerning several things which tended
|
||
both to justify him and to condemn them. If they would but think
|
||
impartially, and speak as they thought, they could not but own,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p24">I. That, though he was necessitous, yet he
|
||
was not craving, nor burdensome to his friends. Those that are so,
|
||
whose troubles serve them to beg by, are commonly less pitied than
|
||
the silent poor. Job would be glad to see his friends, but he did
|
||
not say, <i>Bring unto me</i> (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.22" parsed="|Job|6|22|0|0" passage="Job 6:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>), or, <i>Deliver me,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Job.vii-p24.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.23" parsed="|Job|6|23|0|0" passage="Job 6:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>. He did not
|
||
desire to put them to any expense, did not urge his friends either,
|
||
1. To make a collection for him, to set him up again in the world.
|
||
Though he could plead that his losses came upon him by the hand of
|
||
God and not by any fault or folly of his own,—that he was utterly
|
||
ruined and impoverished,—that he had lived in good condition, and
|
||
that when he had wherewithal he was charitable and ready to help
|
||
those that were in distress,—that his friends were rich, and able
|
||
to help him, yet he did not say, <i>Give me of your substance.</i>
|
||
Note, A good man, when troubled himself, is afraid of being
|
||
troublesome to his friends. Or, 2. To raise the country for him, to
|
||
help him to recover his cattle out of the hands of the Sabeans and
|
||
Chaldeans, or to make reprisals upon them: "Did I send for you to
|
||
<i>deliver me out of the hand of the mighty?</i> No, I never
|
||
expected you should either expose yourselves to any danger or put
|
||
yourselves to any charge upon my account. I will rather sit down
|
||
content under my affliction, and make the best of it, than sponge
|
||
upon my friends." St. Paul worked with his hands, that he might not
|
||
be burdensome to any. Job's not asking their help did not excuse
|
||
them from offering it when he needed it and it was in the power of
|
||
their hands to give it; but it much aggravated their unkindness
|
||
when he desired no more from them than a good look, and a good
|
||
word, and yet could not obtain them. It often happens that from
|
||
man, even when we expect little, we have less, but from God, even
|
||
when we expect much, we have more, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p24.3" osisRef="Bible:Eph.3.20" parsed="|Eph|3|20|0|0" passage="Eph 3:20">Eph. iii. 20</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p25">II. That, though he differed in opinion
|
||
from them, yet he was not obstinate, but ready to yield to
|
||
conviction, and to strike sail to truth as soon as ever it was made
|
||
to appear to him that he was in an error (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.24-Job.6.25" parsed="|Job|6|24|6|25" passage="Job 6:24,25"><i>v.</i> 24, 25</scripRef>): "If, instead of
|
||
invidious reflections and uncharitable insinuations, you will give
|
||
me plain instructions and solid arguments, which shall carry their
|
||
own evidence along with them, I am ready to acknowledge my error
|
||
and own myself in a fault: <i>Teach me, and I will hold my
|
||
tongue;</i> for I have often found, with pleasure and wonder,
|
||
<i>how forcible right words are.</i> But the method you take will
|
||
never make proselytes: <i>What doth your arguing reprove?</i> Your
|
||
hypothesis is false, your surmises are groundless, your management
|
||
is weak, and your application peevish and uncharitable." Note, 1.
|
||
Fair reasoning has a commanding power, and it is a wonder if men
|
||
are not conquered by it; but railing and foul language are impotent
|
||
and foolish, and it is no wonder if men are exasperated and
|
||
hardened by them. 2. It is the undoubted character of every honest
|
||
man that he is truly desirous to have his mistakes rectified, and
|
||
to be made to understand wherein he has erred; and he will
|
||
acknowledge that right words, when they appear to him to be so,
|
||
though contrary to his former sentiments, are both forcible and
|
||
acceptable.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p26">III. That, though he had been indeed in a
|
||
fault, yet they ought not to have given him such hard usage
|
||
(<scripRef id="Job.vii-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.26-Job.6.27" parsed="|Job|6|26|6|27" passage="Job 6:26,27"><i>v.</i> 26, 27</scripRef>):
|
||
"<i>Do you imagine,</i> or contrive with a great deal of art" (for
|
||
so the word signifies), "<i>to reprove words,</i> some passionate
|
||
expressions of mine in this desperate condition, as if they were
|
||
certain indications of reigning impiety and atheism? A little
|
||
candour and charity would have served to excuse them, and to put a
|
||
better construction upon them. Shall a man's spiritual state be
|
||
judged of by some rash and hasty words, which a surprising trouble
|
||
extorts from him? Is it fair, is it kind, is it just, to criticize
|
||
in such a case? Would you yourselves be served thus?" Two things
|
||
aggravated their unkind treatment of him:—1. That they took
|
||
advantage of his weakness and the helpless condition he was in:
|
||
<i>You overwhelm the fatherless,</i> a proverbial expression,
|
||
denoting that which is most barbarous and inhuman. "The fatherless
|
||
cannot secure themselves from insults, which emboldens men of base
|
||
and sordid spirits to insult them and trample upon them; and you do
|
||
so by me." Job, being a childless father, thought himself as much
|
||
exposed to injury as a fatherless child (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p26.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.127.5" parsed="|Ps|127|5|0|0" passage="Ps 127:5">Ps. cxxvii. 5</scripRef>) and had reason to be offended
|
||
with those who therefore triumphed over him. Let those who
|
||
overwhelm and overpower such as upon any account may be looked upon
|
||
as fatherless know that therein they not only put off the
|
||
compassions of man, but fight against the compassions of God, who
|
||
is, and will be, a Father of the fatherless and a helper of the
|
||
helpless. 2. That they made a pretence of kindness: "<i>You dig a
|
||
pit for your friend;</i> not only you are unkind to me, who am your
|
||
friend, but, under colour of friendship, you ensnare me." When they
|
||
came to see and sit with him he thought he might speak his mind
|
||
freely to them, and that the more bitter his complaints to them
|
||
were the more they would endeavour to comfort him. This made him
|
||
take a greater liberty than otherwise he would have done. David,
|
||
though he smothered his resentments when the wicked were before
|
||
him, would probably have given vent to them if none had been by but
|
||
friends, <scripRef id="Job.vii-p26.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.39.1" parsed="|Ps|39|1|0|0" passage="Ps 39:1">Ps. xxxix. 1</scripRef>. But
|
||
this freedom of speech, which their professions of concern for him
|
||
made him use, had exposed him to their censures, and so they might
|
||
be said to dig a pit for him. Thus, when our hearts are hot within
|
||
us, what is ill done we are apt to misrepresent as if done
|
||
designedly.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.vii-p27">IV. That, though he had let fall some
|
||
passionate expressions, yet in the main he was in the right, and
|
||
that his afflictions, though very extraordinary, did not prove him
|
||
to be a hypocrite or a wicked man. His righteousness he holds fast,
|
||
and will not let it go. For the evincing of it he here appeals, 1.
|
||
To what they saw in him (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.28" parsed="|Job|6|28|0|0" passage="Job 6:28"><i>v.</i>
|
||
28</scripRef>): "<i>Be content,</i> and <i>look upon me;</i> what
|
||
do you see in me that bespeaks me either a madman or a wicked man?
|
||
Nay, look in my face, and you may discern there the indications of
|
||
a patient and submissive spirit, for all this. Let the show of my
|
||
countenance witness for me that, though I have cursed my day, I do
|
||
not curse my God." Or rather, "Look upon my ulcers and sore boils,
|
||
and by them it will be evident to you that I do not lie," that is,
|
||
"that I do not complain without cause. Let your own eyes convince
|
||
you that my condition is very sad, and that I do not quarrel with
|
||
God by making it worse than it is." 2. To what they heard from him,
|
||
<scripRef id="Job.vii-p27.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.30" parsed="|Job|6|30|0|0" passage="Job 6:30"><i>v.</i> 30</scripRef>. "You hear
|
||
what I have to say: <i>Is there iniquity in my tongue?</i> that
|
||
iniquity that you charge me with? Have I blasphemed God or
|
||
renounced him? Are not my present arguings right? Do not you
|
||
perceive, by what I say, that I can discern perverse things? I can
|
||
discover your fallacies and mistakes, and, if I were myself in an
|
||
error, I could perceive it. Whatever you think of me, I know what I
|
||
say." 3. To their own second and sober thoughts (<scripRef id="Job.vii-p27.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.29" parsed="|Job|6|29|0|0" passage="Job 6:29"><i>v.</i> 29</scripRef>): "<i>Return, I pray you,</i>
|
||
consider the thing over again without prejudice and partiality, and
|
||
let not the result be iniquity, let it not be an unrighteous
|
||
sentence; and you will find <i>my righteousness is in it,</i>" that
|
||
is, "I am in the right in this matter; and, though I cannot keep my
|
||
temper as I should, I keep my integrity, and have not said, nor
|
||
done, nor suffered, any thing which will prove me other than an
|
||
honest man." A just cause desires nothing more than a just hearing,
|
||
and if need be a re-hearing.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |