659 lines
48 KiB
XML
659 lines
48 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Job.xx" n="xx" next="Job.xxi" prev="Job.xix" progress="9.69%" title="Chapter XIX">
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<h2 id="Job.xx-p0.1">J O B</h2>
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<h3 id="Job.xx-p0.2">CHAP. XIX.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Job.xx-p1">This chapter is Job's answer to Bildad's discourse
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in the foregoing chapter. Though his spirit was grieved and much
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heated, and Bildad was very peevish, yet he gave him leave to say
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all he designed to say, and did not break in upon him in the midst
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of his argument; but, when he had done, he gave him a fair answer,
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in which, I. He complains of unkind usage. And very unkindly he
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takes it. 1. That his comforters added to his affliction, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.2-Job.19.7" parsed="|Job|19|2|19|7" passage="Job 19:2-7">ver. 2-7</scripRef>. 2. That his God was the
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author of his affliction, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.8-Job.19.12" parsed="|Job|19|8|19|12" passage="Job 19:8-12">ver.
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8-12</scripRef>. 3. That his relations and friends were strange to
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him, and shy of him, in his affliction, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.20-Job.19.22" parsed="|Job|19|20|19|22" passage="Job 19:20-22">ver. 20-22</scripRef>. II. He comforts himself with
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the believing hopes of happiness in the other world, though he had
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so little comfort in this, making a very solemn confession of his
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faith, with a desire that it might be recorded as an evidence of
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his sincerity, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.23-Job.19.27" parsed="|Job|19|23|19|27" passage="Job 19:23-27">ver.
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23-27</scripRef>. III. He concludes with a caution to his friends
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not to persist in their hard censures of him, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.28-Job.19.29" parsed="|Job|19|28|19|29" passage="Job 19:28,29">ver. 28, 29</scripRef>. If the remonstrance Job here
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makes of his grievances may serve sometimes to justify our
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complaints, yet his cheerful views of the future state, at the same
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time, may shame us Christians, and may serve to silence our
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complaints, or at least to balance them.</p>
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<scripCom id="Job.xx-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Job.19" parsed="|Job|19|0|0|0" passage="Job 19" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Job.xx-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.1-Job.19.7" parsed="|Job|19|1|19|7" passage="Job 19:1-7" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Job.19.1-Job.19.7">
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<h4 id="Job.xx-p1.8">The Reply of Job to Bildad. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Job.xx-p1.9">b. c.</span> 1520.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Job.xx-p2">1 Then Job answered and said, 2 How long
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will ye vex my soul, and break me in pieces with words? 3
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These ten times have ye reproached me: ye are not ashamed
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<i>that</i> ye make yourselves strange to me. 4 And be it
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indeed <i>that</i> I have erred, mine error remaineth with myself.
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5 If indeed ye will magnify <i>yourselves</i> against me,
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and plead against me my reproach: 6 Know now that God hath
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overthrown me, and hath compassed me with his net. 7 Behold,
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I cry out of wrong, but I am not heard: I cry aloud, but <i>there
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is</i> no judgment.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p3">Job's friends had passed a very severe
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censure upon him as a wicked man because he was so grievously
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afflicted; now here he tells them how ill he took it to be so
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censured. Bildad had twice begun with a <i>How long</i> (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p3.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.8.2 Bible:Job.18.2" parsed="|Job|8|2|0|0;|Job|18|2|0|0" passage="Job 8:2,18:2"><i>ch.</i> viii. 2, xviii. 2</scripRef>),
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and therefore Job, being now to answer him particularly, begins
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with a <i>How long</i> too, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p3.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.2" parsed="|Job|19|2|0|0" passage="Job 19:2"><i>v.</i>
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2</scripRef>. What is not liked is commonly thought long; but Job
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had more reason to think those long who assaulted him than they had
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to think him long who only vindicated himself. Better cause may be
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shown for defending ourselves, if we have right on our side, than
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for offending our brethren, though we have right on our side. Now
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observe here,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p4">I. How he describes their unkindness to him
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and what account he gives of it. 1. They <i>vexed his soul,</i> and
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that is more grievous than the vexation of the bones, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.6.2-Ps.6.3" parsed="|Ps|6|2|6|3" passage="Ps 6:2,3">Ps. vi. 2, 3</scripRef>. They were his friends;
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they came to comfort him, pretended to counsel him for the best;
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but with a great deal of gravity, and affectation of wisdom and
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piety, they set themselves to rob him of the only comfort he had
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now left him in a good God, a good conscience, and a good name; and
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this vexed him to his heart. 2. They <i>broke him in pieces with
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words,</i> and those were surely hard and very cruel words that
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would break a man to pieces: they grieved him, and so broke him;
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and therefore there will be a reckoning hereafter for all the hard
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speeches spoken against Christ and his people, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:Jude.1.15" parsed="|Jude|1|15|0|0" passage="Jude 1:15">Jude 15</scripRef>. 3. They <i>reproached him,</i>
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(<scripRef id="Job.xx-p4.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.3" parsed="|Job|19|3|0|0" passage="Job 19:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>), gave him a
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bad character and laid to his charge things that he knew not. To an
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ingenuous mind reproach is a cutting thing. 4. They <i>made
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themselves strange to him,</i> were shy of him now that he was in
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his troubles, and seemed as if they did not know him (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p4.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.2.12" parsed="|Job|2|12|0|0" passage="Job 2:12"><i>ch.</i> ii. 12</scripRef>), were not free
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with him as they used to be when he was in his prosperity. Those
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are governed by the spirit of the world, and not by any principles
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of true honour or love, who make themselves strange to their
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friends, or God's friends, when they are in trouble. <i>A friend
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loves at all times.</i> 5. They not only estranged themselves from
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him, but <i>magnified themselves against him</i> (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p4.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.5" parsed="|Job|19|5|0|0" passage="Job 19:5"><i>v.</i> 5</scripRef>), not only looked shy of
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him, but looked big upon him, and insulted over him, magnifying
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themselves to depress him. It is a mean thing, it is a base thing,
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thus to trample upon those that are down. 6. <i>They pleaded
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against him his reproach,</i> that is, they made use of his
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affliction as an argument against him to prove him a wicked man.
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They should have pleaded for him his integrity, and helped him to
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take the comfort of that under his affliction, and so have pleaded
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that against his reproach (as St. Paul, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p4.6" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.1.12" parsed="|2Cor|1|12|0|0" passage="2Co 1:12">2 Cor. i. 12</scripRef>); but, instead of that, they
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pleaded his reproach against his integrity, which was not only
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unkind, but very unjust; for where shall we find an honest man if
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reproach may be admitted for a plea against him?</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p5">II. How he aggravates their unkindness. 1.
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They had thus abused him often (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.3" parsed="|Job|19|3|0|0" passage="Job 19:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>): <i>These ten times you have
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reproached me,</i> that is, very often, as <scripRef id="Job.xx-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:Gen.31.7 Bible:Num.14.22" parsed="|Gen|31|7|0|0;|Num|14|22|0|0" passage="Ge 31:7,Nu 14:22">Gen. xxxi. 7; Num. xiv. 22</scripRef>. Five
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times they had spoken, and every speech was a double reproach. He
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spoke as if he had kept a particular account of their reproaches,
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and could tell just how many they were. It is but a peevish and
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unfriendly thing to do so, and looks like a design of retaliation
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and revenge. We better befriend our own peace by forgetting
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injuries and unkindnesses than by remembering them and scoring them
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up. 2. They continued still to abuse him, and seemed resolved to
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persist in it: "How long will you do it?" <scripRef id="Job.xx-p5.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.2 Bible:Job.19.5" parsed="|Job|19|2|0|0;|Job|19|5|0|0" passage="Job 19:2,5"><i>v.</i> 2, 5</scripRef>. "I see you will magnify
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yourselves against me, notwithstanding all I have said in my own
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justification." Those that speak too much seldom think they have
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said enough; and, when the mouth is opened in passion, the ear is
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shut to reason. 3. They were not ashamed of what they did,
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<scripRef id="Job.xx-p5.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.3" parsed="|Job|19|3|0|0" passage="Job 19:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>. They had
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reason to be ashamed of their hard-heartedness, so ill becoming
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men, of their uncharitableness, so ill becoming good men, and of
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their deceitfulness, so ill becoming friends: but were they
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ashamed? No, though they were told of it again and again, yet they
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could not blush.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p6">III. How he answers their harsh censures,
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by showing them that what they condemned was capable of excuse,
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which they ought to have considered. 1. The errors of his judgment
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were excusable (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.4" parsed="|Job|19|4|0|0" passage="Job 19:4"><i>v.</i>
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4</scripRef>): "<i>Be it indeed that I have erred,</i> that I am in
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the wrong through ignorance or mistake," which may well be supposed
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concerning men, concerning good men. <i>Humanum est
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errare</i>—<i>Error cleaves to humanity;</i> and we must be
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willing to suppose it concerning ourselves. It is folly to think
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ourselves infallible. "But be it so," said Job, "<i>my error
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remaineth with myself,</i>" that is, "I speak according to the best
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of my judgment, with all sincerity, and not from a spirit of
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contradiction." Or, "If I be in an error, I keep it to myself, and
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do not impose it upon others as you do. I only prove myself and my
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own work by it. I meddle not with other people, either to teach
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them or to judge them." Men's errors are the more excusable if they
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keep them to themselves, and do not disturb others with them.
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<i>Hast thou faith? Have it to thyself.</i> Some give this sense of
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these words: "If I be in an error, it is I that must smart for it;
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and therefore you need not concern yourselves: nay, it is I that do
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smart, and smart severely, for it; and therefore you need not add
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to my misery by your reproaches." 2. The breakings out of his
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passion, though not justifiable, yet were excusable, considering
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the vastness of his grief and the extremity of his misery. "If you
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will go on to cavil at every complaining word I speak, will make
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the worst of it and improve it against me, yet take the cause of
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the complaint along with you, and weigh that, before you pass a
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judgment upon the complaint, and turn it to my reproach: <i>Know
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then that God has overthrown me,</i>" <scripRef id="Job.xx-p6.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.6" parsed="|Job|19|6|0|0" passage="Job 19:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>. Three things he would have them
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consider:—(1.) That his trouble was very great. He was
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overthrown, and could not help himself, enclosed as in a net, and
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could not get out. (2.) That God was the author of it, and that, in
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it, he fought against him: "It was his hand that overthrew me; it
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is in his net that I am enclosed; and therefore you need not appear
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against me thus. I have enough to do to grapple with God's
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displeasure; let me not have yours also. Let God's controversy with
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me be ended before you begin yours." It is barbarous to
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<i>persecute him whom God hath smitten and to talk to the grief of
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one whom he hath wounded,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p6.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.69.26" parsed="|Ps|69|26|0|0" passage="Ps 69:26">Ps.
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lxix. 26</scripRef>. (3.) That he could not obtain any hope of the
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redress of his grievances, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p6.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.7" parsed="|Job|19|7|0|0" passage="Job 19:7"><i>v.</i>
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7</scripRef>. He complained of his pain, but got no ease—begged to
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know the cause of his affliction, but could not discover
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it—appealed to God's tribunal for the clearing of his innocency,
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but could not obtain a hearing, much less a judgment, upon his
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appeal: <i>I cry out of wrong, but I am not heard.</i> God, for a
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time, may seem to turn away his ear from his people, to be angry at
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their prayers and overlook their appeals to him, and they must be
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excused if, in that case, they complain bitterly. Woe unto us if
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God be against us!</p>
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</div><scripCom id="Job.xx-p6.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.8-Job.19.22" parsed="|Job|19|8|19|22" passage="Job 19:8-22" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Job.19.8-Job.19.22">
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<h4 id="Job.xx-p6.6">Job Complains of God's Displeasure; Job
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Complains of His Friends. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Job.xx-p6.7">b. c.</span> 1520.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Job.xx-p7">8 He hath fenced up my way that I cannot pass,
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and he hath set darkness in my paths. 9 He hath stripped me
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of my glory, and taken the crown <i>from</i> my head. 10 He
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hath destroyed me on every side, and I am gone: and mine hope hath
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he removed like a tree. 11 He hath also kindled his wrath
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against me, and he counteth me unto him as <i>one of</i> his
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enemies. 12 His troops come together, and raise up their way
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against me, and encamp round about my tabernacle. 13 He hath
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put my brethren far from me, and mine acquaintance are verily
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estranged from me. 14 My kinsfolk have failed, and my
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familiar friends have forgotten me. 15 They that dwell in
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mine house, and my maids, count me for a stranger: I am an alien in
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their sight. 16 I called my servant, and he gave <i>me</i>
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no answer; I intreated him with my mouth. 17 My breath is
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strange to my wife, though I intreated for the children's
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<i>sake</i> of mine own body. 18 Yea, young children
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despised me; I arose, and they spake against me. 19 All my
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inward friends abhorred me: and they whom I loved are turned
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against me. 20 My bone cleaveth to my skin and to my flesh,
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and I am escaped with the skin of my teeth. 21 Have pity
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upon me, have pity upon me, O ye my friends; for the hand of God
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hath touched me. 22 Why do ye persecute me as God, and are
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not satisfied with my flesh?</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p8">Bildad had very disingenuously perverted
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Job's complaints by making them the description of the miserable
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condition of a wicked man; and yet he repeats them here, to move
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their pity, and to work upon their good nature, if they had any
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left in them.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p9">I. He complains of the tokens of God's
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displeasure which he was under, and which infused the wormwood and
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gall into the affliction and misery. How doleful are the accents of
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his complaints! "<i>He hath kindled his wrath against me,</i> which
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flames and terrifies me, which burns and pains me," <scripRef id="Job.xx-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.11" parsed="|Job|19|11|0|0" passage="Job 19:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>. What is the fire of
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hell but the wrath of God? Seared consciences will feel it
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hereafter, but do not fear it now. Enlightened consciences fear it
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now, but shall not feel it hereafter. Job's present apprehension
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was that <i>God counted him as one of his enemies;</i> and yet, at
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the same time, God loved him, and gloried in him, as his faithful
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friend. It is a gross mistake, but a very common one, to think that
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whom God afflicts he treats as his enemies; whereas, on the
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contrary, <i>as many as he loves he rebukes and chastens;</i> it is
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the discipline of his sons. Which way soever Job looked he thought
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he saw the tokens of God's displeasure against him. 1. Did he look
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back upon his former prosperity? He saw God's hand putting an end
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to that (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.9" parsed="|Job|19|9|0|0" passage="Job 19:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>):
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"<i>He has stripped me of my glory,</i> my wealth, honour, power,
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and all the opportunity I had of doing good. My children were my
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glory, but I have lost them; and whatever was a crown to my head he
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has taken it from me, and has laid all my honour in the dust." See
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the vanity of worldly glory: it is what we may be soon stripped of;
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and, whatever strips us, we must see and own God's hand in it and
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comply with his design. 2. Did he look down upon his present
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troubles? He saw God giving them their commission, and their orders
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to attack him. They are <i>his troops,</i> that act by his
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direction, which <i>encamp against me,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p9.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.12" parsed="|Job|19|12|0|0" passage="Job 19:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>. It did not so much trouble him
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that his miseries came upon him in troops as that they were
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<i>God's</i> troops, in whom it seemed as if God fought against him
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and intended his destruction. God's troops <i>encamped around his
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tabernacle,</i> as soldiers lay siege to a strong city, cutting off
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all provisions from being brought into it and battering it
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continually; thus was Job's tabernacle besieged. Time was when
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God's hosts encamped round him for safety: <i>Hast thou not made a
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hedge about him?</i> Now, on the contrary, they surrounded him, to
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his terror, and <i>destroyed him on every side,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p9.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.10" parsed="|Job|19|10|0|0" passage="Job 19:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>. 3. Did he look forward
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for deliverance? He saw the hand of God cutting off all hopes of
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that (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p9.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.8" parsed="|Job|19|8|0|0" passage="Job 19:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>): "<i>He
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hath fenced up my way, that I cannot pass.</i> I have now no way
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left to help myself, either to extricate myself out of my troubles
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or to ease myself under them. Would I make any motion, take any
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steps towards deliverance? I find <i>my way hedged up;</i> I cannot
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do what I would; nay, if I would please myself with the prospect of
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a deliverance hereafter, I cannot do it; it is not only out of my
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reach, but out of my sight: God <i>hath set darkness in my
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paths,</i> and there is none to tell me how long," <scripRef id="Job.xx-p9.6" osisRef="Bible:Ps.74.9" parsed="|Ps|74|9|0|0" passage="Ps 74:9">Ps. lxxiv. 9</scripRef>. He concludes (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p9.7" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.10" parsed="|Job|19|10|0|0" passage="Job 19:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>), "I am gone, quite
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lost and undone for this world; <i>my hope hath he removed like a
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tree</i> cut down, or plucked up by the roots, which will never
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grow again." Hope in this life is a perishing thing, but the hope
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of good men, when it is cut off from this world, is but removed
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like a tree, transplanted from this nursery to the garden of the
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Lord. We shall have no reason to complain if God thus remove our
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hopes from the sand to the rock, from things temporal to things
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eternal.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p10">II. He complains of the unkindness of his
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relations and of all his old acquaintance. In this also he owns the
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hand of God (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.13" parsed="|Job|19|13|0|0" passage="Job 19:13"><i>v.</i>
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13</scripRef>): <i>He has put my brethren far from me,</i> that is,
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"He has laid those afflictions upon me which frighten them from me,
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and make them stand aloof from my sores." As it was their sin God
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was not the author of it; it is Satan that alienates men's minds
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from their brethren in affliction. But, as it was Job's trouble,
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God ordered it for the completing of his trial. As we must eye the
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hand of God in all the injuries we receive from our enemies ("the
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Lord has bidden Shimei curse David"), so also in all the slights
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and unkindnesses we receive from our friends, which will help us to
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bear them the more patiently. Every creature is that to us (kind or
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unkind, comfortable or uncomfortable) which God makes it to be. Yet
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this does not excuse Job's relations and friends from the guilt of
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horrid ingratitude and injustice to him, which he had reason to
|
||
complain of; few could have borne it so well as he did. He takes
|
||
notice of the unkindness, 1. Of his kindred and acquaintance, his
|
||
neighbours, and such as he had formerly been familiar with, who
|
||
were bound by all the laws of friendship and civility to concern
|
||
themselves for him, to visit him, to enquire after him, and to be
|
||
ready to do him all the good offices that lay in their power; yet
|
||
these were <i>estranged from him,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.13" parsed="|Job|19|13|0|0" passage="Job 19:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>. They took no more care about
|
||
him than if he had been a stranger whom they never knew. His
|
||
kinsfolk, who claimed relation to him when he was in prosperity,
|
||
now failed him; they came short of their former professions of
|
||
friendship to him and his present expectations of kindness from
|
||
them. Even his familiar friends, whom he was mindful of, had now
|
||
forgotten him, had forgotten both his former friendliness to them
|
||
and his present miseries: they had heard of his troubles, and
|
||
designed him a visit; but truly they forgot it, so little affected
|
||
were they with it. Nay, his inward friends, the men of his secret,
|
||
whom he was most intimate with and laid in his bosom, not only
|
||
forgot him, but abhorred him, kept as far off from him as they
|
||
could, because he was poor and could not entertain them as he used
|
||
to do, and because he was sore and a loathsome spectacle. Those
|
||
whom he loved, and who therefore were worse than publicans if they
|
||
did not love him now that he was in distress, not only turned from
|
||
him, but were turned against him, and did all they could to make
|
||
him odious, so to justify themselves in being so strange to him,
|
||
<scripRef id="Job.xx-p10.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.19" parsed="|Job|19|19|0|0" passage="Job 19:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>. So uncertain
|
||
is the friendship of men; but, if God be our friend, he will not
|
||
fail us in a time of need. But let none that pretend either to
|
||
humanity or Christianity ever use their friends as Job's friends
|
||
used him: adversity is the proof of friendship. 2. Of his domestics
|
||
and family relations. Sometimes indeed we find that, beyond our
|
||
expectation, there is a friend that sticks closer than a brother;
|
||
but the master of a family ordinarily expects to be attended on and
|
||
taken care of by those of his family, even when, through weakness
|
||
of body or mind, he has become despicable to others. But poor Job
|
||
was misused by his own family, and some of his worst foes were
|
||
those of his own house. He mentions not his children; they were all
|
||
dead, and we may suppose that the unkindness of his surviving
|
||
relations made him lament the death of his children so much the
|
||
more: "If they had been alive," would he think, "I should have had
|
||
comfort in them." As for those that were now about him, (1.) His
|
||
own servants slighted him. His maids did not attend him in his
|
||
illness, but <i>counted him for a stranger and an alien,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Job.xx-p10.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.15" parsed="|Job|19|15|0|0" passage="Job 19:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>. His other
|
||
servants never heeded him; if he called to them they would not come
|
||
at his call, but pretended that they did not hear him. If he asked
|
||
them a question, they would not vouchsafe to <i>give him an
|
||
answer,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p10.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.16" parsed="|Job|19|16|0|0" passage="Job 19:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>.
|
||
Job had been a good master to them, and did not <i>despise their
|
||
cause when they pleaded with him</i> (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p10.6" osisRef="Bible:Job.31.13" parsed="|Job|31|13|0|0" passage="Job 31:13"><i>ch.</i> xxxi. 13</scripRef>), and yet they were rude
|
||
to him now, and despised his cause when he pleaded with them. We
|
||
must not think it strange if we receive evil at the hand of those
|
||
from whom we have deserved well. Though he was now sickly, yet he
|
||
was not cross with his servants, and imperious, as is too common,
|
||
but he entreated his servants with his mouth, when he had authority
|
||
to command; and yet they would not be civil to him, neither kind
|
||
nor just. Note, Those that are sick and in sorrow are apt to take
|
||
things ill, and be jealous of a slight, and to lay to heart the
|
||
least unkindness done to them: when Job was in affliction even his
|
||
servants' neglect of him troubled him. (2.) But, one would think,
|
||
when all forsook him, the wife of his bosom should have been tender
|
||
of him: no, because he would not curse God and die, as she
|
||
persuaded him, his breath was strange to her too; she did not care
|
||
for coming near him, nor took any notice of what he said, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p10.7" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.17" parsed="|Job|19|17|0|0" passage="Job 19:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>. Though he spoke to
|
||
her, not with the authority, but with the tenderness of a husband,
|
||
did not command, but entreated her by that conjugal love which
|
||
their children were the pledges of, yet she regarded him not. Some
|
||
read it, "Though I lamented, or bemoaned myself, for the children,"
|
||
that is, "for the death of the children of my own body," an
|
||
affliction in which she was equally concerned with him. Now, it
|
||
appeared, the devil spared her to him, not only to be his tempter,
|
||
but to be his tormentor. By what she said to him at first, <i>Curse
|
||
God and die,</i> it appeared that she had little religion in her;
|
||
and what can one expect that is kind and good from those that have
|
||
not the fear of God before their eyes and are not governed by
|
||
conscience? (3.) Even the little children who were born in his
|
||
house, the children of his own servants, who were his servants by
|
||
birth, despised him, and spoke against him (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p10.8" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.18" parsed="|Job|19|18|0|0" passage="Job 19:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>); though he arose in civility
|
||
to speak friendly to them, or with authority to check them, they
|
||
let him know that they neither feared him nor loved him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p11">III. He complains of the decay of his body;
|
||
all the beauty and strength of that were gone. When those about him
|
||
slighted him, if he had been in health, and at ease, he might have
|
||
enjoyed himself. But he could take as little pleasure in himself as
|
||
others took in him (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.20" parsed="|Job|19|20|0|0" passage="Job 19:20"><i>v.</i>
|
||
20</scripRef>): <i>My bone cleaves now to my skin,</i> as formerly
|
||
it did to my flesh; it was this that filled <i>him with
|
||
wrinkles</i> (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.16.8" parsed="|Job|16|8|0|0" passage="Job 16:8"><i>ch.</i> xvi.
|
||
8</scripRef>); he was a perfect skeleton, nothing but skin and
|
||
bones. Nay, his skin too was almost gone, little remained unbroken
|
||
but the <i>skin of his teeth,</i> his gums and perhaps his lips;
|
||
all the rest was fetched off by his sore boils. See what little
|
||
reason we have to indulge the body, which, after all our care, may
|
||
be thus consumed by the diseases which it has in itself the seeds
|
||
of.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p12">IV. Upon all these accounts he recommends
|
||
himself to the compassion of his friends, and justly blames their
|
||
harshness with him. From this representation of his deplorable
|
||
case, it was easy to infer, 1. That they ought to pity him,
|
||
<scripRef id="Job.xx-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.21" parsed="|Job|19|21|0|0" passage="Job 19:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>. This he begs
|
||
in the most moving melting language that could be, enough (one
|
||
would think) to break a heart of stone: "<i>Have pity upon me, have
|
||
pity upon me, O you my friends!</i> if you will do nothing else for
|
||
me, be sorry for me, and show some concern for me; <i>have pity
|
||
upon me, for the hand of God hath touched me.</i> My case is sad
|
||
indeed, for I have fallen into the hands of the living God, my
|
||
spirit is touched with the sense of his wrath, a calamity of all
|
||
other the most piteous." Note, It becomes friends to pity one
|
||
another when they are in trouble, and not to shut up the bowels of
|
||
compassion. 2. That, however, they ought not to persecute him; if
|
||
they would not ease his affliction by their pity, yet they must not
|
||
be so barbarous as to add to it by their censures and reproaches
|
||
(<scripRef id="Job.xx-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.22" parsed="|Job|19|22|0|0" passage="Job 19:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>): "<i>Why do
|
||
you persecute me as God?</i> Surely his rebukes are enough for one
|
||
man to bear; you need not add your wormwood and gall to the cup of
|
||
affliction he puts into my hand, it is bitter enough without that:
|
||
God has a sovereign power over me, and may do what he pleases with
|
||
me; but do you think that you may do so too?" No, we must aim to be
|
||
like the Most Holy and the Most Merciful, but not like the Most
|
||
High and Most Mighty. God gives not account of any of his matters,
|
||
but we must give account of ours. If they did delight in his
|
||
calamity, let them be satisfied with his flesh, which was wasted
|
||
and gone, but let them not, as if that were too little, wound his
|
||
spirit, and ruin his good name. Great tenderness is due to those
|
||
that are in affliction, especially to those that are troubled in
|
||
mind.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Job.xx-p12.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.23-Job.19.29" parsed="|Job|19|23|19|29" passage="Job 19:23-29" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Job.19.23-Job.19.29">
|
||
<h4 id="Job.xx-p12.4">Job's Confession of Faith; Happiness of the
|
||
Redeemed. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Job.xx-p12.5">b. c.</span> 1520.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Job.xx-p13">23 Oh that my words were now written! oh that
|
||
they were printed in a book! 24 That they were graven with
|
||
an iron pen and lead in the rock for ever! 25 For I know
|
||
<i>that</i> my redeemer liveth, and <i>that</i> he shall stand at
|
||
the latter <i>day</i> upon the earth: 26 And <i>though</i>
|
||
after my skin <i>worms</i> destroy this <i>body,</i> yet in my
|
||
flesh shall I see God: 27 Whom I shall see for myself, and
|
||
mine eyes shall behold, and not another; <i>though</i> my reins be
|
||
consumed within me. 28 But ye should say, Why persecute we
|
||
him, seeing the root of the matter is found in me? 29 Be ye
|
||
afraid of the sword: for wrath <i>bringeth</i> the punishments of
|
||
the sword, that ye may know <i>there is</i> a judgment.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p14">In all the conferences between Job and his
|
||
friends we do not find any more weighty and considerable lines than
|
||
these; would one have expected it? Here is much both of Christ and
|
||
heaven in these verses: and he that said such things as these
|
||
<i>declared plainly that he sought the better country, that is, the
|
||
heavenly;</i> as the patriarchs of that age did, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Heb.11.14" parsed="|Heb|11|14|0|0" passage="Heb 11:14">Heb. xi. 14</scripRef>. We have here Job's creed, or
|
||
confession of faith. His belief in God the Father Almighty, the
|
||
Maker of heaven and earth, and the principles of natural religion,
|
||
he had often professed: but here we find him no stranger to
|
||
revealed religion; though the revelation of the promised Seed, and
|
||
the promised inheritance, was then discerned only like the dawning
|
||
of the day, yet Job was taught of God to believe in a living
|
||
Redeemer, and to <i>look for the resurrection of the dead and the
|
||
life of the world to come,</i> for of these, doubtless, he must be
|
||
understood to speak. These were the things he comforted himself
|
||
with the expectation of, and not a deliverance from his trouble or
|
||
a revival of his happiness in this world, as some would understand
|
||
him; for besides that the expressions he here uses, of the
|
||
Redeemer's <i>standing at the latter day upon the earth,</i> of his
|
||
seeing God, and <i>seeing him for himself,</i> are wretchedly
|
||
forced if they be understood of any temporal deliverance, it is
|
||
very plain that he had no expectation at all of his return to a
|
||
prosperous condition in this world. He had just now said that
|
||
<i>his way was fenced up,</i> (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p14.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.8" parsed="|Job|19|8|0|0" passage="Job 19:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>) and his <i>hope removed like a
|
||
tree,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p14.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.10" parsed="|Job|19|10|0|0" passage="Job 19:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>.
|
||
Nay, and after this he expressed his despair of any comfort in this
|
||
life, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p14.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.23.8-Job.23.9 Bible:Job.30.23" parsed="|Job|23|8|23|9;|Job|30|23|0|0" passage="Job 23:8,9,30:23"><i>ch.</i> xxiii. 8, 9;
|
||
xxx. 23</scripRef>. So that we must necessarily understand him of
|
||
the redemption of his soul from the power of the grave, and his
|
||
reception to glory, which is spoken of, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p14.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.49.15" parsed="|Ps|49|15|0|0" passage="Ps 49:15">Ps. xlix. 15</scripRef>. We have reason to think that
|
||
Job was just now under an extraordinary impulse of the blessed
|
||
Spirit, which raised him above himself, gave him light, and gave
|
||
him utterance, even to his own surprise. And some observe that,
|
||
after this, we do not find Job's discourses such passionate,
|
||
peevish, unbecoming, complaints of God and his providence as we
|
||
have before met with: this hope quieted his spirit, stilled the
|
||
storm and, having here cast anchor within the veil, his mind was
|
||
kept steady from this time forward. Let us observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p15">I. To what intent Job makes this confession
|
||
of his faith here. Never did any thing come in more pertinently, or
|
||
to better purpose. 1. Job was now accused, and this was his appeal.
|
||
His friends reproached him as a hypocrite and contemned him as a
|
||
wicked man; but he appeals to his creed, to his faith, to his hope,
|
||
and to his own conscience, which not only acquitted him from
|
||
reigning sin, but comforted him with the expectation of a blessed
|
||
resurrection. <i>These are not the words of him that has a
|
||
devil.</i> He appeals to the coming of the Redeemer, from this
|
||
wrangle at the bar to the judgment of the bench, even to him to
|
||
whom all judgment is committed, who he knew would right him. The
|
||
consideration of God's day coming will make it a <i>very small
|
||
thing with us to be judged of man's judgment,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.4.3-1Cor.4.4" parsed="|1Cor|4|3|4|4" passage="1Co 4:3,4">1 Cor. iv. 3, 4</scripRef>. How easily may we
|
||
bear the unjust calumnies and reproaches of men while we expect the
|
||
glorious appearance of our Redeemer, and his redeemed, at the last
|
||
day, and that there will then be a resurrection of names, as well
|
||
as bodies! 2. Job was now afflicted, and this was his cordial; when
|
||
he was pressed above measure this kept him from fainting—he
|
||
believed that he should <i>see the goodness of the Lord in the land
|
||
of the living;</i> not in this world, for that is the land of the
|
||
dying.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p16">II. With what a solemn preface he
|
||
introduces it, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.23-Job.19.24" parsed="|Job|19|23|19|24" passage="Job 19:23,24"><i>v.</i> 23,
|
||
24</scripRef>. He breaks off his complaints abruptly, to triumph
|
||
his comforts, which he does, not only for his own satisfaction, but
|
||
for the edification of others. Those now about him, he feared,
|
||
would little regard what he said, and so it proved, He therefore
|
||
wished it might be recorded for the generations to come. <i>O that
|
||
my words were now written,</i> the words I am now about to say! As
|
||
if he had said, "I own I have spoken many unadvised words, which I
|
||
could wish might be forgotten, for they will neither do me credit
|
||
nor do others good. But I am now going to speak deliberately, and
|
||
that which I desire may be published to all the world and preserved
|
||
for the generations to come, <i>in perpetuam rei
|
||
memoriam</i>—<i>for an abiding memorial,</i> and therefore that it
|
||
may be written plainly and <i>printed,</i> or drawn out in large
|
||
and legible characters, so that he that runs may read it; and that
|
||
it may not be left in loose papers, but put into <i>a book;</i> or,
|
||
if that should perish, that it may be <i>engraven</i> like an
|
||
inscription upon a monument, <i>with an iron pen in lead, or in the
|
||
stone;</i> let the engraver use all his art to make it a durable
|
||
appeal to posterity." That which Job here somewhat passionately
|
||
wished for God graciously granted him. His words are written; they
|
||
are printed in God's book; so that, wherever that book is read,
|
||
there shall this be told for a memorial concerning Job. He
|
||
believed, therefore he spoke.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p17">III. What his confession itself is; what
|
||
are the words which he would have to be written; we here have them
|
||
written, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.25-Job.19.27" parsed="|Job|19|25|19|27" passage="Job 19:25-27"><i>v.</i>
|
||
25-27</scripRef>. Let us observe them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p18">1. He believes the glory of the Redeemer
|
||
and his own interest in him (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.25" parsed="|Job|19|25|0|0" passage="Job 19:25"><i>v.</i> 25</scripRef>): <i>I know that my Redeemer
|
||
liveth,</i> that he is in being and is my life, <i>and that he
|
||
shall stand at last,</i> or stand the last, or at the latter day,
|
||
<i>upon</i> (or above) <i>the earth.</i> He shall be raised up, or,
|
||
He shall be, at the latter day, (that is, in the fulness of time:
|
||
the gospel day is called <i>the last time</i> because that is the
|
||
last dispensation) upon the earth: so it points at his incarnation;
|
||
or, He shall be lifted up from the earth (so it points at his
|
||
crucifixion), or raised up out of the earth (so it is applicable to
|
||
his resurrection), or, as we commonly understand it, At the end of
|
||
time he shall appear over the earth, for <i>he shall come in the
|
||
clouds, and every eye shall see him,</i> so close shall he come to
|
||
this earth. He shall stand <i>upon the dust</i> (so the word is),
|
||
upon all his enemies, which shall be put a dust under his feet; and
|
||
he shall tread upon them and triumph over them. Observe here, (1.)
|
||
That there is a Redeemer provided for fallen man, and Jesus Christ
|
||
is that Redeemer. The word is <i>Goël</i> which is used for the
|
||
next of kin, to whom, by the law of Moses, the right of redeeming a
|
||
mortgaged estate did belong, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p18.2" osisRef="Bible:Lev.25.25" parsed="|Lev|25|25|0|0" passage="Le 25:25">Lev. xxv.
|
||
25</scripRef>. Our heavenly inheritance was mortgaged by sin; we
|
||
are ourselves utterly unable to redeem it; Christ is near of kin to
|
||
us, the next kinsman that is able to redeem; he has paid our debt,
|
||
satisfied God's justice for sin, and so has taken off the mortgage
|
||
and made a new settlement of the inheritance. Our persons also want
|
||
a Redeemer; we are sold for sin, and sold under sin; our Lord Jesus
|
||
has wrought out a redemption for us, and proclaims redemption for
|
||
us, and proclaims redemption to us, and so he is truly the
|
||
Redeemer. (2.) He is a living Redeemer. As we are made by a living
|
||
God, so we are saved by a living Redeemer, who is both almighty and
|
||
eternal, and is therefore able to save to the uttermost. <i>Of him
|
||
it is witnessed that he liveth,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p18.3" osisRef="Bible:Heb.7.8 Bible:Rev.1.18" parsed="|Heb|7|8|0|0;|Rev|1|18|0|0" passage="Heb 7:8,Re 1:18">Heb. vii. 8; Rev. i. 18</scripRef>. We are dying,
|
||
but he liveth, and hath assured us that <i>because he lives we
|
||
shall live also,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p18.4" osisRef="Bible:John.14.19" parsed="|John|14|19|0|0" passage="Joh 14:19">John xiv.
|
||
19</scripRef>. (3.) There are those that through grace have an
|
||
interest in this Redeemer, and can, upon good grounds, call him
|
||
theirs. When Job had lost all his wealth and all his friends, yet
|
||
he was not separated from Christ, nor cut off from his relation to
|
||
him: "Still he is my Redeemer." That next kinsman adhered to him
|
||
when all his other kindred forsook him, and he had the comfort of
|
||
it. (4.) Our interest in the Redeemer is a thing that may be known;
|
||
and, where it is known, it may be triumphed in, as sufficient to
|
||
balance all our griefs: <i>I know</i> (observe with what an air of
|
||
assurance he speaks it, as one confident of this very thing), <i>I
|
||
know that my Redeemer lives.</i> His friends have often charged him
|
||
with ignorance or vain knowledge; but he knows enough, and knows to
|
||
good purpose, who knows Christ to be his Redeemer. (5.) There will
|
||
be a latter day, a last day, a day when <i>time shall be no
|
||
more,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p18.5" osisRef="Bible:Rev.10.6" parsed="|Rev|10|6|0|0" passage="Re 10:6">Rev. x. 6</scripRef>. That is
|
||
a day we are concerned to think of every day. (6.) Our Redeemer
|
||
will at that day stand upon the earth, or over the earth, to summon
|
||
the dead out of their graves, and determine them to an unchangeable
|
||
state; for to him all judgment is committed. He shall stand, at the
|
||
last, on the dust to which this earth will be reduced by the
|
||
conflagration.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p19">2. He believes the happiness of the
|
||
redeemed, and his own title to that happiness, that, at Christ's
|
||
second coming, believers shall be raised up in glory and so made
|
||
perfectly blessed in the vision and fruition of God; and this he
|
||
believes with application to himself. (1.) He counts upon the
|
||
corrupting of his body in the grave, and speaks of it with a holy
|
||
carelessness and unconcernedness: <i>Though, after my skin</i>
|
||
(which is already wasted and gone, none of it remaining but <i>the
|
||
skin of my teeth,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.20" parsed="|Job|19|20|0|0" passage="Job 19:20"><i>v.</i>
|
||
20</scripRef>) <i>they destroy</i> (those that are appointed to
|
||
destroy it, the grave and the worms in it of which he had spoken,
|
||
<scripRef id="Job.xx-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.17.14" parsed="|Job|17|14|0|0" passage="Job 17:14"><i>ch.</i> xvii. 14</scripRef>)
|
||
<i>this body.</i> The word <i>body</i> is added: "Though they
|
||
destroy this, this skeleton, this shadow (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p19.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.17.7" parsed="|Job|17|7|0|0" passage="Job 17:7"><i>ch.</i> xvii. 7</scripRef>), this that I lay my hand
|
||
upon," or (pointing perhaps to his weak and withered limbs) "this
|
||
that you see, call it what you will; I expect that shortly it will
|
||
be a feast for the worms." Christ's body saw not corruption, but
|
||
ours must. And Job mentions this, that the glory of the
|
||
resurrection he believed and hoped for might shine the more
|
||
brightly. Note, It is good for us often to think, not only of the
|
||
approaching death of our bodies, but of their destruction and
|
||
dissolution in the grave; yet let not that discourage our hope of
|
||
their resurrection, for the same power that made man's body at
|
||
first, out of common dust, can raise it out of its own dust. This
|
||
body which we now take such care about, and make such provision
|
||
for, will in a little time be destroyed. Even <i>my reins</i> (says
|
||
Job) <i>shall be consumed within me</i> (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p19.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.27" parsed="|Job|19|27|0|0" passage="Job 19:27"><i>v.</i> 27</scripRef>); the innermost part of the
|
||
body, which perhaps putrefies first. (2.) He comforts himself with
|
||
the hopes of happiness on the other side death and the grave:
|
||
<i>After I shall awake</i> (so the margin reads it), <i>though this
|
||
body be destroyed, yet out of my flesh shall I see God.</i> [1.]
|
||
Soul and body shall come together again. That body which must be
|
||
destroyed in the grave shall be raised again, a glorious body:
|
||
<i>Yet in my flesh I shall see God.</i> The separate soul has eyes
|
||
wherewith to see God, eyes of the mind; but Job speaks of seeing
|
||
him with eyes of flesh, <i>in my flesh, with my eyes;</i> the same
|
||
body that died shall rise again, a true body, but a glorified body,
|
||
fit for the employments and entertainments of that world, and
|
||
therefore a <i>spiritual body,</i> <scripRef id="Job.xx-p19.5" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.15.44" parsed="|1Cor|15|44|0|0" passage="1Co 15:44">1
|
||
Cor. xv. 44</scripRef>. Let us <i>therefore</i> glorify God with
|
||
our bodies because there is such a glory designed for them. [2.]
|
||
Job and God shall come together again: <i>In my flesh shall I see
|
||
God,</i> that is, the glorified Redeemer, who is God. <i>I shall
|
||
see God in my flesh</i> (so some read it), the Son of God clothed
|
||
with a body which will be visible even to eyes of flesh. Though the
|
||
body, in the grave, seem despicable and miserable, yet it shall be
|
||
dignified and made happy in the vision of God. Job now complained
|
||
that he could not get a sight of God (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p19.6" osisRef="Bible:Job.23.8-Job.23.9" parsed="|Job|23|8|23|9" passage="Job 23:8,9"><i>ch.</i> xxiii. 8, 9</scripRef>), but hoped to see
|
||
him shortly, never more to lose the sight of him, and that sight of
|
||
him will be the more welcome after the present darkness and
|
||
distance. Note, It is the blessedness of the blessed that they
|
||
shall see God, shall see him as he is, see him face to face, and no
|
||
longer through a glass darkly. See with what pleasure holy Job
|
||
enlarges upon this (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p19.7" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.27" parsed="|Job|19|27|0|0" passage="Job 19:27"><i>v.</i>
|
||
27</scripRef>): "<i>Whom I shall see for myself,</i>" that is, "see
|
||
and enjoy, see to my own unspeakable comfort and satisfaction. I
|
||
shall see him as mine, as mine with an appropriating sight,"
|
||
<scripRef id="Job.xx-p19.8" osisRef="Bible:Rev.21.3" parsed="|Rev|21|3|0|0" passage="Re 21:3">Rev. xxi. 3</scripRef>. <i>God himself
|
||
shall be with them and be their God;</i> they shall be <i>like him,
|
||
for they shall see him as he is,</i> that is seeing for themselves,
|
||
<scripRef id="Job.xx-p19.9" osisRef="Bible:1John.3.2" parsed="|1John|3|2|0|0" passage="1Jo 3:2">1 John iii. 2</scripRef>. <i>My eyes
|
||
shall behold him, and not another. First,</i> "He, and not another
|
||
for him, shall be seen, not a type or figure of him, but he
|
||
himself." Glorified saints are perfectly sure that they are not
|
||
imposed upon; it is no <i>deceptio visus—illusion of the senses.
|
||
Secondly,</i> "I, and not another for me, shall see him. Though my
|
||
flesh and body be consumed, yet I shall not need a proxy; I shall
|
||
see him with my own eyes." This was what Job hoped for, and what he
|
||
earnestly desired, which, some think, is the meaning of the last
|
||
clause: <i>My reins are spent in my bosom,</i> that is, "all my
|
||
desires are summed up and concluded in this; this will crown and
|
||
complete them all; let me have this, and I shall have nothing more
|
||
to desire; it is enough; it is all." With this the prayers of
|
||
David, the son of Jesse, are ended.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p20">IV. The application of this to his friends.
|
||
His creed spoke comfort to himself, but warning and terror to those
|
||
that set themselves against him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p21">1. It was a word of caution to them not to
|
||
proceed and persist in their unkind usage of him, <scripRef id="Job.xx-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.28" parsed="|Job|19|28|0|0" passage="Job 19:28"><i>v.</i> 28</scripRef>. He had reproved them
|
||
for what they had said, and now tells them what they should say for
|
||
the reducing of themselves and one another to a better temper.
|
||
"<i>Why persecute we him</i> thus? Why do we grieve him and vex
|
||
him, by censuring and condemning him, <i>seeing the root of the
|
||
matter,</i> or the root of the word, <i>is found in him?</i>" Let
|
||
this direct us, (1.) In our care concerning ourselves. We are all
|
||
concerned to see to it that the root of the matter be found in us.
|
||
A living, quickening, commanding, principle of grace in the heart,
|
||
is the root of the matter, as necessary to our religion as the root
|
||
to the tree, to which it owes both its fixedness and its
|
||
fruitfulness. Love to God and our brethren, faith in Christ, hatred
|
||
of sin—these are the root of the matter; other things are but
|
||
leaves in comparison with these. Serious godliness is the one thing
|
||
needful. (2.) In our conduct towards our brethren. We are to
|
||
believe that many have the root of the matter in them who are not
|
||
in every thing of our mind—who have their follies, and weaknesses,
|
||
and mistakes—and to conclude that it is at our peril if we
|
||
persecute any such. Woe be to him that offends one of those little
|
||
ones! God will resent and revenge it. Job and his friends differed
|
||
in some notions concerning the methods of Providence, but they
|
||
agreed in the root of the matter, the belief of another world, and
|
||
therefore should not persecute one another for these
|
||
differences.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Job.xx-p22">2. It was a word of terror to them.
|
||
Christ's second coming will be very dreadful to those that are
|
||
found <i>smiting their fellow servants</i> (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.24.49" parsed="|Matt|24|49|0|0" passage="Mt 24:49">Matt. xxiv. 49</scripRef>), and therefore (<scripRef id="Job.xx-p22.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.29" parsed="|Job|19|29|0|0" passage="Job 19:29"><i>v.</i> 29</scripRef>), "<i>Be you afraid of
|
||
the sword,</i> the flaming sword of God's justice, which turns
|
||
every way; fear, lest you make yourselves obnoxious to it." Good
|
||
men need to be frightened from sin by the terrors of the Almighty,
|
||
particularly from the sin of rashly judging their brethren,
|
||
<scripRef id="Job.xx-p22.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.7.1 Bible:Jas.3.1" parsed="|Matt|7|1|0|0;|Jas|3|1|0|0" passage="Mt 7:1,Jam 3:1">Matt. vii. 1; Jam. iii.
|
||
1</scripRef>. Those that are peevish and passionate with their
|
||
brethren, censorious of them and malicious towards them, should
|
||
know, not only that their wrath, whatever it pretends, works not
|
||
the righteousness of God, but that, (1.) They may expect to smart
|
||
for it in this world: <i>It brings the punishments of the
|
||
sword.</i> Wrath leads to such crimes as expose men to the sword of
|
||
the magistrate. God himself often takes vengeance for it, and those
|
||
that showed no mercy shall find no mercy. (2.) If they repent not,
|
||
that will be an earnest of worse. By these you may know there is a
|
||
judgment, not only a present government, but a future judgment, in
|
||
which hard speeches must be accounted for.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |