Advanced Commentary

Texts -- Job 5:1-13 (NET)

Context
5:1 “Call now ! Is there anyone who will answer you? To which of the holy ones will you turn ? 5:2 For wrath kills the foolish person , and anger slays the silly one . 5:3 I myself have seen the fool taking root , but suddenly I cursed his place of residence . 5:4 His children are far from safety , and they are crushed at the place where judgment is rendered , nor is there anyone to deliver them. 5:5 The hungry eat up his harvest , and take it even from behind the thorns , and the thirsty swallow up their fortune . 5:6 For evil does not come up from the dust , nor does trouble spring up from the ground , 5:7 but people are born to trouble , as surely as the sparks fly upward .
Blessings for the One Who Seeks God
5:8 “But as for me, I would seek God , and to God I would set forth my case . 5:9 He does great and unsearchable things, marvelous things without number ; 5:10 he gives rain on the earth , and sends water on the fields ; 5:11 he sets the lowly on high , that those who mourn are raised to safety . 5:12 He frustrates the plans of the crafty so that their hands cannot accomplish what they had planned ! 5:13 He catches the wise in their own craftiness , and the counsel of the cunning is brought to a quick end .

Pericope

NET
  • Job 5:8-27 -- Blessings for the One Who Seeks God

Bible Dictionary

more

Questions

Sermon Illustrations

Suffering and Adversity; Why Me?

Resources/Books

Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable)

  • Jacob and Laban ("White") made an agreement that each man felt he could manipulate to his own advantage. However, God sovereignly overruled to bless Jacob as He had promised in spite of Laban's deceit and Jacob's devices (cf....
  • What this book is all about has been the subject of considerable debate. Many people think God gave it to us to provide His answer to the age-old problem of suffering. In particular, many believe it is in the Bible to help us...
  • I. Prologue chs. 1-2A. Job's character 1:1-5B. Job's calamities 1:6-2:101. The first test 1:6-222. The second test 2:1-10C. Job's comforters 2:11-13II. The dialogue concerning the basis of the divine-human relationship 3:1-42...
  • The writer composed the prologue and epilogue of this book in prose narrative and the main body (3:1-42:6) in poetry. The prologue and epilogue form a frame around the main emphasis of the revelation, the poetic section, and ...
  • The two soliloquies of Job (chs. 3 and 29-31) enclose three cycles of dialogue between Job and his three friends. Each cycle consists of speeches by Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar in that order interspersed with Job's reply to e...
  • Eliphaz's first speech has a symmetrical introverted (chiastic) structure that emphasizes the central section."AOpening remark (4:2)BExhortation (4:3-6)CGod's dealings with men (4:7-11)DThe revelation of truth (4:12-21)C'God'...
  • Job's friend did not deny that the wicked fool (cf. Ps. 14:1) prospers temporarily (v. 3), but he believed that before a person dies God will punish him for his sins. Jesus disagreed (Luke 13:4). The well-known comparison in ...
  • Job began his response to Bildad by acknowledging that much of what his friends had said was true (v. 2). Many of Job's speeches began with sarcasm or irony. He then turned to a question that Eliphaz had raised earlier (4:17)...
  • Verse 2 is irony; his companions were not as wise as they thought. Job pointed out that much of what they had said about God was common knowledge (cf. 5:9-10; 8:13-19; 11:7-9). Nonetheless their conclusion, that the basis of ...
  • "But it is just here, when everything is blackest, that his faith . . . like the rainbow in the cloud . . . shines with a marvelous splendor."89This short section contains probably the best known verses in the book (vv. 23-27...
  • Elihu began by voicing his respect for Job's three friends (vv. 6-10). They were older than he, and for this reason he said he had refrained from speaking until now. However he had become convinced that advancing age does not...
  • This whole speech is an attempt to explain to Job why God was not responding to him. Elihu was very wordy, which he admitted in 32:18. In summary, he told Job that God was not silent, as Job had charged, but that He was speak...
  • 4:10-12 The king described what he had seen in poetic language. His words therefore appear as a prophetic oracle. The ancients frequently used trees to describe rulers of nations (cf. Isa. 2:12-13; 10:34; Ezek. 31:3-17).141Th...
  • The apostle now combined the threads of his argument, which began at 1:18, and drew a preliminary conclusion. If his readers insisted on taking the natural view of their teachers and continued to form coteries of followers, t...

Expositions Of Holy Scripture (Maclaren)

  • Behold, happy is the man whom God correcteth: therefore despise not then the chastening of the Almighty: 18. For He maketh sore, and bindeth up: the woundeth, and His hands make whole. 19. He shall deliver thee in six trouble...
Back to Commentary Page


TIP #21: To learn the History/Background of Bible books/chapters use the Discovery Box. [ALL]
created in 0.04 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA